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How to Change/Lube Driveshaft U-Joint

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  • How to Change/Lube Driveshaft U-Joint

    Topkat, or Admininstrators. Please review this for tech tips and move it as you please.. or delete if it sucks. Hopefully there is a place to post these pics permanently (and change the links). But I will leave em up for the time being.. (and delete this first paragraph please)>

    Hello, In rehabing my old bike I found myself wondering about the Universal Joint in the driveshaft. Its piece of mind to know what shape everything is in.


    First thing I did was to open up the rubber boot between the middledrive and the swingarm, and used a piece of wood in the spokes of the rear tire (bike on centerstand) to hold it still while I removed the 4 bolts holding the Ujoint to the middledrive flange. They are on there pretty tight so prepare to grunt.

    With that out of the way you can remove the rear wheel, final drive assembly, rear shocks and swingarm.

    The driveshaft will pull right out as has been covered in many threads (needs a healthy pull with some pliers with couple layers of paper towel or a rag in the jaws.. or a slide hammer if ya have one)..

    Now you have the Ujoint in your hands, and this is where the adventure begins............... (Your vision blurs..... you hear the sound of tiny bells ringing somewhere in the distance. Suddenly you realize your in another world!! ) Ok seriously now....

    The pictures tell the story so I'll just add some tips and things Ive picked up over the years.

    Here she is...


    Not the biggest one in the world and it is also not lube-able in the normal sense. The cross on this one does not have passages for grease to pass thru the 4 ends, rather the hole you see only goes in so far. A grease zirk like you often see on automotive ujoints wouldnt help here cause they are all closed. You would have to have grease fittings in all four caps and they would no doubt have to be the type that use a "needle tip" of a grease gun or a chainsaw tip greaser because I doubt a normal zirk would ever make it sticking out of a cap (no clearance). Mabye there are other ujoints that can be used but I dont know that, this post could be edited someday to correct this I hope. I would think a ujoint like you normaly see in automotive applications with the zirk in the middle of the joint would work. Dont qoute me. One more thing, on this setup, the yolk that hooks to the middledrive has an angled side to it. This makes it more difficult because a normal socket will not fit on there and line up easily.. More on that later.

    The job can be done with a vice or even a strong C clamp. In my case I have a balljoint press kit for 4wheel drive axles, it is basically a big C clamp. On cars/trucks I clamp this thing into a vice and use an air impact to run the screw in and out although only in small amounts because its not so much the pressure that free's up a stuck ujoint, its a little pressure and just the right tapping/rap with a hammer combined with some penetrant. Or you can and probably will bend the yolk ear, be gentle.

    Usually on cars I can just use the big clamp cause the hole is big enough and so is the male end, I dont need adapters. In this case the ujoint is much smaller and I had to use sockets to do the same thing, this is also how you would do it in a vise. I decided to go with my big clamp because I could sit at a desk and do it at night in my house.

    Ok on with it.

    Here you see the Ujoint with the C clips removed and the clamp. When everything is right, you should be able to move the C clips around in a circle with a screwdriver, and with a little more force get em up and out of the groove, ya might need to use a screwdriver and a hammer to get em moving. The clips on this ujoint are pretty tough looking in my experience, most automotive ones Ive seen are pretty lame and break really easy. (plus most are rusty and rotten because they are not protected by a rubber boot). Also note that I have marked the yolks with a blue paint pen, this will let me keep them lined up the same way when it goes back together, I will replace the paint lines with some scratches with a file later.



    Now time to take it apart. Hopefully you have sprayed it a few times with penetrating fluid by now, it helps. I will admit right now this can be a pain if your not so good with your hands. If you have a helper this could be much easier, one person can run the vice or clamp and the other could help hold it all in place until ya get tension on it..

