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After reading this thread a while ago (the last posts are recent), I still hadn't attempted clutchless downshifting on the SV. But yesterday the clutch pushrod failed just as I pulled into my nephews football game, so I hit the kill switch and chugged to a stop in the grass beside the parking lot. I had planned on bump starting it when it was time to leave, then looked at the grass and decided to use it as my "clutch" when starting off. A little extra gas right after the click to first from neutral and I was in business with some wheelspin. Turns out the downshifts on the way home were sweet and easy as long as the transmission was unloaded. At stop signs I pulled onto grass or dirt on the shoulder and only stalled it once getting going again. With a little practice finding neutral cluchless I may even take a few more rides before I dig into it.
(PS: what's with the auto thread tag generator telling me I've tried to add too many tags?)
'02 SV650 street|woods|race LRRS #128
the clutch actuator mechanism came apart on my SV when I was 75 miles away from home, I managed to make all my stops except one on a downhill so that I could get rolling by gravity in neutral before slipping in gear, the one stop I made on level was at intersection of 11 & 11B in Gilford, I just started the engine in 1st gear when the light turned green
certainly make you think ahead before you just stop
RandyO
IBA#9560
A man with a gun is a citizen
A man without a gun is a subject LETS GO BRANDON
My motard has a slipper, so no clutch on the shifts. My SV doesn't have a nice device like that. Anyway, on more than one occasion after racing the motard I will hop in the SV and bang a few down shifts before I remember. It hasn't cause an issue yet.
I hadn't thought about starting it in first gear, guess that would have worked, too. Definitely made me plan ahead for stops in any case, and hope I didn't need to make any emergency stops. I'm not sure how the clutch rod broke, looks like it had been bent and cracked for a while before it let go.
'02 SV650 street|woods|race LRRS #128
I practiced it on my SV at NHMS WHEN MY SIZE 12 boot hit the shifter down a gear instead of up. The resulting slide remains very clear in my minds' eye...
“It's 2 minutes for any capable adult.”
Perhaps I'm wrong, but I can't think of any reason why downshifting is any different (mechanically) than upshifting when not using the clutch. If you put a little downward pressure on the shift lever and roll off the gas a little, it'll snick right into gear, exactly the way it does when upshifting using the same technique (other than the direction of pressure on the shift lever...).
RandyO
IBA#9560
A man with a gun is a citizen
A man without a gun is a subject LETS GO BRANDON
I unload the the transmission either way, but it's what happens right after it's in the next gear that's different. When upshifting clutchless, the revs between engine and rear wheel match almost automatically because they drop as you let up on the gas to unload the transmission. When downshifting, the rev differential is much greater as they're dropping when they need to be even higher to match the lower gear. I downshifted at much lower revs than usual, and gave it extra throttle as it clicked into the lower gear to help it match.
'02 SV650 street|woods|race LRRS #128
It can, but the timing is tricky. I used to do it at Boxshop for one turn, hard on the front brake, throttle closed, and to finish the braking as the motor was pretty low in the rev range at that point I'd click it down one, release the brakes and throttle out. It works when the revs get low enough that the motor is no longer effectively engine braking, but it means you have to have a bit of patience on the downshifts. Into T1 at NHMS it means grabbing it after the seam...