Hopefully these will help, It's great when a farly simple jobs turns out to be not so easy
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Originally posted by eepmep View PostI guess I dont need to take the end off if ther are other ways to refill them?~Jay
Guilty Ones M.C.
Manassas, Va.
1980 Standard G
2001 CBR 929RR
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If you take them out of the trees it's easy as pie. Get everything sealed back up on top, seals in and everything. Then with the forks back together, and the drain screw out, just just get one of those turkey injector syringes and if your lucky they are marked for amount. Then fill the syringe and put it in the drain hole with the forks upside down and put the fork oil in till the right amount has been squirted in, put the drain screw back in and turn the forks back right side up. Repeat for the other side and then reinstall the forks and get them setup and check them out. Everything should be good. This process goes easy and fast, and doesn't require opening the top. In fact, if the seals don't need changed, this is FAR faster for changing the oil than the normal method. You don't have do turn them upside down either, just on their side will usually work just fine and well, I did it upside down just to be sure nothing came back out the hole. The other person who did it, did it with the forks in the bike, and had to guess the amount that came back out the drain hole, I didn't want to try and guess that.Cy
1980 XS1100G (Brutus) w/81H Engine
Duplicolor Mirage Paint Job (Purple/Green)
Vetter Windjammer IV
Vetter hard bags & Trunk
OEM Luggage Rack
Jardine Spaghetti 4-2 exhaust system
Spade Fuse Box
Turn Signal Auto Cancel Mod
750 FD Mod
TC Spin on Oil Filter Adapter (temp removed)
XJ1100 Front Footpegs
XJ1100 Shocks
I was always taught to respect my elders, but it keeps getting harder to find one.
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Originally posted by cywelchjr View PostIf you take them out of the trees it's easy as pie. Get everything sealed back up on top, seals in and everything. Then with the forks back together, and the drain screw out, just just get one of those turkey injector syringes and if your lucky they are marked for amount. Then fill the syringe and put it in the drain hole with the forks upside down and put the fork oil in till the right amount has been squirted in, put the drain screw back in and turn the forks back right side up. Repeat for the other side and then reinstall the forks and get them setup and check them out. Everything should be good. This process goes easy and fast, and doesn't require opening the top. In fact, if the seals don't need changed, this is FAR faster for changing the oil than the normal method. You don't have do turn them upside down either, just on their side will usually work just fine and well, I did it upside down just to be sure nothing came back out the hole. The other person who did it, did it with the forks in the bike, and had to guess the amount that came back out the drain hole, I didn't want to try and guess that.~Jay
Guilty Ones M.C.
Manassas, Va.
1980 Standard G
2001 CBR 929RR
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I agree with phil. Except for the cap, they look like XS11 standard forks. But the cap area looks wrong, and that the fork seal is too tight says they are something really close but not quite the same. Now you can if you really want, put G forks on an E, but the G and H both have air forks and progressive front springs so the front handles a bit different than the non air and straight wound springs of the E and F. Crazy Steve also found that the air forks have an extra slider bushing that the non air forks don't have, so they are slightly better forks, but still not as good as the special forks (the special forks really are better made except for their weird brake caliper mounting system).
I know that many of the things I've heard owners of earlier standard model owners complain about handling wise, I've not experienced (at least not since I got rid of the stupid D404 that was on it when I bought the bike), and the things it did do stopped when I put the XJ shocks on the rear. It seems that mother Yamaha made little improvements to the suspension each model year, with the culmination for the XS standards being the XS1100H Venturer model in 81. Then they kind of took all of it and added air suspension to the back with the XJ in 82. But I digress. It might be that those are something else close that looks almost exactly the same, but is different at the top. It's hard to tell cause the photo looking down into the top of the fork isn't quite well enough lit and sharp enough to see, but there SHOULD be threads in there and I don't see any, it looks like it's held in by a clip of some sort.
That said, is you can find the right fork seals for them, they may still work fine if you can take them apart from the bottom. And as I mentioned, it's pretty easy to fill them from the drain hole, actually I think it's easier to fill them from there.Cy
1980 XS1100G (Brutus) w/81H Engine
Duplicolor Mirage Paint Job (Purple/Green)
Vetter Windjammer IV
Vetter hard bags & Trunk
OEM Luggage Rack
Jardine Spaghetti 4-2 exhaust system
Spade Fuse Box
Turn Signal Auto Cancel Mod
750 FD Mod
TC Spin on Oil Filter Adapter (temp removed)
XJ1100 Front Footpegs
XJ1100 Shocks
I was always taught to respect my elders, but it keeps getting harder to find one.
Comment
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Sorry guys, but those aren't XS11 forks.... very similar, but the 11 forks don't have that 'flat' on the inside or those 'webs' at the fender mount bosses...
Maybe a pic of the wheel, fender and/or brake calipers could offer more clues; you'll need to figure out what they are, otherwise finding the right seals or even the right amount of oil to put in will be tough. If I had to guess, I'd say those are off something newer, as I've seen some newer Yammy forks that don't have conventional fork caps; I've got a set of '80 XJ 650 forks that appear to be sealed, with a pressed-in steel plug instead of a removable cap...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...
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Originally posted by eepmep View PostI read on a post of a guy using a 2cc surynge and a small tube and slowly cilled threw the drain hole?
Now I just need to figure out whythey don't hold air pressure. I will change the o-rings to see it that helps but I couldn't see any bubbles at the valve with a soap test. Hints would help. No oil leaking anywhere.1980 XS 1100 Special
Mostly stock & original
Added Yamaha fairing (w/ 8-track!)
Torpedo bags
New paint (still) pending
Stainless brake lines
Tkat forkbrace
Coils from Honda 1000
Previous bikes:
1968(?) 350 Harley Davidson
1977 Yamaha 650
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Originally posted by barrelguy View PostI just drained and refilled my fork oil the other night (1100SG) I took out the air valve and used a syringe from my dentist that had a small, curved end that fit down into that tiny hole.
Now I just need to figure out whythey don't hold air pressure. I will change the o-rings to see it that helps but I couldn't see any bubbles at the valve with a soap test. Hints would help. No oil leaking anywhere.Cy
1980 XS1100G (Brutus) w/81H Engine
Duplicolor Mirage Paint Job (Purple/Green)
Vetter Windjammer IV
Vetter hard bags & Trunk
OEM Luggage Rack
Jardine Spaghetti 4-2 exhaust system
Spade Fuse Box
Turn Signal Auto Cancel Mod
750 FD Mod
TC Spin on Oil Filter Adapter (temp removed)
XJ1100 Front Footpegs
XJ1100 Shocks
I was always taught to respect my elders, but it keeps getting harder to find one.
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