Trev's on the money here. The early engine does not have a seal. Instead there is an oil slinger, simply a pressed steel circular shim (67 1239) which goes into the bare crankcase first, followed by the bearing, BSA Part No. 67 1240
With the crank fitted and the drive sleeve and cush all tightened down, the slinger is clamped between the bearing inner race and the drive sleeve and rotates with the crank. Drive sleeve is a close fit to the crankcase hole, some sleeves have a scroll in the periphery, others have a plain edge.
Later design BA Series crankcases have a seal, and a smaller diameter to the drive sleeve periphery. Later type drive sleeve fitted to an early case results in a gap between crankcase and sleeve, and engine oil transferred to the primary case.
All this well documented in previous posts, extensively covered in Cush Drive and Primary Problems.
The Longstroke engine uses an imperial deep groove ball race, not a roller race as on the later shortstroke design. This latter race is metric, so the crank and crankcase locations differ and they do not interchange. The ball race means that on final assembly there is no crank end float.
The ball race has a bore of 1 1/8", OD is 2 13/16" Width 13/16". This bearing is also used on the early A50 and A65 Unit Motors. Draganfly's online Parts Catalogue tells all. Drags list its real world identity as MS 11, so a fair choice of international source, quality and price. The shim you can cut from a bean can......
Muskys Mod adds a seal to the early shortstroke motor. Don't know if this is possible on the Longstroke cases because of the different size of bearing housing. Best left as original.
Swarfy.