The new tires I ordered (1980 GS1000G) should arrive by Tuesday and I'd like to take the front and rear wheels off and be ready to do the swap. While they're off, I'm going to thoroughly detail and clean the rims. (lots of wax stuck in the raised lettering, etc)
On my previous GS850G, I polished the aluminum and with the painted surfaces nice and clean, clear-coated both rims. I did this over 20 years ago and when viewing the bike at the new owner's house a few months ago, they still look great. I'm very surprised because I did not use high-quality 2K automotive paint, rather a spray can. Somehow I don't feel comfortable doing the same to these rims because that's not a factory procedure and the bike is a survivor. It will depend on how good the gray paint on rim inserts is....
Since I restored the whole bike over 20 years ago, I have no recollection of the sequence I used to take the wheels off. I do know however, that I did NOT use a fork compressor in order to remove the back wheel. The owner's manual gives a rudimentary explanation of how to remove the wheels. I'm thinking that if I remove the front wheel first, I should be able to pivot the bike forward enough to remove the rear wheel.
Any suggestions on where to support the bike with a jack or block(s) during the removal of the wheels?
Any procedural suggestions / comments would be welcomed since I don't remember a thing from back then. Also, does anyone have torque specs on the various nuts and bolts that have to be removed? The owner's manual suggests calling a Suzuki dealer. LOL
Also, I'm going to be putting in new brake pads all around and I'll have to compress the pistons I'm sure. Will the old "C" clamp trick work?
Any help would be appreciated, thanks in advance,
P.S. I'll be sure to implement Willie's rear drive spline cleanup and lube!
Mark
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