?
and what greese?
Canadian.
?
and what greese?
Mo2S4they look like sealed bearing?
so do you just greese between the adjuster and the bearing?
and what greese?
they look like sealed bearing?
so do you just greese between the adjuster and the bearing?
and what greese?
cheers mateThey aren't sealed - just a plastic cage retaining the needles and two races (they do clip together via the plastic race but there are no seals). They come pre-greased with 'special' BMW white grease (which has a German name I can't remember). To regrease them you can just unclip them and wodge some moly bearing grease in.
cheers mate![]()

...or just do it by feel![]()

Quite right.
Having not done it before I didn't have the muscle memory and wasn't confident in 'feeling' the low torque. Having done it a few times now, I'd happily do it by feel if I didn't have a torque wrench handy. If I did have a torque wrench handy, I'd use it - why not?![]()
What about torquing the screw until the wheel has no mere play in it?![]()
what a mess! Grease nipples are the real answer, but BMW don’t fit them as they used to, very satisfying going round the bike every few months with a grease gun, nothing ever seized up on my old airhead. happy daysI always thought they were self lubricating 'oilite' type stuff?
Anyway the OEM roller bearings can seize up in just the same way.
Because there's no true 'rotation' the rollers can hammer grooves into the inner race which then effectively locks the bearing (brinelling I believe it's called). The locked bearing then spins on the pinion (rather than the swingarm) and bu**ers it. I assume this happens when they're allowed to stay 'loose' for a too long and are then adjusted up tight.
I know this because it happened to me although I only discovered it just after I bought the bike, when I removed the swingarm to replace the gearbox output shaft seal - there was no external indication at all that anything was amiss. My left hand bearing inner race and pinion:
<a href="http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/lh/photo/Gyx_bW6yMaDjDDGXU_r3AQ?feat=embedwebsite"><img src="http://lh4.ggpht.com/_SSn2CtCOKnU/ScdT8GssOYI/AAAAAAAABZ4/jU89AvKvPRc/s800/IMG_4344.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/lh/photo/znc3Jbq76tCUmXKZ3__fRA?feat=embedwebsite"><img src="http://lh4.ggpht.com/_SSn2CtCOKnU/ScdT25m9P6I/AAAAAAAABZc/3Vt4fV-lfVo/s800/IMG_4347.JPG" /></a>
<a href="http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/lh/photo/QYGeApJd4sZr46UMKRiHIg?feat=embedwebsite"><img src="http://lh4.ggpht.com/_SSn2CtCOKnU/ScfFUaRrf7I/AAAAAAAABhM/7VoI0vAEj-w/s800/IMG_4351.JPG" /></a>

what a mess! Grease nipples are the real answer, but BMW don’t fit them as they used to, very satisfying going round the bike every few months with a grease gun, nothing ever seized up on my old airhead. happy days![]()
Bored out to 1200




drill/tap/fit grease nipples? Should say still looking for GS to buy so blissful ignorance of practicality of this idea!
Ps. Collapse of staff in Portuguese bearing shop into unstoppable hilarity recently when I tried mimeing when attempting purchase of grease nipples....
People are never satisfied !!
Ain't it ever so.
Along the lines of the RS owners who fit GS air intake tubes as it improves the bike.
And the GS owners who fit RS air intake tubes as it improves the bike.

Use: for large , slowly rotating bearings under extremely heavy loads. Good water resistance. Suitable for extreme vibration applications. Contains molybdenum disulphide.
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David Baily yer not 