Thanks Ruffus, Tom & Karl. The local dealer seems confident that he can get a variator outer for about £40 “next day” so I’m happy to wait a few days and see. Inner surface of fan seems close to pristine, so I'll bear in mind the suggestion of smoothing off the burrs and reassembling if the wait for parts is going to be too long Karl. CVT belt seems OK - no black debris or stress fractures-and no flat spots on rollers, so I’m tempted to wait until 15K miles before going back in there to replace.
Whilst I’d rather it hadn’t happened, it has been a useful learning opportunity for me and stripping the CVT no longer holds that fear of the unknown for me!
Meant to comment on this earlier Neil.
Yep - I too was a little nervous the first time opening up my scooter's CVT system
I'm a pretty good carpenter - and a bit of an a/c VW mechanic - but CVT's and scooters!? Lots could go wrong!
Fortunately - working on VWs taught me to be careful tightening things into alloys!
Things seemed easy enough in the manual, but
there is Murphy's Law. ....then the belt cover stuck fast like it was welded on my LIKE200i, etc.
There were two 'pry-points' - but I had to figure safe ways to make use of them.
"Don't get the belt cover bolts mixed up - they're different lengths!"
Figured out from youtube that the lower skirt panel releases with a
slid to the rear - don't pull!
And, as always - pay attention to how things were fitted - sequence of the washers - faced which way?!
I took photos!
I had to go thru this 4 times! (LIKE, Forza, Burgman, Liberty)
After my 3rd - the Burgman - I made as certain as I could, by studying manuals (official LIBERTY/ Piaggio manual download, $7.99) - that the Liberty was not going to be my undoing!
The LIBERTY's surprises??? .....torqx fasteners were all shot in there by very angry men !! TIGHT! so tight, some stripped.
Other than that....no worries.
You are probably like me, I just didn't want to screw up a perfectly good little machine!
I can wrench a little - still a crap dancer!
I tell ya - the Italians have a special way of writing English instructions for their Vietnamese made scooters!!
Stig