Author Topic: excelsior/Albion gearbox  (Read 3132 times)

Offline safe history man

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 14
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • View Profile
    • Email
excelsior/Albion gearbox
« on: December 01, 2014, 09:59:36 AM »
well guys thanks to you out there the gearbox is back together and seems to be quite smooth ,now the bit on the end has anyone got a diagram or could do a drawing of what the assembly of the clutch fitted to the 4 speed Albion R series with two plates with corks fitted (well they will have when I get them from villiers
(great service by the way) it has a long rod and a small rod about 6mm long and a rod with a disk on the end which I assume presses against the clutch to separate the plates but! there seems to be something missing thats the problem when it comes in a box things like locking washers and nuts I can work out and the parts missing I can make on the lathe providing I know what they are HELP!!
Many Thanks

Offline 33d6

  • Advanced Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 1123
  • Karma: +27/-4
  • I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
    • View Profile
Re: excelsior/Albion gearbox
« Reply #1 on: December 02, 2014, 05:54:18 AM »
Hi Safetyman,
I'd suggest you buy yourself a copy of Newnes Motorcycle Repair & Upkeep Vol 2 from eBay. It was first printed in 1931 and reprinted a few years back. The seller has listed it under Motorcycle Manuals, Literature>Norton.
This was one of those weekly magazine things in 14 weekly parts that was sold through your newsagent and you bought a separate section each week. Vol 2 includes the weekly section that covered Albion gear boxes. It's the only decent illustrated workshop strip down and re assembly on Albion gearboxes I know of and covers all their range, 4 speed, 3 speed and 2 speed.

It should answer all your questions.

The early Albion boxes had just a plain pushrod which soon wore a hole in the outer clutch plate. They then changed over to the system you describe with the short mushroom like outer pushrod but I don't know when they introduced it. I know it is a common ploy to upgrade the earlier clutches with the later parts so who knows where yours fits in the equation. It may be original, it may not. Whatever the case, it is the better arrangement.
Cheers,