The Clymer manual specifies 15 weight oil, should a heavier (over 200 lbs) rider use something thicker? I reallize it may take some experimenting to fine tune it, but I want to get as close as possible. The bike seems fine right now, but I'm new to it.
In my travels looking for an oil suction gun someone told me that there are cruch washers for the drains and for the caps that need replacing every time. I see no such thing in Clymer's diagram, was he mis-speaking?
It seems that most people here replace the oil by measuring volume instead of level. I was planning to use the suction gun method to measure the level, but it's hard to find a suitable gun for the purpose. Is pre measuring the oil volume accurate, and just how accurate do I have to be?
I've read cautions about removing both caps/forks at the same time unless the front wheel is raised, can I safely remove both sides with the front wheel raised? Do I want to, for that matter - can I sevice one fork at a time? I had planned to remove the forks for best draining and flushing as per the manual, as I ain't raising the rear of the bike to level the forks unless Kal-El's ship crashes outside my garage (Haven't seen Superman? Aw never mind...)
Also, I had mentioned once that my bike says it's a 550E on the steering head, while the pipes say 550L, and it has the stepped seat and had those mondo pullback bars that look L to me. After poking around on a German GS site it looks like my bike has everything that makes an L an L - the shorter pipes, the pullback deer antlers, the seat, the smaller looking tank, the rear grab rail and chrome fender, the two per side pinch bolts on the lower clamp versus the E's one, etc. Am I safe in assuming it's really an L model? I only ask because the fork oil capacity is different for an L in the manual.
Ohhhhhh and my fork legs are nice and clean, but the dust boots are slightly cracked, I guess it would be good to replace them while I'm doing this? I haven't seen them in any catalogs, are they easy to obtain?
Thanks for your help, and thanks for the TONS of info I've already gotten from the GS site and forums!
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