Guys, in a previous thread where I announced myself as a new 80 1100 SG owner, it was brought up that I should check steering head bearings to be sure they are not worn and or gunked up with 28 year old grease. This is in reference to the 30 mph-ish weave/sway that the bike does, esp. after riding awhile and coming down from speed and then cruising slower through town.
All posts I find relating to the steering bearings, you guys are dremeling, freezing, heating, punching, drifting, and all kinds of other "-ings" to get the bearings OUT.
In the previous post I mention above, someone says that another person "checked his bearings, they were in good shape, so he cleaned them, regreased them and was good to go." (or his words were similar)
Question is, it appears I can do this by accessing things from the top w/o pulling the forks, etc. Is this correct?
I have no reason to think they are worn, the bike was completely garaged for 28 years and everything else I have taken apart thus far (rear end, lubed all splines, front wheel bearings, rear wheel bearings, middle/rear drive, et al) has been not too bad considering the age of the fluids. The bike has just over 13,000 original miles on it and was definitely never abused.
So with no reason to think they are worn or need replacing, am I on the right track as far as access from the top goes?
Thanks in advance!
All posts I find relating to the steering bearings, you guys are dremeling, freezing, heating, punching, drifting, and all kinds of other "-ings" to get the bearings OUT.
In the previous post I mention above, someone says that another person "checked his bearings, they were in good shape, so he cleaned them, regreased them and was good to go." (or his words were similar)
Question is, it appears I can do this by accessing things from the top w/o pulling the forks, etc. Is this correct?
I have no reason to think they are worn, the bike was completely garaged for 28 years and everything else I have taken apart thus far (rear end, lubed all splines, front wheel bearings, rear wheel bearings, middle/rear drive, et al) has been not too bad considering the age of the fluids. The bike has just over 13,000 original miles on it and was definitely never abused.
So with no reason to think they are worn or need replacing, am I on the right track as far as access from the top goes?
Thanks in advance!
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