Moderators: DAVID THOMPSON, phlat65
breakwellmz wrote:It does look low at the back without the front having been lowered by the same amount, how about sliding the forks up in the yolks when you change the fork seals? Having material added to the subframe sounds tiresome and expensive!
I found that i had to change gear lever output shaft, water pump and a fork seal on my Puzey (yes!) after it had stood for a long time unused, all easy to do as others say.
homebrew123 wrote:Waste of time trying to do the seals while still assembled and in the bike, it makes it incredibly difficult and is an easy way for something getting damaged. Get a small bike lift and lift under the main frame tubes to raise the bike level, and work on the front end no problem, I can do new fork seals with a complete internal clean down and wash out in an hour, but I have done a dozen different Baghira's and Mastiff's over the years, even so you should be able to do it in a couple of hours. Don't forget to wash all the muck out of the lower leg, and blow everything off with an air line and blow gun, even with low mileage, you will be surprised how much muck there will be.
Good luck.
Jon
homebrew123 wrote:Hi, yes you can undo the bottom damper rod bolt and pull the lower leg off the stanchions while they are still clamped in the bike and slide the leg down like a slide hammer until it slides off with the upper bush, then remove dust seal and snap ring on top of oil seal and carefully without damaging the edge of the leg prise the oil seal out, best to put a piece of curved hard plastic on the edge to protect it. Then loosen the large top nut and slide stanchions out of yokes and wash them off and blow dry them. With the low miles, you shouldn't need to dismantle the cartridges and they can stay in the stanchions, remember one side is compression, and the other rebound, so better to do one fork at a time and keep the bits separate. There will be an aluminium cap for the end of the damper assemblies that will stay in the leg probably, tip it out and don't forget to put it back in before you reassemble, then wash out thoroughly the lower leg and stuff it with rag on the end of a brush handle and turn it while keeping hold of a bit of the rag, and then give it a good blow out, don't forget to clean the oil seal seat area and there is a heavy gauge plain washer that goes under the oil seals Remove the copper or aluminium washers from the lower rod bolt and replace with a tight fitting Dowty hydraulic seal instead, they are far better and don't rely on overly tightening the bolt to seal properly, although do make sure the bolt is tight enough lol. Then reassemble the stanchion into the leg with a bit of clean fork oil rubbed around the bushes to lube them, it should go back together with a gentle tap, and tighten the bottom bolt with Dowty seal on. Then slide heavy washer over stanchion and onto seal seat, then lube oil seal with rubber grease and slide over stanchion and knock into place with a seal driver, then slide dust seal down and push on with fingers. undo the pre loosened top nut and slide stanchion down a bit to expose the spring and hold in that position, there is just enough room to run the oil from a jug into the coils of the spring slowly to refill, but keep the stanchion near the top of the spring or there is not enough room for the oil as it comes fairly high up the tube, then screw the top nut on, and tighten fully once back in the yokes.
That is the quick way to do it, if there is nothing else that needs attention, and everything is pretty clean inside, and it involves the minimum of dismantling, but if you do want to take it completely apart, you will have to undo top nut and lower stanchion, pull spring down a bit and put an open end spanner through the coils to hold the rod and unscrew the large top nut and adjuster, then remove the cartridges from the stanchion tube. But with the low miles, you should be ok just doing it the quick way. And yes 7.5 oil is perfect, although Marzocchi give 3 options of oil, 1 heavier and 1 lighter think they are 5 and 10 grade off the top of my head, but I have always used the 7.5.
Good luck
Jon
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