Well, I haven't had much time to ride this season (and it's fast drawing to a close in Utah, it seems) and my bike has been out of commission for awhile. Sick of that.
So yesterday I decided I'd check/change the middle/final oil and maybe tear into the front forks to change seals. What a dirty job.
Of course the middle and final gearbox fill bolts were stuck solid. The allen wrench alone wouldn't budge the bolts and they were previously stripped a little. I was able to latch onto the middle gear fill bolt with vice grips, and at the same time, used the allen wrench with a cheater bar and was able to unscrew the bolt. The rear was easier.
I don't think the oil had been changed in a long time. Nice to get rid of the black ooze and fill with fresh clean gear oil.
Was also going to color-tune but didn't have time. I did a quick carb synch with the trusty Morgan Carbtune, though. Will work more on carbs and jetting later.
Now on to the fork seals....
Had a pair I bought off of EBay months ago and dreaded the job. It's always a mucky, oily, messy job. But I tore into the forks. It's much easier having done it 1 or 2 times before. This time I loosened the allen bolts on the bottom of the forks and the spring caps before removing the forks from the bike. Then I removed the wheel, calipers, fender, etc, and removed one fork at a time. Then I drained the oil and dissasembled with little effort.
Problem is always the old seals. They just won't come out without shredding/cutting the heck out of them. Not sure what kind of seals are in there but it looks like Yamaha presses in some kind of seal that never comes out. Either that or the flanges inside the fork tube are part of the fork casting itself.
Anyway, I was a bit worried because the replacement seals looked suspicious. I determined that they were designed to sit on top of the first flange - no circlip involved. I tapped them in with a rubber mallet. They seem cheap, will probably be redoing the forks again, especially if there are any pits on the fork slider I didn't smooth out. But in reassembling and testing, they seem to work so far. I have not air pressurized the shocks. It's nice to have damping again. If these things work, it's always nice to not have oil all over your brake calipers/pads/discs as well.
Only one problem. I lost the little metal bracket that attaches to the square notches in the forks and that holds the tops of the brake pads in place. Drat. Anyone have one they could throw in the mail quick?
Hope to be riding soon. By summer's end I should have some before / after restore pics.
Ben
So yesterday I decided I'd check/change the middle/final oil and maybe tear into the front forks to change seals. What a dirty job.
Of course the middle and final gearbox fill bolts were stuck solid. The allen wrench alone wouldn't budge the bolts and they were previously stripped a little. I was able to latch onto the middle gear fill bolt with vice grips, and at the same time, used the allen wrench with a cheater bar and was able to unscrew the bolt. The rear was easier.
I don't think the oil had been changed in a long time. Nice to get rid of the black ooze and fill with fresh clean gear oil.
Was also going to color-tune but didn't have time. I did a quick carb synch with the trusty Morgan Carbtune, though. Will work more on carbs and jetting later.
Now on to the fork seals....
Had a pair I bought off of EBay months ago and dreaded the job. It's always a mucky, oily, messy job. But I tore into the forks. It's much easier having done it 1 or 2 times before. This time I loosened the allen bolts on the bottom of the forks and the spring caps before removing the forks from the bike. Then I removed the wheel, calipers, fender, etc, and removed one fork at a time. Then I drained the oil and dissasembled with little effort.
Problem is always the old seals. They just won't come out without shredding/cutting the heck out of them. Not sure what kind of seals are in there but it looks like Yamaha presses in some kind of seal that never comes out. Either that or the flanges inside the fork tube are part of the fork casting itself.
Anyway, I was a bit worried because the replacement seals looked suspicious. I determined that they were designed to sit on top of the first flange - no circlip involved. I tapped them in with a rubber mallet. They seem cheap, will probably be redoing the forks again, especially if there are any pits on the fork slider I didn't smooth out. But in reassembling and testing, they seem to work so far. I have not air pressurized the shocks. It's nice to have damping again. If these things work, it's always nice to not have oil all over your brake calipers/pads/discs as well.
Only one problem. I lost the little metal bracket that attaches to the square notches in the forks and that holds the tops of the brake pads in place. Drat. Anyone have one they could throw in the mail quick?
Hope to be riding soon. By summer's end I should have some before / after restore pics.
Ben
Comment