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Do you HAVE to take apart the fork to change seal?
- Z1Driver
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- love the smell of triple smoke
Blue 1975 Z1B
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- Scirocco
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Otherwise you can easily scratch or damage the chrome on the fork legs. Some old rusty seals can very difficult to remove
without the fork legs too, it´s like a PITA. Trust me, i am knowing about it.
Plus you can make a deep clean into the fork inner parts that can easily destroy your new seals!!!
My 1975 Z 1 B 900 Project
www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/605133...ears-deep-sleep-mode
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- zed1015
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Trickiest bit is getting the old seal out and you need to be carefull when sliding the new seal over the end of the staction so as not to tear the seals lip on the chromed edge.
A few wraps of electricians tape or a plastic food bag over the end smeared over with lube helps the seal slide on.
AIR CORRECTOR JETS FOR VM CARBS AND ETHANOL RESISTANT VITON CHOKE PLUNGER SEAL REPLACMENT FOR ALL CLASSIC AND MODERN MOTORCYCLE CARBURETTORS
kzrider.com/forum/23-for-sale/611992-air-corrector-jets-
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- Z1Driver
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- Nessism
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- MDZ1rider
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For my dirt bikes, I fill the area around the seal with some white lithium grease. It can't be seen with the dust boot in place and traps grime from getting down (up on inverted forks) in the seals. Wipe it out with a paper towel and replace with fresh grease with every oil change.
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- BlackZ1R
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Kawasaki
Someone once told me to marry that motorcycle I was riding ......there's times I wish I hadda listened .
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- Z1Driver
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Nice thing about having 2 motorcycles is when 1 is down I can still ride the other.
The 900 is getting a new Dynamo wire grommet too. I used a impact driver on the screws on the cover and all broke loose except for one. Wouldn't you know it..it figures there always has to be one. Also in a spot I can't slot without damaging the cover its self. So I went and got a #2 easy out with a corresponding sized drill. Sometimes I really hate Murphy.
In the mean time I will be out of town for a few days. I get to go to a cousins funeral in North West KS. My cousin was on a ladder in his garage. Fell off the ladder, hit his head and that was that. Wow out of no place.
Thanks again Tim
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- SWest
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I had a problem with the seals (Two new sets) then tried the "no leak" type. Still leaked. Turned out the forks were bent very slightly. Never noticed it. I wound up twisting them in the clamps until I could feel a free spot. The leaks stopped. I then bought new fork tubes from Z1E and ordered progressive springs. All of that including the seals was under $200. I felt better knowing everything was clean inside and the next step will be emulators on the dampers....Some day. :whistle:
Steve
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- Z1Driver
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The fork seals are a few years old. Can't remember just how long ago but it could be up to 5 years. I installed repo fork boots from Redline Cycle after finding Z1 fork boots didn't hold up as well as I thought they should. The boots from Redline are pretty bullet proof with no cracks or signs of age.
I haven't hit any thing that might have cause a inner tube to misalign. And I replaced the inner tubes when the seals got replaced last time. This bike lives in a garage and rarely gets wet. For cleaning it gets spray and shine.
I bought the fork seals off ebay before I knew better. Now I get to pay for it.
How do you like the progressive springs? Worth it?
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- SWest
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Steve
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- loudhvx
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Nessism wrote: If your forks have air valves in the cap you can apply high pressure and pop the seals out without taking apart the forks. A friend of mine have done them this way anyway. Says it takes some pretty high pressure though - in the range of 175 psi.
Nice. I've wondered about that.
Drain the oil first, I assume.
I've made the mistake of removing the drain screw before releasing the air pressure (only about 10 psi). It was a dirty bomb for sure.
1981 KZ550 D1 gpz.
Kz550 valve train warning.
Other links.
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