Glad it worked out for you and thanks for posting. A couple of things-
You do not have to remove both front motor mounts to do a valve adjust. In fact, there is absolutely no advantage in removing the left / front bracket. I have done several valve checks / adjustments on different C-14s and never had the engine to frame relationship shift when only removing the right / front motor mount bracket.
Can you expand a bit on moving the rear mount adjustment(s), hearing a clunk and the front brackets coming back into alignment? It would seem that moving the rear motor mounts with the front brackets removed could only result in the engine shifting downward.... but how would the engine have shifted upward just by removing the front brackets in the first place? Did you have a jack under the engine at some point? Were both front brackets misaligned in the same direction (i.e. both up or both down relative to the engine)? I honestly do not remember the finer points of this discussion and am not picturing what went on with your procedure.
Thanks,
Brian
Sure thing, happy to do it.
I have tip over bars that mount on the front engine mount bolts (bottom of the front engine mount brackets), using the bolts that thread into the engine case. When I installed the bars, I did them one side at a time, never having both front bolts out at the same time.
When I pulled the bars to remove the fairings to do the valve inspection, both sides were now off at the same time, and the engine moved
UP, relative to the holes in
both brackets (still not sure why). No jacking up of the engine was done, bike was just sitting on the center stand. Maybe the C14 engine just defies the laws of gravity.
I had noticed when I originally installed the bars, the tops of the lower holes in both front aluminum engine brackets were scarred by the threads of the bolts. It was difficult to get the bolts back in, because the threads were seriously rubbing the top of the holes in both brackets.
I didn't have a Allen head socket short enough to remove the bolts over the #1 exhaust with the left side bracket in the way. It was just easier to remove the left side bracket completely to get the bolts out, to remove the cams. Since the engine bolt was already out, and I could see the holes were no longer aligned, it mattered even less. As I recall, that's the same reason vortex2 (Steve?) removed the left side bracket on his bike.
I'm not sure how the rear mounting bolts actually work. There are 2 bolts that go all the way through the bike, connecting to the frame on each side, with the engine sandwiched in between. There are no 'brackets' really, just bolts going through everything.
It would seem that just loosening these bolts would do nothing, but that is certainly not the case. The heads of these bolts are on the right side (Allen heads), and I believe they thread into the engine case itself. When you tighten the bolts, it pulls the engine up against the right side frame. The nut on the left side is a jam nut, to keep the bolt from coming loose, and possibly pulls the left side frame tight against the engine (not sure about this either).
Clearly when I loosened the last bolt, the engine dropped into place. There was a loud 'clunk', loud enough that my buddy standing next to me heard it too (he's half deaf, and I forgot to ask him if he had his hearing aids in or not).
After that, I was able to start the front bolts, and turn them until they hit the red thread lock goo, with my fingers. Something I could not do when I originally installed the tip over bars.
