Tony,
I just discovered the same issue on my 1983 R65. I had assumed that that starter was the issue, and spent the morning trying to swap starters. Upon removing the old Bosch starter, I found that the ring gear had separated from the clutch carrier. I counted three points of connection between the carrier and the Gear ring (six rivet holes?). Are you planning on replacing the whole carrier or bolting the gear back to the carrier?
I noticed that you can access the rivets through the starter pretty easily. Would it be possible to bolt the ring gear back on to the carrier without having to open the engine rear.
This sounds like a bad Idea right?
James
I'll start at the end....
Firstly, my sympathies.
Yes it is a bad idea to even think about using bolts inserted by simply lining up the now vacant holes in the starter cavity :-)
I would seriously consider re-riveting the ring gear to the carrier if:-
1/. I had it all out of the bike so i could look at it and line it up the same way the factory did for balance reasons.
2/. The holes had not been wallowed out, as it is a no- brainer that at least the last couple to let go will be well wallowed out, figure on re-drilling all holes and then reaming them to a precise size.
3/. I had the time to turn up and harden a dolly and press to form the rivets (you can't buy them, I tried a few years back when i wanted to rivet rather than weld something and nobody has riveting tools anymore.
4/. I could buy the rivets, or buy suitable stock steel (which would then mean having to either make yet more tools to form the initial rivet shape or (more likely) turn rivet blanks from round stock (I should mention at this stage that I have no idea of what properties rivet steel needs to have, but i guess an engineers guide at the Uni library could tell me, and at some point the decision as to whether this would be a cold or hot rivet process would need to be made.
My further reason for not trying to re-rivet is that if the manufacturer thought bolts were appropriate they would have used bolts. Now having said that there are plenty of cases of rivets being successfully replaced by bolts - on my own bikes I have brake discs bolted to carriers and rear wheel drive cups bolted not riveted. But in both cases there was ample "prior art" to verify that bolts in place of rivets would work. Replacing rivets with bolts on the clutch carrier would make you a pioneer - I am generally no in favour of being a pioneer around things that might fly to pieces and hurt me.
And my last reason for neither bolting or riveting a failed carrier - why did it fail in the first place?
Ringwood motorcycles have a 1984 R100 with a complete carrier and clutch. the BM shop in Brisbane has one for $130 + post (and Christoph is a good bloke). After that there is Motobins for a new one or Motorworks.
There is a long (and expensive) list of things you need to do this job properly:-
Essential
5 New flywheel bolts.
6 new Clutch bolts (and star washers)
4 new drive shaft bolts
Molly paste for spline and clutch diaphragm lube
Probably need and a good idea anyway.
Rear Engine oil seal
O ring for intermediate carrier
O ring for oil pump
4 new bolts for oil pump
New clutch plate
Front gearbox seal
Neutral switch (if your existing one is leaking, now is the time to fix it)
Driveshaft boot - the chances of getting a 30 year old boot back on without tearing it are very low.
Tool wise you will need to buy a clutch centering tool (there is a procedure to use the gearbox itself on the web, but I reckon it is a bit rinky-dink. You are also going to have to shorten up the working arm of an 8mm allen key to get at the RHS lower gearbox mounting bolt. Buy a cheapie and cut 3/4" off the other end and weld a washer to the end of it - instant crank blocking tool which you are also going to need.
The reason you need all new bolts is that the originals driveshaft, flywheel and clutch bolts are of the "torque to yield" type and should NEVER be re-used. The oil pump bolts are ordinary hi-tensile bolts, but they are torques well into the upper range for a bolt of that size, replacement is sensible as digging a broken one out from that location would be a bugger.
No matter how good it looks i could not bring myself to re-use a 30 year old clutch plate.
I will put up photos when I do mine, which may be of some assistance to you. My cltuch carrier is about to leave the USA and I ordered everything (except the clutch plate which I already had) yesterday from motobins (with a few service items chucked in, just past $170).