Driveshaft Lubrication and other servicing tasks

I am very pleased to report that my 2014 WCGSA has signs of joint lubrication:
i-h64FCbj-M.jpg

However, to the best of my knowledge, lubtcation of this joint is not a feature of any scheduled service, probably because failure of this section is very rare.
I feel happier to inspect and lube it regardless.
 
A tip when offering the drive up : use a long cable tie to hold the shaft up to the correct mating position .A hydraulic jack also useful to support the drive weight, but only for support ! Gentle coaxing and it'll mate easily, then cut the tie.
 
There is no schedule for driveshaft lubrication. As has been mentioned, if you ride in a lot of rain, or do high water crossings, you should check your FD by pushing back the boot for a look either right after water crossings, or every 6K. I also recommend, depending on your riding habits, dropping the FD every 12-24K and lubing the splines, plus a light layer of oil around the entire interior area. Make sure you also add some lithium grease around the boot to help seal it. As for what lube, I recommend a moly based high tack lube, the brand doesn't matter.

Jim :cool:
 
There is no schedule for driveshaft lubrication. As has been mentioned, if you ride in a lot of rain, or do high water crossings, you should check your FD by pushing back the boot for a look either right after water crossings, or every 6K. I also recommend, depending on your riding habits, dropping the FD every 12-24K and lubing the splines, plus a light layer of oil around the entire interior area. Make sure you also add some lithium grease around the boot to help seal it. As for what lube, I recommend a moly based high tack lube, the brand doesn't matter.

Jim :cool:

Would the stuff they put in CV joints found on front wheel drive cars do the job ?
 
There is no service schedule for this, so not an omission. I'll bet that every bike that"s seen any deep water will look like that. The angle of that shaft section is such that once water is in, it ain't coming out, cos there's no drain hole . Does that matter? It seems not.
Not easy ( possibly impossible ?) to pull the boot back when the final drive is in place
I've Moly"d the splines and ACF50"d the rest cos it's a humid place in there.
 
There is no service schedule for this, so not an omission. I'll bet that every bike that"s seen any deep water will look like that. The angle of that shaft section is such that once water is in, it ain't coming out, cos there's no drain hole . Does that matter? It seems not.
Not easy ( possibly impossible ?) to pull the boot back when the final drive is in place
I've Moly"d the splines and ACF50"d the rest cos it's a humid place in there.

It isn't hard at all to pull the boot back with the FD in place. You will not get it very far, but you only need a small gap to check for water.
05-caliper-off-and-hung.jpg


Here you can see the lithium grease:
018-splines-exposed.jpg


This was at 20K miles, looks perfect, and had not been touched to this point, with plenty of water crossings and heavy rain riding.

Note, this is an 05 Hexhead, but the process is similar, and the materials no different.

Jim :cool:
 
JimVonBaden, your FD is incredibly rust free. It'll be the only one that is.:-)
 
JimVonBaden, your FD is incredibly rust free. It'll be the only one that is.:-)

Checked mine today - little puddle in the bottom despite never intentionally even going out on a wet day or jet washing. has anyone thought of being brave & drilling a small drain hole in the bottom of the casting & using a small rubber bung? Casting looks meaty enough to take a 3mm hole carefully placed in the water trap?
 
Im considering drilling a hole,wouldnt bother with a bung.

Or just check it more regularly, took 20k miles to become an issue .
 
Never considered that, I got a new engine /gearbox a year ago.

Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
 
Would a main dealer drop the final drive on a LC to grease the splines ?

Don't think so but given the small amount of time it takes (about an hour) its good insurance given some of us have experienced water getting into the housing - its straightforward if you have reasonable mechanical ability / common sense. Don't forget to apply Loctite to the key components upon reassembly (tie arm / brake calliper)
 


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