Fork Seals
Moderators: the2knights, Highway Rider
-
- Newbie
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Mon Jul 24, 2023 1:58 pm
- 1
- Current bike(s): 00 Voyager XII
- Has liked: 0
- Been liked: 0
Fork Seals
Hi from Maryland. New to the group. I recently picked up a 01, with 34K on the clock. While going over the bike i noticed one fork seal leaking. Considering the year, and the low mileage could it really be bad seals or thin fluid?
- SgtSlag
- King of the Road
- Posts: 1057
- 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: 238 times
Re: Fork Seals
Welcome to the Voyager Family! Great bikes, when well maintained, which isn't too hard.
Yes, the seals can/will fail due to age. Ozone gas, a byproduct of gasoline combustion (one of the things catalytic converters addressed), will eat away at rubber.
Did an experiment for Jr. High Science class on it, in the late 70's. Causes rubber to harden and break into dried, tiny, crumbly, pieces -- it partially disintegrates. Never forgot seeing what happened to the stretched rubber band, left by the curb of my street for a couple of weeks.
Change out ALL of the fluids, to be certain your bike is performing optimally!
There are several updates recommended for your XII, on this site:
Progressive Fork Springs and sealed rear shocks; LED bulb replacements; far better than Dunflop tires, and more.
Take your time and read up on what others have said and done. Cheers!
Yes, the seals can/will fail due to age. Ozone gas, a byproduct of gasoline combustion (one of the things catalytic converters addressed), will eat away at rubber.
Did an experiment for Jr. High Science class on it, in the late 70's. Causes rubber to harden and break into dried, tiny, crumbly, pieces -- it partially disintegrates. Never forgot seeing what happened to the stretched rubber band, left by the curb of my street for a couple of weeks.
Change out ALL of the fluids, to be certain your bike is performing optimally!
There are several updates recommended for your XII, on this site:
Progressive Fork Springs and sealed rear shocks; LED bulb replacements; far better than Dunflop tires, and more.
Take your time and read up on what others have said and done. Cheers!
SgtSlag
1993 Voyager XII
1993 Voyager XII
- Nails
- King of the Road
- Posts: 1771
- Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2017 4:37 pm
- 7
- Current bike(s): '97 XII
'00 XT350
'85 KLR 250
'82 Silverwing Sushiguzzi - Location: New Mexico Rockies
- Has liked: 228 times
- Been liked: 602 times
Re: Fork Seals
Leaky fork seals is common on old bikes, and I doubt many new XII owners haven't had to deal with this. I wouldn't be surprised if you have the original fork oil. I'd replace all that (and install Progressives) as a matter of course. You'll end up there, so just do it right instead of paying to redo it later.
You can attempt to save the seals by cutting some thin, rigid plastic (like the clear boxes some salads come in at the grocery store) into little hooks. The idea is to hook out the crud stuck in the seal that's keeping it from sealing. I consider this a stop-gap measure, such as to make it back home to fix it right.
You can attempt to save the seals by cutting some thin, rigid plastic (like the clear boxes some salads come in at the grocery store) into little hooks. The idea is to hook out the crud stuck in the seal that's keeping it from sealing. I consider this a stop-gap measure, such as to make it back home to fix it right.
--
Nails
Nails
- ted1r
- Cruiser
- Posts: 80
- Joined: Thu Sep 14, 2023 12:52 pm
- 1
- Current bike(s): Kawasaki ZG1200 and KE250
- Has liked: 92 times
- Been liked: 35 times
Re: Fork Seals
Hi guys ,I have had the same issue a few months ago so I duly swapped the seals with genuine K parts only to find they have gone again.
air pressure was set for comfort about 5psi .
anyway talking with a good friend and long time mechanic he pointed out to me that the bushes can also wear inside the fork tube
so I took the forks into him and sure enough they were all worn .
Hope that helps
Regards Nigel
air pressure was set for comfort about 5psi .
anyway talking with a good friend and long time mechanic he pointed out to me that the bushes can also wear inside the fork tube
so I took the forks into him and sure enough they were all worn .
Hope that helps
Regards Nigel
- Nails
- King of the Road
- Posts: 1771
- Joined: Thu Feb 16, 2017 4:37 pm
- 7
- Current bike(s): '97 XII
'00 XT350
'85 KLR 250
'82 Silverwing Sushiguzzi - Location: New Mexico Rockies
- Has liked: 228 times
- Been liked: 602 times
Re: Fork Seals
I do my own wrenching, but this is one job I took to my local independent shop. They have the right tools and all. It was pretty cheap since I took in the fork tubes, bushings, seals, and oil. I had a significant scratch that he smoothed over, and it hasn't leaked yet in almost 30K miles. I'll put fresh oil in it whenever I get a chance to work on it.
--
Nails
Nails
- Van Voyager
- Grand Tourer
- Posts: 435
- Joined: Wed Aug 30, 2017 8:01 am
- 7
- Current bike(s): 1986 Kawasaki ZN1300 Voyager
- Has liked: 46 times
- Been liked: 40 times
Re: Fork Seals
Ain't that the truth.
- These users liked Van Voyager's post:
- ted1r (Mon Oct 30, 2023 2:18 pm)
- Rating: 11.11%