That's a Monty with a crank mounted clutch.
I'll give you a look at the insides as soon as I find my impact driver
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Why did they do that? I understand that it was the intention to use it on the VB series of Monties and VB initially came out with the crank mounted clutch (but these are VA cases). Very quickly they reverted and retrospectively offered under warranty the parts to convert back to the more conventional primary drive clutch. Apparently the c/m clutch worked well as a clutch but for some reason it was reputed to make gear changes at high revs difficult.
So why did they do it in the first place? The only advantage I can think of is that the faster spinning weight of the additional clutch on the crank, compared to the primary driven reduction geared conventional clutch (spinning about a quarter slower), gave more crank shaft inertia smoothing out power delivery (aka flywheel weights) or maybe reduced vibes. Of course the same effect can be achieved with, heavier crank, flywheel weights and heavier mags (effectively the samething) but this approach would add overall weight.
So what does the 'Brains Trust' think.
By the way, my intention at this stage is to use the c/m clutch and only to change if it is a real prob. I'm been told all the primary clutch parts bolt straight up with only the c/c cover needing changing (and I have a cover).
If you look closely at this early release publicity shot of the VB you'll notice that it has the c/m clutch. My VB should end up looking something like this.