Wow. That’s a lot of dosh. I guess that is some good extra motivation to do this pain-in-the-*** preventive maintenance, to avoid having to pay that amount . Thanks for the tally, pants.
Thanks FredNeither. There is a thin, hardened metal, outer race that is pressed into the bore in the relay arm. That’s what needs to be slit or perforated to allow grease in to the rollers.Is the outer race built into the relay arm or are the needle bearings riding on the aluminum casting?
I also had gotten a good one off ebay. Bearings were free and pretty clean.Too bad about the condition of the part from eBay. The full set of bearings, collars and seals isn't cheap. I had better luck with the one I got.
Based on what I've read on here, I just did my 2018 a few weeks ago and I didn't run into anything radically different. You still have to get those bolts out, and it is a pain the first time.I serviced the relay arm bearings twice on my old ‘03.
Is there anything different with my ‘18 that I should be aware off. Plan to remove and inspect this winter.
Canadian FJR
Right at 18500 was when I did it. Everything, bearing wise, was in really good shape, but the exterior needed a good cleaning. I used Lucas Red 'n' Tacky grease and stuffed the bearings.How many miles on your '18 and what kind of shape was everything in?
Canadian FJR
The centerstand bolts are not that hard. I cut mine with a sawsall with a metal cutting blade in about 15 seconds each. Clamp the head with vise-grips to keep the bolt from turning.I scored a really nice relay arm off an 09 with 16,000 miles for 28 dollars. Woohoo. Just got it today. {yeah I'm braggin, LOL}
Couple of questions. I heard what you guys said about the front underside of the arm being sandblasted, and It didn't seem quite right, but Dang, the front underside of the one I bought, at only 16,000 miles, was rough as heck. I can't imagine actual "sand" doing that at the "relatively" slow speeds we ride at. Perhaps small rocks and pebbles kicked up by the front wheel? I know the arm is soft aluminium but still. I am curious if mine, with 60-70 thousand miles will be better or worse.
What do you guys think about just stuffing some more grease into those pretty, clean, bearings, as opposed to scooping them out of there, removing the waxy stuff everyone says they are packed with and replacing it with axle grease???
Also, I bought a metal cutting blade for my HF oscillating tool. I have never cut serious metal with the oscillating tool, only wood and nails and I am fearful that tool won't cut the bolts to the center stand and I will get stuck removing the exhaust or have to bend the hell out of the exhaust to get them out. Anyone use an oscillating saw to cut those bolts???
Lastly, if anyone wants the old arm after I get it out, it's yours for the shipping. I have no idea what I will find when I get it out.
Thanks
No need to pick out the bearings and "waxy" stuff, IMHO. Smear a little fresh waterproof grease in there and call it good - as long as the bearings appear to be in decent shape with little to no corrosion.What do you guys think about just stuffing some more grease into those pretty, clean, bearings, as opposed to scooping them out of there, removing the waxy stuff everyone says they are packed with and replacing it with axle grease???
I'll give $20 plus shipping for that used relay arm. Good donor for a grease fitting mod. If your 'score' relay arm has the collars in it, I'd like the ones in your take off too. Good indicators of the condition of the bearings. PM me, please. ThanksI scored a really nice relay arm off an 09 with 16,000 miles for 28 dollars. Woohoo. Just got it today. {yeah I'm braggin, LOL}
Couple of questions. I heard what you guys said about the front underside of the arm being sandblasted, and It didn't seem quite right, but Dang, the front underside of the one I bought, at only 16,000 miles, was rough as heck. I can't imagine actual "sand" doing that at the "relatively" slow speeds we ride at. Perhaps small rocks and pebbles kicked up by the front wheel? I know the arm is soft aluminium but still. I am curious if mine, with 60-70 thousand miles will be better or worse.
What do you guys think about just stuffing some more grease into those pretty, clean, bearings, as opposed to scooping them out of there, removing the waxy stuff everyone says they are packed with and replacing it with axle grease???
Also, I bought a metal cutting blade for my HF oscillating tool. I have never cut serious metal with the oscillating tool, only wood and nails and I am fearful that tool won't cut the bolts to the center stand and I will get stuck removing the exhaust or have to bend the hell out of the exhaust to get them out. Anyone use an oscillating saw to cut those bolts???
Lastly, if anyone wants the old arm after I get it out, it's yours for the shipping. I have no idea what I will find when I get it out.
Thanks
Almost everyone who posts pictures of their garage/shop have clean organized work area's, I wonder if everyone but me has an organized shop, or am I the only one who will post of pic of my disastrous garage. LOLAgree with the above. Quite frankly, the hardest part of this job is to decide how you want to hang the bike. This is how I did mine:
Cutting the C/S bolts is no big deal, but you do need a sharp blade. Use some oil on the blade teeth and they will but like butter. I bought some OEM bolts to replace, but there is nothing special about them - any hardware store will have those in stock.
My only regret is not doing it sooner. I ended up replacing my bearings and collars. I'm not entirely sure that I had to, but the waxy crap was so corroded that I didn't want to take any chances.
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