Lubrication Points - Regular Maintenance

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BkrK12

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I'm doing an 8K maintenance on my '06 and am up to the point of lubricating pivot points (eg. levers, pedals, suspension pivots, etc.). Shop manual indicates lubing these points with LS. I can find no grease fittings on any of these items, leading me to the conclusion that you have to disassemble all of them to get them lubricated. Is this a correct assumption?

 
I'm doing an 8K maintenance on my '06 and am up to the point of lubricating pivot points (eg. levers, pedals, suspension pivots, etc.). Shop manual indicates lubing these points with LS. I can find no grease fittings on any of these items, leading me to the conclusion that you have to disassemble all of them to get them lubricated. Is this a correct assumption?
There's a good writeup on the FJRInfo site right here with lots of purty pics.

 
I'm doing an 8K maintenance on my '06 and am up to the point of lubricating pivot points (eg. levers, pedals, suspension pivots, etc.). Shop manual indicates lubing these points with LS. I can find no grease fittings on any of these items, leading me to the conclusion that you have to disassemble all of them to get them lubricated. Is this a correct assumption?
There's a good writeup on the FJRInfo site right here with lots of purty pics.
Thank you. Now I have to figure out just how much of this disassembly really needs to be done at 8K miles. Any suggestions would be appreciated.

 
Now I have to figure out just how much of this disassembly really needs to be done at 8K miles.
I think you will find that depends on who you ask. Some will say definitely, others will say its not necessary, but keep this in mind when deciding.

 
I thought it was called for at 12k miles...may be mistaken but I'll have to check.

According to the shop manual, lubrication of all these pivot points is called for every 4K miles. At 8K five of them have been apart and looked fine. The center stand and rear shock have to wait until I can get a skyhook to hold the bike up in the air. The dog bones look lke crap from the outside. But, I have hopes for them because there are seals protecting the bearings. Anything that requires lubrication every 4K should have a grease fitting.

 
Here's mine that I did a few years ago-have pixs if needed....Later,,, De :rolleyes:

Lessons learned from rear linkage lube. My ’04 FJR1300 is about 1 year old and has 9000 mi on it and I have ridden thru many rainstorms here in the Hotlanta area. After reading the many horror stories of rusted/non-greased parts, I bit the bullet to lube & inspect & here is what I found. Working from a 3’ high lift is great & having an overhead hoist above the lift is even better.

#1 Things needed: a 19mm hex socket (removes the front axle also) to remove & re torque the swing arm pivot shaft, a set of torx sockets for the one torx bolt on the front of the shifter mount, a good set of 6 point metric sockets (large ones too for re the swing arm pivot shaft nuts), a good set of combination metric wrenches, the factory service manual for the assembly pictures & torque values, a copy of the https://www.fjrtech.com/ article on lubing the pivot points for the instructions.

#2 There was no rust or fretting corrosion on any thing and all splines & bearings were greased & all shafts had a light coating of oil on them. If I had known this, I would have waited a few years to do this job.

#3 The center stands on the pre ‘04s (with their extra added gusset) may break, but they darned sure won’t fall off because of loosened bolts. These 4 bolts & nuts were the tightest & hardest to loosen of any I have ever seen. These 4 bolts were inserted from the outside, so the exhaust system has to be pried over & down to remove the bolts. While the book says to remove the exhaust system, you can do it without removing the headers by removing the muffler bolts & exhaust bolts to the center stand. When remounting the center stand, insert these 4 bolts from the inside so the exhaust won’t interfere. On the front 2 bolts I used a thick flat washer under the bolt head and purchased 2 thinner nuts (blue thread locker too) for proper exhaust clearance. I made sure that the weight of the bike was on the center stand before tightening these 4 center stand bolts/nuts.

#4 Remember which way the relay arm (the dog bones attach to the center of this) goes or you might have “falling rate” suspension. The arm with the bend in it goes to the back & is hooked to the Shock. A while back someone posted pixs of his relay are where he added grease fittings to it but I elected not to do this because I couldn’t see how the grease would get by the outer race of the needle bearing unless these bearing housings have a grease hole in them. Any ideas on this, guys & gals? Is there a hole in the bearing housing? I do believe that a grease fitting will work where there are 2 needle bearings separated by a space as in the center of the relay arm and on the swing arm.

#5 Remove the right muffler & the swing arm will have enough clearance to drop out.

#6 Didn’t pull the drive shaft out of the rear end cause it gets it’s lube from the rear end. Did remove the “U” joint and lube both splines with Moly lube. Looks like the “U” joint could go in either way but the splines on one end have a lead in bevel to help when inserting the drive shaft.

