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I've had the bike over 9yrs, never had the swing arm off, which sounds like a long time for the bearing to eventually rust out completely, if due to moisture contamination prior to my ownership. Thanks, Mart
You have, of course, nailed it completely in that sentence, I can speculate on prior years but those 9 are yoursThe next 50 are the important onesLove it and it will love you, neglect at your perilDo not waste any more time nor money, neither should you ever expect fkd bits to lastHave a butchers inside drive box, pinion housing just pulls out, if teeth missing it’s maybe too lateIf all good , grease splines nicely, I’d prob weld sleeve to pinion but if not really sloppy grease’ll doThing has been badly abused, treat it like dog or child, with love, forgiveness is possible
, no discernible play, bearings are shimmed and that big nut is tightBut there must be some backlash between gears.Get the flange out and all becomes obviousIf tight, don’t chisel it apart, hold pinion shaft with soft jaw grips and belt box off with rubber hammer
I think that what is being said. Is to pull the pinion carrier out of the bevel box. You can then look at the teeth on the pinion as well as the ring gear. If all looks good, your "probably" fine.Before removing the pinion carrier, mark the bevel box and carrier so that you know which way to slide the carrier back in. As you noticed, there are holes/slits for oil to flow.On the rust......Your pics sure look like rust, Like rust that I would find on bare steel constantly dunked in and out of ocean salt water. But your saying that it's just the dried out grease making it look like serious rust. If it's just grease, not idea how it got that way So I should take back my water in through the U joint boot thought. The pinion splines as pictured look like they are eaten away by rust. But as you mention, they look perfect below the clip. So that kinda throws out my sitting in water idea. You live in a place where it rains at least once or twice a year , so water came to mind.On the swingarm....I do not consider removing the swingarm a normal maintenance job. A good grease in the pivot bearings will last many years. For the drive shaft. Some will pull the bevel box off the swingarm every, or every few rear tire changes to grease the splines on the drive shaft. But, at every tire change, the grease in the wheel to bevel box should be added. Some will also clean these splines so that no contamination is left, then grease them.Spline grease may have been covered already. But, Wurth SIG 3000l grease is generally the go to for splines, except the trans input splines. There are spline greases from BMW and Honda (not sure it you can get Honda anymore) that do a great job. Lacking this, I would think that a "tacky" grease would suffice. and lacking that I would use Permatex silver anti-sieze. That I would consider a VERY light dusting on the trans input shaft.Tom
That is odd how it stopped at the clip. Could be as simple as a lousy grease was used?? Maybe it was Yak fat??? Who knows how it happened. Maybe when a PO was working in there they were outside in a rain storm and the grease container filled with water and they used it anyways?I had a typo on the Wurth SIG 3000 not 3000l. Sorry about that. I think the red and tacky will do the job just fine for all the splines your working on.You doing a great job taking your time to make sure all is done up as best as it can be Tom
Four pings with a punch will not retain a loose wheel bearing in the hub.RC680 Loctite applied to a thoroughly cleaned bore and bearing probably will retain the bearing in the hub.Just replaced 3 universals on my Ural. Laid a roller over in a cup two separate times. Urals come apart easier so I saved the cups. There are a lot easier jobs than installing universal spiders. A lot of the bigger universals have split mountings. Makes life easy.
I'm 78 next week. Been doing this stuff for a long time. Been making mistakes (and corrections) long before internet was available to point me in the correct direction. Every project is a lesson. The mistakes are tuition. Education is seldom free. But is always valuable.
Many many many moons ago I tried to find U joints to fit the Guzzi when I work for an auto parts supplier for repair shops. Never could find the right ones back then. I did take one apart just to see if I could.The Guzzi U joint IMHO is not repairable, though it can be done. I just came to the conclusion that I just need to bite the price and get a complete U Joint ready to install.
Having rebuilt a BMW driveshaft for my 04, I was not completely happy with the results. I ended up with a used part for very little money that was in good condition. I put the rebuilt on the shelf for a spare. So if used parts can be sourced at reasonable prices they are a great way to keep your bike rolling. One note on when the swing arm is installed I would use a bit of loctite on the bearing caps and paint mark a spot. The spot makes it easy to see if it moves. I had a cap and bearing loosen and luckily I spotted it before it fell out.
Bit of controversy here. I pour the whole liter of Amsoil Manual Transmission and Transaxle lube into my transmissions at change. Some of it always migrates out at the output shaft and ends up in the boot. This lubricates the splines, needle bearings and the swingarm bore ahead of the carrier bearing. Haven't lost a universal yet. Haven't had to fight corrosion to remove a carrier bearing.I think the key is that the bit of extra oil keeps out moisture in the universal and creeps into any opening at the universal spiders.
It looks like it may have some crud underneath it . If you heat the outside you should be able to take the swing arm and whack it smarty on a wood block. The inertia should make the race move enough to get a puller or pry bar underneath it and pull it out without damaging anything. Clean the seat and reinstall.
Sounds like the race is in a happy place. The bearings are adjustable so I would concentrate on making the swingarm centered. Smooth and free with no play is what I aim for. Ride a few hundred miles and check, readjust if necessary. Paint dot the caps to know if they loosen on you.
It sounds like you have coupled two drive shafts together so you can turn the U joint. Good idea!Now put the trans in gear, any gear so the output shaft does not turn.You might take a vice grips pliers or the like and clamp it to the output shaft to hold the boot back so you can see the joint and shaft.Get the swing arm into place. U joint not connected yet to output shaft . Now hook up the shock to help you work with the swing arm.Now the fiddly part. Your going to have to take a screwdriver or the like to maneuver the U joint onto the output shaft WHILE working with the sing arm. You may need to hold the swing arm up or down and try to align the U joint.Sometimes they just slide together without effort. Other time they and be a royal B*&%$. If you can get a helper, that would be great!Good luck!Tom