    As you can see here I am using sockets, one that is smaller than the bearing cap of the Ujoint and one that is larger that will recieve the opposite cap. Just use your best judgement because there are many sizes of Ujoints but in our application they are smaller so you wont need any real big ones. The black metal piece you see is part of my ball joint kit, its just a flat part that keeps the socket from falling thru the hole, its made for bigger stuff.




    Be carefull now, too much pressure will only bend the yolk itself and then you have problems. Only apply enough pressure to make it tight, then use a hammer and tap around the "strap" or the hole that the bearing cap is in. Usually you will see and hear it pop loose and move.. if ya miss it and it falls apart in your hands thats ok dont get mad.. put it together again and keep pushing and tapping until you get all the way over and one cap falls out (into the big socket or at least is loose).



    Here you see the first cap pushed out and the cross is over to the left.. now to go back the other way.. to be carefull/gentle with it you should engage the other cap back into its hole (in reverse) so try to fit it in there then tap it with a plastic hammer or a piece of wood.. get it started .. now find a smaller socket that fits on the end of the bare cross so that you can push the whole thing back the other direction and get the other cap out.



    Thats it! Now the first half is free.



    These Ujoints have a internal seal as you can see.. it almost looks like RTV (I think it probably is). It is best to keep the bearing caps seperated and remember which leg they came from (I never do but dont do what I do haha).
    Ok onward and upward.

    Here's where this one gets a bit trickier. The side that hooks up to the middledrive box has a tapered or angled edge. A regular socket will not fit on here very well and makes it a fumbley mess.. I took a piece of 1 inch galvanized pipe and cut off a chunk.. I think it was about a 9 or 10 degree angle but I ended up fine tuning it on a belt sander. You can see in this next picture, it looks just like a socket but with an angled end this is where again it would help to have a helper to hold it all together while someone runs the vice/clamp.



    Now do the same thing again.. push one side out, and then use that smaller socket to push the cross and go back the other way. Now you have the feeling of halfway point. (drink appropriate beverage now).



    Now its time to clean it all up. Solvent, carb cleaner or whatevever to clean up the cross, but be carefull with the caps. They have seals and you dont wanna mess that up..

    If you have a new Ujoint then you can skip this part, maybe if you wanna take the time put a coat of some spraypaint on it to protect it for the years. If your just rehabing an old one and nothing has broken yet then you can remove the needles from the caps with a pokey if you want. Clean em off and put em back in with some new grease to hold em in place..

    Warning!! Many times I have messed up and dropped a bearing cap and spread the needles all over the place. This probably wont happen to these because of the rubber boot protecting the area.. These will not rust up like on car driveshafts that are exposed to the weather. However I have at least twice been on my hands and knee's at the bottom of a grease pit under a vehicle searching hopelessly with a light for those needles.. No joke both times I managed to find everyone, and a few others from old jobsl hahaha..

    Its important on any Ujoint to make sure that the needles are held in with a little grease and in position. In the case of me re-using this one, after I cleaned em up a little I put some grease in each cap and "shove" it onto a leg of the cross a few times to sort of pump the grease up in there.. then I turn them and push them on and let the excess come out so its easier later (its like a shoe stuck in the mud). Then I will add just a little more so there is some to squeeze out when ya finally put it together.



    By the way, it had black paint on it already.. All I did was clean it up and repaint it.. (Its sort of my trademark to have a yellow yolk or cross on a shaft somewhere, just for fun but a secondary purpose could be that if you ever had to identify your bike to a cop or whatever, you have a "hidden" thing that only you could know about. Just shine a flashlight into the boot and see that silver and yellow, thats MY bike).
    Ive been looking for a place for one of those hidden marks and that seemed like a pretty good one.. ok..

    Normally I would reassemble the same way I took it apart. But in the case of those angled ears on the yolk that hooks to the middledrive, I decided to just do em both simultaneously.

