Mine just have a large heat sink, no fan. I was able to separate them to install them through the rubber cover. Whatever you buy, make sure you can do this.
Mine just have a large heat sink, no fan. I was able to separate them to install them through the rubber cover. Whatever you buy, make sure you can do this.
Fan? What fan? I run LEDs and there is no fan.
I'd urge you to do this yourself for a couple of reasons. The only obstacle I see is removing the side fairing pieces - the large middle cowls. Replacing the lamps can be done with the fairing intact, but it is much more difficult.
Why do it yourself? I've found that doing my own maintenance is very satisfying and lets me get to know the bike. It is also a learning experience and there are few downsides to that. This is a fairly straightforward task and short of dropping a screw and having it roll under your work bench there are not many things that can go wrong. Doing it yourself is a chance to save some money and given the number of horror stories on this website about botched repairs by Honda trained (or dealer) mechanics I'll only trust one of these fellows AFTER I've seen his work (on someone else's bike). What can a dealer's guy do wrong? He is under some time constraints and might take shortcuts like pulling the fairing out and cracking it or not telling you if he sees evidence of heating at an electrical connector. He might also simply not look around to see if anything is an incipient failure - part of any maintenance procedure.
Edit: Not saying anything about your dealer or mechanic, but the example below is evidence why I distrust dealerships (and my own history of being screwed by my nearby dealer).
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Yeah, we all mess up, but that's how we learn - and get to be experienced mechanics. Great that you have a good mechanic you trust, most of us do not.But unfortunately, I also have vivid memories of all I was able to mess up myself!