Gonna have to beg to differ just a wee bit.
Pushing it hard as you can is not a good thing, IMVHO.
Better to check for wiggle.
Not at all meaning to be adverserial and you are right, KC.
Tight is right. Just saying to much force could be bad, is all.
(smiles) Agreed, but by pushing the engine back and forth as hard as you can I mean as hard as
I can push it with my two arms.
A strong man with both arms and a leg could bust an engine out of one these bikes but if it's mounted right and solid he'd be tired when he was done hehehe.
First you don't need to use studs, I find bolts work better and my local Ace hardware stocks them for cheap.
You can tell a case hardened bolt by the lines or numbers on the top of the hex head.
The more lines or higher the number the harder and stronger the bolt.
We just had to do an easy-out re-bolt and grabbed some 8.8's at Ace for like 20 cents each.
There is little you can do for the back mount but keep it flush against the seat tube but that's all it needs.
A really great front mount makes a world of difference for the lateral movement however and how you keep the back from having to deal with it.
Nothing short of welded mounts works as well as a muffler clamp and plate front mount that I have ever seen.
The muffler clamp gives you a round to flat full grip platform that won't twist, from there it is just spacers and connection plate.
All I know is with 50 or so 2-stroke builds using that method they do the job best and though we might not be able to rip a phone book in half we are not weak, and it's not right until we can't make the engines move when done right and our hands down test.