Royal Enfield four-speed gearboxes, separated by 40-plus years. My 1999 made-in-India left-shift gearbox is at right. |
And, my, doesn't it look familiar?
There are differences. The older one is right-hand shift, of course, as most were. Only where legally required were they made to shift left, as is mine.
Note oil filler plug at top right of gearbox. Mine has one there, but... |
Castrol, Mobiloil, Shell, Essolube, Energol. Great old names that mark this gearbox as a product of Redditch, England.
...the older gearbox filler plug is labelled. |
I'm a little surprised that the filler plug specifies oil.
My understanding was that gearboxes back then were filled with grease from the factory, as there was no proper seal on the sprocket side to retain oil.
My 1999 gearbox came from India filled with what some used to refer to as "elephant snot." That stuff stayed put.
When I tried using oil the gearbox it soon bathed everything behind it in oil. At a sprocket change my mechanic fit a seal, and oil has worked fine for me ever since.
Canadian Royal Enfield enthusiast Chris Overton kindly identified the old gearbox, based in its serial number, as being from a 1965 Series 1 Interceptor.
The Indian 4 speeds had 'snot' or grease mixed with oil, whereas the Redditch bikes had oil. Having both an Indian and a Redditch, I have to think which stuff is correct to put in when topping one of them up!
ReplyDeleteNeat picture of that plug. Have never seen that before.
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