gv550 wrote:I have lubed my steering bearings and swingarm bearings 3 times, did the work myself.
For the steering, no fairing parts need to be removed. I combined the job with removing, draining, flushing the forks so they were already off but I think you could drop the steering stem with the fork tubes in place. I did need to have the OD of my 36mm socket turned down to loosen and re-torque the top nut but everything else went easy. Remove the handlebars and lay them on a blanket over the tank, remove the top triple clamp, remove the top nut and the lower bearing drops down enough to lube it and top bearing can be removed. After the fork tubes are off, the bearing lube takes maybe an hour.
For the swingarm lube, you don't need to remove the trunk or rear wheel, but the whole exhaust system needs to come off just to get to the swingarm nut. Loosen the rear axle and slide the wheel all the way forward, slide the belt off the pulley, remove the swingarm shaft and the whole swingarm/wheel/brake/pulley will slide back far enough inside the fender to access the bearings. I did need to remove the rear caliper and ABS sensor because the hose and wire is not long enough to reach when the wheel is that far back. I think I could do that job (now that I'm experienced) in about 2 hours.
Garry
Garry -- I am getting ready to lubricate the steering head bearings and the swingarm bearing (and I have read the sections in the service manual as well). A couple of questions if you don't mind:
1. what size socket is needed for the swingarm nut?
2. did you need an impact wrench to get the swingarm nut loose?
3. what size socket is needed for the rear axle nut?
4. did you replace the gaskets where the exhaust pipes meet the heads, or did you re-use them?
5. any special tips or problems to be on the lookout for?
Thanks in advance.