by mr_luke » Sun Jun 16, 2013 3:18 am
If the MZ clutch taper occasionally serves that purpose, then I'm afraid I'm pretty sure it's purely a coincidence! A good, well fitting taper is one of the strongest ways possible to attach something to a shaft, and as far as I can tell the only times it will give up are when the nut isn't correctly torqued up (the factory manual instructs you to do it up incredibly tightly!), the taper wasn't perfectly free of oil or grease upon the last reassembly, or it has been damaged in the past by the clutch spinning due to one of the above reasons!
a previous owner was unable to remove the clutch from my crankshaft to replace the crank seals, and eventually resorted to releasing it with an angle grinder(!), so there is now a flat cut into one side of the taper, about 3/4" wide. Even so, I can confirm that when I siezed it a few weeks ago, while doing 60mph along the motorway with a heavily overloaded sidecar, the clutch stayed rock solid and the back wheel locked up for a good distance before I pulled the clutch in. I was carrying a dismantled motorcycle, a garden strimmer, and a load of tools in and around the sidecar, so I think that was probably one of the harshest siezures you could expect the clutch to be exposed to!
With regards to the OP's 251, assuming it's not a massive chunk missing, and it's only a part of the sealing surface, you should be able to bodge something up with araldite, superglue, or even just an extra blob of silicon gasket goo! My own crankcase has a small triangular chunk missing from the flange for the clutch cover, just under 1cm across and 1cm deep. The gap had previously been filled with araldite, filed flat where the gasket seals, but I used silicon gasket goo on the cover, and upon removal it took the small lump of glue with it! I just stuck an extra squirt of silicon in the gap and it's been fine since! If the damage was any worse I think I'd be trying to glue the original chunk back in, and obviously the ideal solution would be to find a friendly aluminium welder to weld it back in!