    Warning!!!! This is where you want to make sure the needles are all against the inner walls of the caps.. it is common for them to fall into the cap as your trying to assemble it and get pinched or trapped in there and it is a pain and you might ruin it all .. make sure you put grease in there and run your pinky finger around in there and make sure they are lined up right, and then check all 4 caps on the cross before you start assembling so you know they will fit on.

    Ok so you see I pushed the caps on by hand and am attempting to keep the cross centered between the two caps as I begin to squeeze it back together. Inevitably one side moves more than the other so move a little at a time and make sure the cross stays centered so the needles have something to ride on and not fall into the bottom of the caps. A little anti-sieze compound helps here in the "straps" or the cap hole (whatever). Sometimes you have to push/pull pretty hard on the cross to get it to move back and forth because the grease has it hydraulically locked.. make sure it moves back and forth and move in small steps.. keep turning it..
    I hate doing it this way.. I prefer to push one side on and past where it would seat.. but not all the way out like when you remove them.. then you have enough of the leg of the cross sticking out the other side to get the next cap started and know its lining up well.



    Here you see that I have one side in its place and have put the C clip back in. Then I turned it around and had to use my angled adapter again to push the other side in until the groove for the clip just clears the inner edge of the yolk.

    The reason I used the adapter is because you are pushing against the body of the yolk this way and not the other cap. Often times they become to tight when you assemble them. Only after you tap around with a hammer will they adjust and loosen up.. OK then...



    Warning!! A word about C clips.
    If all is well you should be able to spin the clips around with a screwdriver. And with a little more force, they start popping out of the groove. Try to position them on the "upper" part of the yolk, in other words have the open part of the clip down toward the bottom of the yolk so that the whole clip is on the nice flat that is the upper part of the yolk.

    Ok by now you should get the groove of things.. When I painted my parts, I replaced my blue paint pen marks with a few scratches that I made with a file. So line up the yolks the way they originally were and put the second half on. You can do em at the same time like the last one or since the sides of this one are flat you can just push one at a time and ALWAYS keep the cross moving back and forth between the caps and turning a little. Imagine in your mind, all those needles in those caps and you want them to stay on the sides like the tilt-o-whirl.

    Here I am doing both at the same time again, as you can see one side is reaching home first so as soon as it gets there slip the C clip in place.. then switch to the other side.. If its real tight and your having trouble .. remember the same thing when you took them apart.. a little tension and then tapping with a hammer makes it move. I often will hold the whole thing in my hand or against a bench and hit it with a hammer on either side, on the ends of the caps and around the "straps".. a little of this tapping will reposition things and free up a "tight" ujoint. Then its nice and free moving in your hand.. this means it will be the same way when its flying around in a circle at high speed.



    Now if any of your paintjob survives all this, you can put a little tape in the middle around the cross and shoot the yolks one more time to freshen things up.. If you even care, I just do it for fun.

    Here is how mine ended up.
    Also in this pic is the adapter I made, I belive I used about a 9 or 10 degree angle but I cut the 1 inch pipe with a hacksaw so ended up adjusting the angle on a belt sander till it lined up right.



    Eventually perhaps this post could contain part numbers or alternative ujoints that will work.

    Just a note. On a normal bearing, it is constantly spinning and wearing a smooth pattern. Eventually it wears out and becomes loose. On a Ujoint, it never makes a complete circle or anything near it.. Even though it may work well and seem smooth to your hands.. a new one or some new grease combined with repositioning it can refresh it and make it work much better/smoother.

    As protected as these ujoints are in there boots, they will truly last a long long time. But it doesnt mean they couldnt benefit from a little loving if your so inclined. If you need to replace a bad one, I hope this post will help.

    Best of luck,
    ClarkGriswald
    XS1100 F/G (79 Bike/80 Motor)
    Grab a tetanus shot and jump on!!!

  • #2
    Great post! I only noticed three typos that you may want to fix before making it a permanent tech tip. Everyone (when you were talking about finding every one of the needle bearing rollers) should be every one - seperate words instead of one word. This sentence, "I will admit right now this can be a pain if your not so good with your hands." The word your should be you're. In this sentence. "Often times they become to tight when you assemble them." To should be spelled too.

