by Bill Jurgenson » Wed Apr 04, 2012 2:53 am
Unless the plates are warped, the wet clutch in the various versions of the Yamaha motor does not stick in the classical sense. I personally have never had warped plates in this engine.
It is just the "stickiness" of the cold oil dragging. After a few meters it will be fine and shifting into first after starting, altho it does jolt, does no damage.
the fainthearted can, as advised, put it in gear, pull the clutch and jostle back and forth a few times before starting. It will jolt anyway, perhaps not quite as badly.
Old brits have essentially dry clutches which sorta gets oily a bit ( if the oil level in the primary chain case is correct) and cork lines plates. These cork pads really do stick to the neighbor plate after a while.
Some "high-performance" engines from back then, mostly italians taken more or less from the circuit, have metal-metal (i.e.copper-steel) wet clutches which 13 and more plates and these either do not separate at all when cold or slip all the time, depending on the adjustment. Back then, one was in the habit for racers of heating the crankcase with a blowtorch or charcoal fire underneath, before starting the engine and even then thinner oil was in the thing until it was warm, the warming up done in the paddock, then the heavier Castrol 50 or 60 oil went in along with colder plugs and possibly with two strokes other jets. The clutch was fine once hot.
So is the XTZ clutch. there is no cure because it is not an ailment.
Using highest quality 10W50 synthetic oil does help a lot. cheap oils are much grabbier, not to mention what other damage they can cause.