Other than opening the case, is there a way to free a stuck clutch?
Here is what happened: Due to a hand injury, the bike was put in the garage for 2 months, transmission in first gear. When I went to start the bike yesterday, the following symptoms appeared:
1. The clutch lever at the handle bar moves normally, as does the lever at the back of the case.
2. When I pull in the clutch lever ad try to roll to bike, the transmission keeps the rear wheel from turning.
3. I can shift the bike into neutral to roll it (neutral light on),
4. The bike will start in neutral, but
5. it runs rough and after a minute or so it appeared that the clutch was beginning to burn (clutch smell and a trace of smoke from the gear box).
In the past, I have twice had issues when storing the bike over the winter. Usually I store it in neutral, and have had a clutch issue at times. (P.S., for the past several years, I have pulled the clutch lever periodically when the bike was in winters storage, and this problem did not occur). In the past, I could start in neutral, grab the brakes, and drop it into gear to free up the clutch. Due to the roughness of the engine running now, that is not an option.
Any ideas? Do you think that if I pull in the clutch in first gear, keep on the brake, and hit the starter it might break the clutch plates free? Or is there too high a risk of breaking the starter gear? Any other thoughts?
FYI, it is a 1982, and I don't consider myself competent enough to open it up and do a clutch job myself. Competent airhead mechanics are few and far between here, and it would be a logistical issue getting it trailered to a mechanic (and hence I would like to get it at least rideable if possible).
k_enn