Ya know, Tod... that's weird!
Can't remember now what member it was, but here a while back he posted his was leaking, too... described where.
Several members posted advice, but I could tell EXACTLY where his was leaking as he described it, and the suggestions were all off...
So I asked him if it was this particular place... same as mine...
And he said BINGO!
Then a few others chimed in as well with there's doing it.
I began to see a trend. Cody , Miles, & I have discussed what's been done in detail, and you know more about mine, as you said, than anybody!
Miles told me how they tried to re-torque the head the last time... and made it leak worse. Cody tried a whole new approach to re-torquing mine when it leaked again... didn't help. Got up in there, and could see a 2" piece of the gasket hanging out... dead center, back bottom side, where the jugs notch out. The gasket was a green colored one. The only 3 ways I could see that happening is 1) when we reassembled it, it somehow got torn. 2) warpage, and the pressure forced it out. 3) Design flaw in the head bolt placements & /or torque sequence / specs.
Then Cody began to recall that was the 4th time this has happened to him, and all 4 times he used the green gaskets that come w/ the set, not a Yamaha gasket. Cost was the reason why. Set was cheaper.
All I can think to say, then is ... it's just my luck. BUT, others have had this same problem, too.
It is a mystery I would like to solve... especially if it winds up being a design flaw that's common across the XS line... or crap gaskets, that should never be used again.
Either way... I'd sure like to know the answer why...
For now, all I can say is, if yours is leaking here... take some starting fluid and clean all the oily crap off... apply liberal amounts of high temp clear RTV across about a 6" wide area there... and let it cure thoroughly before riding again. I let mine cure 3 days. It will stop the leak, it's back up in there where you can't see it... fast & cheap fix. Has held up now for 4000 miles.
My boots are a lot cleaner now, and so's the bike...
Can't remember now what member it was, but here a while back he posted his was leaking, too... described where.
Several members posted advice, but I could tell EXACTLY where his was leaking as he described it, and the suggestions were all off...
So I asked him if it was this particular place... same as mine...
And he said BINGO!
Then a few others chimed in as well with there's doing it.
I began to see a trend. Cody , Miles, & I have discussed what's been done in detail, and you know more about mine, as you said, than anybody!
Miles told me how they tried to re-torque the head the last time... and made it leak worse. Cody tried a whole new approach to re-torquing mine when it leaked again... didn't help. Got up in there, and could see a 2" piece of the gasket hanging out... dead center, back bottom side, where the jugs notch out. The gasket was a green colored one. The only 3 ways I could see that happening is 1) when we reassembled it, it somehow got torn. 2) warpage, and the pressure forced it out. 3) Design flaw in the head bolt placements & /or torque sequence / specs.
Then Cody began to recall that was the 4th time this has happened to him, and all 4 times he used the green gaskets that come w/ the set, not a Yamaha gasket. Cost was the reason why. Set was cheaper.
All I can think to say, then is ... it's just my luck. BUT, others have had this same problem, too.
It is a mystery I would like to solve... especially if it winds up being a design flaw that's common across the XS line... or crap gaskets, that should never be used again.
Either way... I'd sure like to know the answer why...
For now, all I can say is, if yours is leaking here... take some starting fluid and clean all the oily crap off... apply liberal amounts of high temp clear RTV across about a 6" wide area there... and let it cure thoroughly before riding again. I let mine cure 3 days. It will stop the leak, it's back up in there where you can't see it... fast & cheap fix. Has held up now for 4000 miles.
My boots are a lot cleaner now, and so's the bike...
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