Lucky!
Moderators: the2knights, Highway Rider
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- Traveler
- Posts: 112
- Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2022 12:13 am
- 2
- Current bike(s): 93 kawasaki voyager xii
89 yamaha venture royale - Has liked: 25 times
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Lucky!
Just glad it didn't stick on the filter when i threw it out, i never would have known!
- GrandpaDenny
- King of the Road
- Posts: 1078
- Joined: Fri Nov 01, 2019 4:24 pm
- 5
- Current bike(s): 1993 Kawasaki Vulcan 1500
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Re: Lucky!
LOL I've done that. Forgotten all kinds of things at various times. Used to be it took me three tries to actually get an oil change done. Expensive way to do things! Last couple of times I've finally got it down to a science - didn't forget anything, didn't put anything in upside-down.
- These users liked GrandpaDenny's post:
- triton28 (Fri Aug 18, 2023 6:13 pm)
- Rating: 11.11%
Dennis Fariello
Philadelphia, PA
2000 Voyager XII "Gertrude" - deceased
1993 Vulcan 88 "Emily"
South Jersey Retreads
Patriot Guard Riders
Warriors Watch Riders
VXII Manuals:
https://amervoyassoc.org/zg1200manuals.php
Philadelphia, PA
2000 Voyager XII "Gertrude" - deceased
1993 Vulcan 88 "Emily"
South Jersey Retreads
Patriot Guard Riders
Warriors Watch Riders
VXII Manuals:
https://amervoyassoc.org/zg1200manuals.php
- SgtSlag
- King of the Road
- Posts: 1054
- Joined: Mon Oct 04, 2010 10:04 pm
- 14
- Current bike(s): 1993 Voyager XII (2010)
(2006-2012: 1979 Honda CB750K)
(2008-2010: 1983 Kawasaki 440LTD, belt drive) - Location: Minnesota
- Has liked: 23 times
- Been liked: 235 times
Re: Lucky!
That is the washer that sits between the filter's central, rubber O-ring gasket, the bike's filter spring, with the filter bolt going through all of them, holding everything in place. It prevents the filter spring from digging into the filter's center rubber O-ring gasket assembly. I left mine out for a couple of years, on my Honda (see below). The filter bolt has the bypass valve inside of it (Honda and Kawi seem to have used the same filter bolt, just different lengths!). I believe that if the filter becomes blocked, oil pressure will compress the spring, pushing the filter down far enough for oil to bypass it, keeping the oil flowing through the engine. That is likely the only time that washer really comes into play. Chances of the oil filter plugging, are minute, as long as you change oil and filter, on schedule (I always change the filter with the oil, always). Oil, and filter, are dirt cheap, in the long run.
My '79 Honda had an identical washer and spring setup. I left the same washer out of that bike, two seasons, before I realized it should be there. Saw it on a schematic drawing on Bike Bandit's parts website: ordered a replacement, and added it back into the assembly when I got it. No harm, no foul, no damage. The XII and my CB750K used the same identical oil filter, and steel filter washer, as well. Cheers!
My '79 Honda had an identical washer and spring setup. I left the same washer out of that bike, two seasons, before I realized it should be there. Saw it on a schematic drawing on Bike Bandit's parts website: ordered a replacement, and added it back into the assembly when I got it. No harm, no foul, no damage. The XII and my CB750K used the same identical oil filter, and steel filter washer, as well. Cheers!
- These users liked SgtSlag's post:
- cushman eagle (Sat Aug 19, 2023 12:42 am)
- Rating: 11.11%
SgtSlag
1993 Voyager XII
1993 Voyager XII