Thanks for the info. Very helpful.
BTW, is it Ok for the right side gear housing to rest on the chain guard?
Other than vibration rattles the engine hitting the pedal chain guard is OK.
As Crass mentioned you have a bunch of room between your pedal sprocket and chain guard.
Chain guards have a lot of clearance above the front sprocket to make it easy to put a chain back on in front.
I am a ' low center of gravity' kind of builder that builds a lot of fender and guard type beach cruiser bikes so a pretty easy task to lower the pedal guard 1/2" there, essential on 4-stroke builds like this uber tight fit I just finished.
Just put in the back mount screw loose, and from the left side so you can see whats going on.
Lower the chain guard to not hit the engine or sprocket, mark a spot on the guards mount piece through your frames mount hole, and then drill a hole there.
I have to do this often, especially with 4-stroke builds, but done right you can use a chain guard between a mount plate and sprocket in a 1/8" gap, just enough to hand push a chain on the sprocket like the 4-stroke above.
I did the grab and shake test. It's solid.
Let me know what y'all think. Thanks,
George
Good for you George, you caught on to what is important quickly.
You are darn close to ideal, but depending on your demands on it, how long it will stay good needs to be a 'grab and shove' checked often thing for loosening as I see 2 things just not 'ideal' as it were....
It may just be a pic shadow, but it don't look like your new back bridge mount is flush with the seat post.
This is the most crucial mating of the engine to the frame there is.
And then there is the front mount which is the 'improvement' over drilling your frame for those that don't have a drill and bit...
U-bolting a flat plate to a round tube directly.
Engine mounts are all about at least two tube attachments as near to 360 degree grip points to the frame as possible to make the engine one with the bike.
That small U-bolt/plate will do a great job of combating the front mounts major job which is keeping the engine from turning left, it just isn't a 'make it one' mount with a flat plate against a round tube with only ~180 degree grip for twist and vibration.
You have a flat plate mounted to your engine front mount to bolt to.
I suggest you replace that U bolt with a muffler clamp that fits your tube, heck they are $1.35 at the auto parts store and work the same, they just have piece that has one side to grip a tube and the other side be flat.
That will give you near a 360 great grip in front to 'make it one' as it were.
You should fine as is, just do the test often, when it's time to fix try that.