#7 Single best improvement was from lubing the shifter arm pivot, but it wasn’t from the added grease. This pivot is a shoulder bolt w/2 thrust washers & a “wave” washer & the proper clearance (read no slop) is obtained by screwing in the bolt till the wave washer is slightly compressed. The bolt is locked in place with blue thread locker from the factory. My bolt was too tight & was binding the shifter. You can easily check this by removing the upper shifter arm from the tranny shifter shaft & seeing that the foot shifter arm moves freely & isn’t binding. Mine was way too tight but I couldn’t tell it cause there is no slop in the linkage, until I disconnected it from the tranny. After removing the shoulder bolt & greasing it, I reinstalled it (with new blue thread locker) without binding it. What a difference. It shifted fine before but now it’s like warm butter. This shifter maintenance can be done by itself by removing the “Shifter/footpeg/sidestand” assy but this assy will have to be removed to remove the “U”joint.

Later,,,De

 
Thanks for the nice write-up De. I've got almost 20k on ole Maxine and haven't done much more than lube things I can easily get to. Except for the shifter arm pivot - cleaned and greased that when I put on the R-1 shift arm (really does make a difference).

 
There are variables that affect how soon and how often you need to lubricate:

1) How well the factory lubed things during assembly. We have seen some bikes with a lot of corrosion on the drive shaft and suspension pivot bolts and we have seen some which have been adequately lubricated at all points. Mine was in between with most points have good lubrication but some corrosion on the rear suspension pivots.

2) How much you ride and under what conditions. Most grease is not waterproof and will wash out over time. If you ride in the rain a lot or wash your bike a lot you will probably need to lubricate more often.

 
Certainly there is a great deal of variability due to riding conditions and how well the factory lubed them. If you take them apart and pack them with some "water proof" grease - I have had excellent luck with BelRay Saltwater Proof Grease (look in a dirt bike shop) - I tend to think the grease will hold up a long time. Mine have looked perfect ever since I packed them with the BelRay grease.

I also put grease zerks in all the joints. You MUST pierce the torrington bearing race for the grease to get into the bearing in several locations. I pressed the bearing out, drilled and tapped the hole for the zerk in the parent metal of the link, pressed the bearing back in and then lightly touched the race with a carbide drill bit to just break thru the race to allow grease in. This only takes a pinpoint of bearing area away and definitely allows grease into the bearing from the zerk.

 
I also put grease zerks in all the joints. You MUST pierce the torrington bearing race for the grease to get into the bearing in several locations. I pressed the bearing out, drilled and tapped the hole for the zerk in the parent metal of the link, pressed the bearing back in and then lightly touched the race with a carbide drill bit to just break thru the race to allow grease in. This only takes a pinpoint of bearing area away and definitely allows grease into the bearing from the zerk.
That is a great idea !!

 
I have seen several references to a problem concerning the shifter pivot bolt and clearance. I have cleaned and lubed Franks at least a half dozen times, have re-assembled and tightened the bolt fully-with nary a hint of binding or any other indication of a problem requiring backing it off for "clearance". I don't understand how this could be happening, unless there are some bolts with insufficient shank length out there.

 
I have seen several references to a problem concerning the shifter pivot bolt and clearance. I have cleaned and lubed Franks at least a half dozen times, have re-assembled and tightened the bolt fully-with nary a hint of binding or any other indication of a problem requiring backing it off for "clearance". I don't understand how this could be happening, unless there are some bolts with insufficient shank length out there.
Radman, I couldn't agree with U more that there shouldn't have been a problem, especially with a shoulder bolt (that should have the correct shoulder length when bottomed out) and wave washers to keep the shifter arm sleeve from ratteling about. Fact is that mine binded when the shoulder bolt was bottomed out & since the factory had applied some type of thread locker on the bolts threads, I figured that the factory ment for the bolt needed to be tightned only enough to put a slight pressure on the wave washers. What can I say--bottomed out it binded & backed out slightly and held in place with the thread locker, no binding. I havn't came across thread locker any where else on the FJR and that stuff is expensive when U use it on all new bikes. What say U?

Later,,, De :rolleyes:

 
I'm doing an 8K maintenance on my '06 and am up to the point of lubricating pivot points (eg. levers, pedals, suspension pivots, etc.). Shop manual indicates lubing these points with LS. I can find no grease fittings on any of these items, leading me to the conclusion that you have to disassemble all of them to get them lubricated. Is this a correct assumption?
There's a good writeup on the FJRInfo site right here with lots of purty pics.
 

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