    Thanks for a beatifully composed and informative post! I can tell that you love what you do. I love working on my 11 too!

    Tim
    Tim Ripley - Gaithersburg, MD
    1981 XS1100 Special "Spoiled Rotten" Just sold - currently bikeless!!
    23mm float height
    120 main jets
    42.5 pilot jets
    drilled stock airbox with K&N
    Jardine 4 to 1 Exhaust
    spade fusebox
    1st and 2nd gear fix

    Comment


    • #3
      Excellent write-up! That's the way this whole forum came to be, people working on some sort of problem, then taking some time to take a few pictures and document it for others. I or one of the other moderators will copy it over to a special "tips under construction" area. We'll sort out the photos so we don't have to rely on a permanent link to an off-site photo host, then we'll get it listed in the appropriate section.

      Heck, we might even go in and change "yolk" to "yoke" just for the fun of it.

      Well done...
      Ken Talbot

      Comment


      • #4
        I can't believe I missed all the yolks!! Ha ha ha

        You're a sharp one, Ken!
        Tim Ripley - Gaithersburg, MD
        1981 XS1100 Special "Spoiled Rotten" Just sold - currently bikeless!!
        23mm float height
        120 main jets
        42.5 pilot jets
        drilled stock airbox with K&N
        Jardine 4 to 1 Exhaust
        spade fusebox
        1st and 2nd gear fix

        Comment


        • #5
          Nice Job!

          How about I just mine to you?
          XS1100SF
          XS1100F

          Comment


          • #6
            I just might add to this that after removing the 4 bolts for the ujoint, if you drain your middle drive and take it off, the yoke is right there and will slide right off.. No shock, wheel, or final drive removal is necessary.


            Tod
            Try your hardest to be the kind of person your dog thinks you are.

            You can live to be 100, as long as you give up everything that would make you want to live to be 100!

            Current bikes:
            '06 Suzuki DR650
            *'82 XJ1100 with the 1179 kit. "Mad Maxim"
            '82 XJ1100 Completely stock fixer-upper
            '82 XJ1100 Bagger fixer-upper
            '82 XJ1100 Motor/frame and lots of boxes of parts
            '82 XJ1100 Parts bike
            '81 XS1100 Special
            '81 YZ250
            '80 XS850 Special
            '80 XR100
            *Crashed/Totalled, still own

            Comment


            • #7
              Good point trbig, I thought about doin that too but for me it wasnt just about the ujoint project, I wanted to relube the swingarm bearings and also give it a fresh coat of black paint so yeah your right I did more work than was needed.

              I have no way to edit anything but whoever handles these things is welcome to change things around or add stuff I dont care. Im sure I probably missed something (although I had to shorten it by 800 characters to make it work haha)

              Yeah I forgot about the yolk, thing. I almost changed the to into a too, but somehow forgot it as I was proof reading.. was tired last night and was being assisted by bells beer. hahah.
              XS1100 F/G (79 Bike/80 Motor)
              Grab a tetanus shot and jump on!!!

              Comment


              • #8
                Wow good job Clark. Something else for me to dismantle this winter. (grumble, grumble)


                Ozz
                Four wheels move your body, two wheels move your soul.

                ATGATT, It could save your life!

