Author Topic: BSA A10  (Read 15849 times)

Offline dougie@35

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 5
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
    • View Profile
    • Email
BSA A10
« on: March 26, 2006, 04:59:06 AM »
I am rebuilding an A10 -1962 and would like to know the best type of engine oil to run it on .
The handbook says it should be sae 40 haynes manual says 20/50.

Offline Alex_James

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 10
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
    • View Profile
Re: BSA A10
« Reply #1 on: April 04, 2006, 05:48:21 AM »
If you go by your hand book you are using oil which is thick enough for the pump If you use modern oils the pump may not push it round with enough pressure.
The A10 & A7 are week on the brass bush crank bearing
If you can get this modified you have a good bike.
The big ends are week so the pump might not produce enough pressure. If the pump is in good order and producing good preasure The best oil is Semi Synthic as you wont get clutch slip Do not use modern oils on clutch you may get it slipping.
You are asking a very difficult question.                           I had severial of these bikes in the early 60s and if the modern oil was avable then i would have used them.as they all ran their big ends and bearings.They were used as a means of transport with high miles If you can fit a modern oil filter this will help, one of the problems with all british bikes is the lack of a good filter.  Read up on oil thickness 20/50   20/40 etc  the haynes is a good guide But????????? if you get my drift    Good luck

Offline lxmlvll

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 38
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
    • View Profile
Re: BSA A10
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2006, 07:28:18 PM »
Hi,

In my experience, when those machines were current, it was considered good money wasted to throw away good oil just because "it was black" to replace it with fresh oil which would "be black" itself in a couple of hundred miles.  Owners would perpetually top the oil up rather than change it causing premature wear, and as the timing side bush wore the oil was lost because of excess clearance rather than be pumped through to the big ends.  Hence big end siezure.  It always seemed to be the drive side that siezed, which was logical since that side got the least amount of oil.

A50's and A65's suffered similar maladies and, like the A7/10 got the reputation as rod breakers.

I have experience of examples which were neglected and ones which were looked after.  A person I was in contact with bought an A10 with a sidecar which had always been run as an outfit with over 100K miles.  It was a little rough, always having been kept in the street, but as it was the man's sole form of transport apart from his bicycle, and because lube oil was free to him (he was a maintenance fitter in a large factory, I worked in the same factory) he used to change it regularly when on night shift.  He bought a new Ford Escort Mk1 when it was just a Ford Escort (the Mk2 had'nt yet been seen), because the Mrs was getting a little wide in the hips and was experiencing some difficulty getting in and out of the sidecar.  She could have worn it as a coat if he had taken it off the bike!

It lay outside his door for about 6 years after he bought the car, then he sold it to my friend who also worked there and who decided to "restore" it (pot of black hammerite and a two inch brush) and at the same time, decided to re-bore it as it was smoking a bit , being on it's original bores and pistons witch had been disturbed once at 70k miles for new rings.

He asked my opinion about the bottom end, which he was convinced should be beyond redemption.  I measured the big ends and found about 1 thou ovality in the journals with the major diameter 2 thou undersize, and  similar wear on the timing side main.  I recommended new standard shells which were fitted with a piece of one-and-a-half thou shim steel under the shells of the big end caps.  The old boy made him a new timing-side bush a couple of thou undersize to suit the crank, from a piece of phosphor-bronze (same as original, I think), turned on a centre lathe and finished with an adjustable reamer.  I assembled the bottom half for him with a new driveside bearing, and told him to change the oil every 2 to 3 thousand miles. he moved to England shortly after, and I was surprised to see him about six years later with 50K more on it.  Apart from new valves and guides when he was "across the water", he had not touched it.  What really did surprise me though, was that he had re-finished all the painted parts, re-built the wheels and re-upholstered and refurbished the sidecar.  It was hard to believe it was the same outfit.

I knew an A65 which broke the drive side rod before 30k, the fella had been boasting that he just pours it in, it runs out all over the road. Then he said they were "soft", and they all had bottom-end problems.

I also knew (not well) of three racing outfits, and another more closely. the fella I knew better was using secondhand engines (he had a couple for the racer) plus a Lightning, I think with a Watsonian Monza for the road.  He spent about £120 at the time for a roller bearing timing side conversion when a new 250 Suzuki onl cost about 4 times as mutch.  Not that he'd broke a rod - he was just afraid he might.

If the bearings are not already nackered, thin oil is ok in my opinion.

A.

  

« Last Edit: May 10, 2006, 08:15:58 PM by lxmlvll »

Offline lxmlvll

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 38
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
    • View Profile
Re: BSA A10
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2006, 08:07:55 PM »
Hi, yes, it's me again.

I'd like to add that thick oil causes high resistance to flow which causes the oil to pump out of the oil pressure release valve, reducing flow to bearings. thin oil causes the oil to flow easier through the bearings which, although causing a reduction in the oil pressure, increases flow through the bearings because it is not escaping ot of the pressure release valve, which has the net effect of cooling and lubricating the journals hence giving them an easier time.

An oil pump is available with increased pumping capacity.  this, combined with thinner oil is, I think, a good idea.

Close tolerances of one-and-a-half to two-and-a-half thou max. used in conjunction with a new high flow oil pump and SAE15/40 or even SAE10/30 semi synthetic oil would, I believe, deliver better bearing life and better economy.  

I realise this opinion might cause some controversy, especially among the "old hands" at this game.  

A.