I have a wafer adapter like this one on my '79 and it leaks like a faucet when the thermostat opens. The only option to attach lines to this unit is via worm drive clamps and they just don't hold up to the pressures involved. I want to be able to use compression style braided lines with this unit. Is it possible to replace the fittings on this unit ?
Oil Cooler adapter installation
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Those look like 1/4" NPT fittings, so you should be able to replace them with fittings that will work with the hose you want to use. Part of your problem MAY be wrong type hose or over tightening the clamps. With the barbs, you are NOT trying to keep the line from slipping off with the clamps, just securing so you have two points of contact at the barbs to keep the hose on. The bikes are running about 50 to 60psi if I remember from a lot of years ago.Transmission oil cooler line works well for these bikes.Ray Matteis
KE6NHG
XS1100 E '78 (winter project)
XS1100 SF Bob Jones worked on it!Comment
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On this type of unit, there are two large O-rings. One in between the adapter and the bike. And one in between the filter cover and the adapter. The oil filter bolt is longer than stock (because of an adapter). If these things are correctly mounted and it's only an output issue, you are correct to look at your barb/hose connections. The hose inner diameter might be too large for the barb. The housing output from the thermostat could also be cracked slightly and heat makes it worse.Comment
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Those look like 1/4" NPT fittings, so you should be able to replace them with fittings that will work with the hose you want to use. Part of your problem MAY be wrong type hose or over tightening the clamps. With the barbs, you are NOT trying to keep the line from slipping off with the clamps, just securing so you have two points of contact at the barbs to keep the hose on. The bikes are running about 50 to 60psi if I remember from a lot of years ago.Transmission oil cooler line works well for these bikes.3 PhotosComment
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The O-ring. Don't forget the thrust washer #5. It's almost always missing from the previous owner.
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I use one of these to monitor the oil temp. Even in the summer lugging a sidecar around it never gets over 225° which is good. 250° is hot enough to start breaking down the oil. Even if that's the case you change the oil more often. No big deal. If you see 300° on a bike you need an oil cooler (like a old GSXR they run hot in the summer). When I see oil coolers on Shovelhead and Evo Harleys in New England it always makes me chuckle. They run pretty cool unless they are not jetted properly (many are not, you hear it every day).
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I had a VDO temp gauge on my first XS1100. Fulll dress, stock, oil cooler after seeing 275F to 325F running up and down I5 through the central Valley of California. Yes, they can get hot, but it's usually in heavy traffic that they need the cooler.2 PhotosRay Matteis
KE6NHG
XS1100 E '78 (winter project)
XS1100 SF Bob Jones worked on it!Comment
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Aside from adding multiple connections/devices I consider as potential Failure Points? (O_o)
I'd be tempted to drive my Special in the daytime temps ( from March thru October-90 degrees by 10 am and STAYS above that till 10 pm...) as well as in the stop-n-go traffic full of road ragers while treating my Special like it wuz a daily driver.... ( ´・_・`)
I noped outta that Idea pretty quickly.... (゜Д゜*)
MUCH happier to ride in the daytime only during the winter months and switch to nighttime about this time of year... (´_ゝ`)
I mean, no better reason to hop on my XS and cruise round than to be out-n-about at the same time as these guys-
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Yep that's the one. Okay cool it's gone as of tomorrow. I always keep an extra filter and O ring handy, so this should be an easy fix. Thanks so much !Comment
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I use one of these to monitor the oil temp. Even in the summer lugging a sidecar around it never gets over 225° which is good. 250° is hot enough to start breaking down the oil. Even if that's the case you change the oil more often. No big deal. If you see 300° on a bike you need an oil cooler (like a old GSXR they run hot in the summer). When I see oil coolers on Shovelhead and Evo Harleys in New England it always makes me chuckle. They run pretty cool unless they are not jetted properly (many are not, you hear it every day).
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+1 on eliminating the oil cooler. I run 2 XS 's down here in the S Florida heat with conventional 20W/50, over 100K miles each with no issues. Just make sure the oil gets changed every 3K, these bikes run foreverLast edited by bikerphil; 04-24-2025, 06:39 PM.2H7 (79) owned since '89
3H3 owned since '06
"If it ain't broke, modify it"
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