- Posts: 182
- Thank you received: 1
Fork Seal Replacement
- Robjb84
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
Well, i went to a dealer and they wanted 50 bucks for fork seals...so i went to ebay and got them for 10 bucks. The dealer also wanted 170 bucks to replace the seals, provided i dissasemble and bring the forks to them first... so yeah.
Im going to do it myself. I did a search and found previous posts on this subject, but im still a little unsure of things. Could anyone give me a run down on the procedure? Maybe with a list of items that I will need to do it? I do have the shop manual, which will be nice to have next to me but still.. I foresee this being a bit of a nightmare. Any help would be greatly appreciated
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Duck
- Offline
- User
- e vica na i sau na ga
Lay everything out in the order of disassembly so you can put it back together. Do one at a time. If you get the parts mixed up on the first one you can take the second apart and be more careful to line up parts
You'll probably want new dust seals too and maybe retaining rings if they are rusty.
Clean it all up good with kerosene.
You'll need something to drive the new seal in with. PVC pipe, short section of exhaust pipe from autoparts store and return it when done, or use imagination.
You may need to replace the O-ring seals at the top.
You'll need something to measure the oil. I bought a 99cent baby bottle at the drug store.
My first one took 3 hours on one side and 10 minutes on the other. My second one took about an hour total but it was a Yamaha and I had no manual.
Third set took about 30 min.
If the chrome is badly pitted, find some new parts or live with it leaking.
-Duck
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- markmeinteil
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 35
- Thank you received: 0
One motorcycle shop I went to told me $55 per fork. I didn't think it was that bad of a price for a shop to do it. I already got a set of seals for $13 at another store. I even got more lucky today, and got a retired motorcycle mechanic to do my seals for $20/pair + one case of beer!
I guess beer goes a long way with some people
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steell
- Offline
- User
Much has been posted on that question
Maybe that should be my next project, make a seal puller and a seal driver
Post edited by: steell, at: 2006/07/26 14:12
KD9JUR
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- JMKZHI
- Offline
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2429
- Thank you received: 48
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Duck
- Offline
- User
- e vica na i sau na ga
The built in slide hammer gets the seal out with a few moderate whacks.I predict the next question is going to be "I got the forks out and apart, now how do I get the old seals out"
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steell
- Offline
- User
Not on the early model KZ forks like this onesteell wrote:
The built in slide hammer gets the seal out with a few moderate whacks.I predict the next question is going to be "I got the forks out and apart, now how do I get the old seals out"
That's a pic of the 1980 KZ440 LTD forks from buykawasaki.com
Post edited by: steell, at: 2006/07/26 18:25
KD9JUR
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- markmeinteil
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 35
- Thank you received: 0
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- N0NB
- Offline
- User
- Blue handles better
I did the pair on the 650B this week. Would have gone faster if I wouldn't have had to go out to the farm and fashion a tool to hold the damper rod. Oh well, now I have one more "special tool" for my collection. :laugh:
Oh yeah, loosen the top plug before removing the drain screw. :pinch: Used a bunch of towels after that one.
- Nate >>
Nate
Nates vintage bike axiom: Riding is the reward for time spent wrenching.
Murphys corollary: Wrenching is the result of time spent riding.
1979 KZ650 (Complete!)
1979 KZ650 SR (Sold!)
1979 KL250 (For sale)
1994 Bayou 400 (four wheel peel )
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- steell
- Offline
- User
Oh yeah, loosen the top plug before removing the drain screw. Used a bunch of towels after that one.
I was changing the fluid in my brother's 82 KZ1000 CSR with air forks and forgot to bleed the air first. My six year old girl was watching me and sitting in a direct line from the drain screw. Covered her with fork oil.
It took awhile before I heard the end of that one
KD9JUR
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- Robjb84
- Topic Author
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 182
- Thank you received: 1
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- floridamba
- Offline
- User
- Posts: 257
- Thank you received: 3
It's not bad but can be frustrating.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.