Thought I saw instructions on here about how to properly sequence the mounting of the front wheel. 91 ST.
Anyone know where to find it?Thanks
I always torque the axle bolt before I ever tighten the pinch bolts, otherwise you are not torqueing it to what you think you are. The other end of the axle has a hole for putting a rod/screw driver, etc. for holding the axle so it does not turn.
Are you saying you don't torque any of the pinch bolts before torquing the axle? The purpose for the axle torque is to pull the forks and all the spacers together with the desired force against the wheel bearings, etc. If you torque the axle without any pinch bolts being tightened first, then you've just torqued the axle bolt onto the axle while the forks are floating in air. Or, perhaps whatever you put through the hole in the other end of the axle to hold it from turning is held tight against the left fork while torquing the nut, performing the same function as tightening the left pinch bolts does.
I always torque the axle bolt before I ever tighten the pinch bolts, otherwise you are not torqueing it to what you think you are. The other end of the axle has a hole for putting a rod/screw driver, etc. for holding the axle so it does not turn.
Easy to do if you don't do it often enough to remember. If it's in there right, it will fit flush into the wheel. Folks have destroyed the drive by not making it flush then torqueing in down. Good advice! I left the bushing out on the last one I did but figured it out before I tightened down. When you do that, you get to pull the wheel back out since you can't get the bushing in with the wheel in position.I screwed up on the speedometer housing placement.
Yes and Yes. ;-) I've done it a few times and so far nothing has fallen off ...The front wheel bearings on Redbird only lasted for 120,000 miles or so ...
I was thinking the axle didn't have a stop to keep it from pulling through the left fork bottom
It doesn't have a stop. As I mentioned above, the shoulder on the end of the axle butts up against the speedo housing. The hole in the end of the left fork simply supports the left end of the axle and the pinch bolts are tightened only after the axle bolt gets torqued to spec. Torquing the axle bolt locks the spacer, inner races of the wheel bearings, distance collar and speedo housing all against the inside surface of the right fork slider. All of these parts are then fixed/do not move/rotate, but the wheel rotates around them on the ball bearings between the fixed inner races and the outer races fixed to the wheel itself. The hole in the left side of the swingarm does the same thing for the rear axle... supports that end after the axle shoulder butts up against the brake caliper bracket and draws everything in between to the inside/inner surface of the final drive. Think about it....
edit: tightening the left pinch bolts before the axle bolt will pull the left fork slider to the right, resulting in increased fork stiction and abnormal fork bushing wear, not to mention possibly affecting handling, brake caliper to rotor alignment, etc.
John
Imagine this -
Remove the left fork from the bike. Now mount the front wheel while supporting the end of the axle with a jack stand. Tighten the axle bolt locking everything together to spec'd torque value. Spin the wheel. Move the jack stand in and out along the shouldered portion of the axle. Doesn't make any difference, all it's doing is supporting the end of the axle, same as the left fork slider.