| Jack,
I had to shim my starter and it has worked great for the past ten  
years. There is a chamfer on the starter that I have. I worrid a  
little about the chamfer being on the wrong side on the flywheel but  
that too has worked great. In your case I dont really know but I  
guess you have to try it and see what happens.
Magnus Karlsson
Sweden
> Hi All, of the several listers using gear reduction starters, has  
> anyone
> ever needed to shim the starter back from the engine plate to keep the
> drive gear and the flywheel from touching??  I did a trial fit of my
> gear reduction starter with my engine on the work bench.  It looks  
> like
> the drive gear touches the back of the flywheel thus needing a shim of
> about 1/16" or so to clear with comfort.  Something tells me this  
> can't
> be good.  Has this happened to anyone else??  Also, there doesn't seem
> to be any chamfer on the starter drive gear.  Is this necessary since
> the flywheel gear ring is chamfered on the wrong side for this type
> starter.  Also again, does the drive gear start spinning  
> immediately or
> does it engage the flywheel ring first??  What's the concept here??
> I'd love some feedback on this from the awesome storehouse of  
> knowledge
> on this list.  As always, many thanks.
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