Q
qisteve
Guest
After using this site for advice for over a year, I thought it was time to give something back. So here is my contribution. The manual says to do this job on the center stand and remove the fender. Not necessary! BTW, one could use a come-along attached to a tree or garage ceiling instead of an engine hoist.
First, I ran a 3/8" long extension under the top of the frame and through a short length of chain:
Then I used an engine crane to lift the bike (after bungee cording the front wheel straight ahead) and set it down on some wooden blocks. I kept the crane in place during the job in case something slipped.
Now it's easy to lift high enough to get the wheel out without removing the fender and associated wiring as the manual recommends.
Clean up splines.
Tired tire!
Break the beads using a big c clamp, protect splines from dirt using tape.
Use the right tools (NOT screwdrivers!)
New vlave stem, of course.
Budget balancer.
Some "Sticky" weights (clean the rim with BrakeKlean first).
Done! 3 hours at a lazy pace!
First, I ran a 3/8" long extension under the top of the frame and through a short length of chain:
Then I used an engine crane to lift the bike (after bungee cording the front wheel straight ahead) and set it down on some wooden blocks. I kept the crane in place during the job in case something slipped.
Now it's easy to lift high enough to get the wheel out without removing the fender and associated wiring as the manual recommends.
Clean up splines.
Tired tire!
Break the beads using a big c clamp, protect splines from dirt using tape.
Use the right tools (NOT screwdrivers!)
New vlave stem, of course.
Budget balancer.
Some "Sticky" weights (clean the rim with BrakeKlean first).
Done! 3 hours at a lazy pace!