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Easily measure fork oil
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Easily measure fork oil
I never thought of it untill my pharmacist recommended it. Ask for an empty liquid medicine bottle. They are marked off by the half ounce and the openning of the 6oz. bottle is the right size to fill your forks without spilling the oil all over the floor.1981 GS 450L
2007 Kawasaki Vulcan 900 Custom
The good we do no one remembers.
The bad we do no one forgets.
Mark 5:36 -- Overhearing what they said, Jesus told him, "Don't be afraid; just believe".Tags: None
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pickardracing
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 17921
- The only Henniker on earth
I just use 1/8" vinyl tubing, measure up from the bottom of the tubing the height of what the oil needs to be and cut a hole in the tubing. Fill the fork with oil, plenty of it. Then put the end in the fork until it hits the bottom and use a brake bleeder pump to suck out the excess. When you start getting nothing but air, the level will be exactly where you cut the hole in the tubing.Currently bikeless
'81 GS 1100EX - "Peace, by superior fire power."
'06 FZ1000 - "What we are dealing with here, is a COMPLETE lack of respect for the law."
I ride, therefore I am.... constantly buying new tires.
"Tell me what kind of an accident you are going to have, and I will tell you which helmet to wear." - Harry Hurt
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Originally posted by Jethro View PostI just use 1/8" vinyl tubing, measure up from the bottom of the tubing the height of what the oil needs to be and cut a hole in the tubing. Fill the fork with oil, plenty of it. Then put the end in the fork until it hits the bottom and use a brake bleeder pump to suck out the excess. When you start getting nothing but air, the level will be exactly where you cut the hole in the tubing.
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BentRod
i have done forks, but never bothered with any of this..
air is left in the top portions of the fork so that you do not blow the caps out on a hard bump. you need that air pocket to allow a full range of movement... SO
put in your spring.. and add oil. then drop the inner slider all the way down.. excess oil will flow over the sides. once the slider is all the way down, and the oil is all the way to the top of it, then you have the absolute max amount of oil you should be putting in.. take away or leave as is to fine tune stiffness.
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Dark Jedi
Originally posted by BentRod View Posti have done forks, but never bothered with any of this..
air is left in the top portions of the fork so that you do not blow the caps out on a hard bump. you need that air pocket to allow a full range of movement... SO
put in your spring.. and add oil. then drop the inner slider all the way down.. excess oil will flow over the sides. once the slider is all the way down, and the oil is all the way to the top of it, then you have the absolute max amount of oil you should be putting in.. take away or leave as is to fine tune stiffness.
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82Shafty
D you guys do this with the forks verticle, or normal riding position?
Manaul says get the forks verticle....ya let me just lift the rear up two to three feet with one arm and balance it while I add fork oil.
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Dink
Of cause you are removing the fork legs to do all this arent you??
Dink
D you guys do this with the forks verticle, or normal riding position?
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82Shafty
when I replace the seals I will.
I wanted to just drain and throw some new (measured) oil in there, pressurize it and finish off the season.
Is it not possible to service the forks on the bike?
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Originally posted by 82Shafty View Postwhen I replace the seals I will.
I wanted to just drain and throw some new (measured) oil in there, pressurize it and finish off the season.
Is it not possible to service the forks on the bike?
Tony.'82 GS1100E
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Forum LongTimerCharter Member
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter- May 2002
- 17921
- The only Henniker on earth
Originally posted by tkent02 View PostSeems to me your method will leave the level low, as when you remove the tube, the level will drop by the amount equal to the volume the tube displaces while it's in there. It would get them both even though.Currently bikeless
'81 GS 1100EX - "Peace, by superior fire power."
'06 FZ1000 - "What we are dealing with here, is a COMPLETE lack of respect for the law."
I ride, therefore I am.... constantly buying new tires.
"Tell me what kind of an accident you are going to have, and I will tell you which helmet to wear." - Harry Hurt
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Another method is to use a syringe. Go to a farm supply store (everywhere in the Midwest, folks in big cities or on the coasts may be out of luck) and look for veterinary supplies, stuff that farmers do themselves. Buy a big syringe. Use it to measure volumes. Some flexible tubing will be needed.sigpic[Tom]
“The greatest service this country could render the rest of the world would be to put its own house in order and to make of American civilization an example of decency, humanity, and societal success from which others could derive whatever they might find useful to their own purposes.” George Kennan
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Originally posted by themess View PostAnother method is to use a syringe. Go to a farm supply store (everywhere in the Midwest, folks in big cities or on the coasts may be out of luck) and look for veterinary supplies, stuff that farmers do themselves. Buy a big syringe. Use it to measure volumes. Some flexible tubing will be needed.
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Originally posted by 82Shafty View Postwhen I replace the seals I will.
I wanted to just drain and throw some new (measured) oil in there, pressurize it and finish off the season.
Is it not possible to service the forks on the bike?
The problems with just measuring a volume of oil and dumping it in are :
1. No guarantee that ALL the old oil is out. Any left in will affect the handling.
2. There are often manufacturing differences between the lower fork legs (you know - bozo at factory has had a heavy weekend, at work Monday, leans a bit hard on machine, cuts a bit too much out...). Measuring the oil height, and setting it level between fork legs (and it CAN be done in bike - just not as accurately), will ensure that you have the same SIZE air space at the top when the fork legs are fully compressed. This affects the SPRING rating - more oil, less air, means more spring 'rebound' effect. More air gap, softer springing. Different air gap sizes - spring rate becomes different between fork legs, causing flex and instability - particularly after hitting a big bump, where the forks get fully compressed.
If you're dong the forks in bike, be aware that the oil height will read higher than it really is, due to the slant of the fork tube. Easy solution is to measure oil height 1 cm (or 0.5") or so higher than spec.
Treat your bike - pull the forks, drain the oil, flush out with some kerosine to clean all the old scunge out of the fork legs (work the legs up and down a few times), drain again, then fill, measure, and reassemble.
Trouble getting forks out - if you have a garage with exposed beams/rafters, buy a couple of nylon webbing type M/C tiedowns, hook them over the rafters - one on each side of the bike, other end attached to solid mount point on front of bike (handlebars are OK, as long as you don't need to remove them to remove the forks - otherwise use a mount on the frame). Make sure tops of tiedowns are angled AWAY from the bike - makes it more stable. Front wheel can be lifted by tightening tiedown straps a bit at a time, alternating sides - or get a beefy mate to give it a bit of a lift while you tighten the straps, or use a car jack to lift it a little, then tighten, then lift a little more, tighten...'07 Yamaha TTR 250 - Exercycle.
'95 Ducati 900 SL - Duclattery
'81 Suzuki/Yoshi GSX1135 ET/X - Yoshi
'84 Suzuki McIntosh - Mac
'74 Yamaha YZ125A - pain in the rrr's...
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