                1980 XS 1100SG
                Dyna 3 Ohm Hi Output Coils
                Pod Filters
                DynoJet Kit
                T.C.'s Fuse Block
                Slip Streamer Turbo Windshield
                Custom Tank and Side Cover Decals
                V-Max Auto CCT

                Comment


                • #9
                  Leave it to a "Michigander" to get the job done right! Married one years ago - learned more about "stuff" from her Dad than anyone else I ever knew. Nuthin' they don't know about!
                  Congrats! GREAT POST! Hurry up with the "Tech Tip" embed!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Great post Griz,

                    I have a question that you seem to be well qualified to answer.
                    I have a u joint that has some side play. When you take the spider and push it side to side, you can see the gap between it and the seal shoulder. There is .004 gap in one and .006 on the other.
                    It looks like the ends of the spider bottom out in the caps, so, can the caps be pressed on all the way, and then the caps be positioned between the ears to center the spider on assembly? That would leave the clips not tight against the inner surface of the yokes. But at least that way the spider couldn't get too far off center when it rotates, and cause an imbalance. Until the caps slip out and are stopped by the clips. Then I'm back to where I am now.
                    What to do, oh what to do!
                    Any words of wisdom?
                    Thanks, CZ

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Hi Clark,
                      let me add one little tip to your comprehensive write-up.
                      I adopted the following procedure while working on carburettors which also have small parts that can fall onto the floor and then disappear into the 4th dimension.
                      Do the work in a big cafeteria style tray.
                      Fred Hill, S'toon
                      XS11SG with Spirit of America sidecar
                      "The Flying Pumpkin"

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        It would be nice to find out if the bearing cups and needle rollers are available new somewhere. On car and truck transmissions, they are a replaceable item but apparently not on the XS1100 UJ joint. I wonder if, like other bearings, they are available somewhere?? It would be good to be able to renovate the UJ fully by replacing them all.....
                        XS1100F 1980 European model. Standard. Dyna coils. Iridium plugs. XS750 final drive (sometimes). Micron fork brace. Progressive front springs. Geezer regulator/rectifier. Stainless 4 into 2 exhaust. Auto CCT (Venturer 1300) SOLD. New project now on the go. 1980 European model.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by James England View Post
                          It would be nice to find out if the bearing cups and needle rollers are available new somewhere. On car and truck transmissions, they are a replaceable item but apparently not on the XS1100 UJ joint. I wonder if, like other bearings, they are available somewhere?? It would be good to be able to renovate the UJ fully by replacing them all.....
                          usually with u joints its the whole thing that gets replaced not just the caps and needles.
                          Nathan
                          KD9ARL

                          μολὼν λαβέ

                          1978 XS1100E
                          K&N Filter
                          #45 pilot Jet, #137.5 Main Jet
                          OEM Exhaust
                          ATK Fork Brace
                          LED Dash lights
                          Ammeter, Oil Pressure, Oil Temp, and Volt Meters

                          Green Monster Coils
                          SS Brake Lines
                          Vision 550 Auto Tensioner

                          In any moment of decision the best thing you can do is the right thing, the next best thing is the wrong thing, and the worst thing you can do is nothing.

                          Theodore Roosevelt

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                          • #14
                            There was thread a while ago about finding an aftermarket source for these, but with no success. The sad part is that some new OEM ones were found sitting in a warehouse somewhere (OEM supplier I think), but due to Yamahas 'ownership' of them, they can only be sold through them. The u-joint comes up as discontinued from Yamaha, so there they sit in limbo...
                            Fast, Cheap, Reliable... Pick any two

                            '78E original owner - resto project
                            '78E ???? owner - Modder project FJ forks, 4-piston calipers F/R, 160/80-16 rear tire
                            '82 XJ rebuild project
                            '80SG restified, red SOLD
                            '79F parts...
                            '81H more parts...

                            Other current bikes:
                            '93 XL1200 Anniversary Sportster 85RWHP
                            '86 XL883/1200 Chopper
                            '82 XL1000 w/1450cc Buell, Baker 6-speed, in-progress project
                            Cage: '13 Mustang GT/CS with a few 'custom' touches
                            Yep, can't leave nuthin' alone...

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Here's the thread on the U joint replacement part #'s....

                              http://www.xs11.com/forum/showthread...oyota+forklift
                              2H7 (79) owned since '89
                              3H3 owned since '06

                              "If it ain't broke, modify it"

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