Brother you had me laughing my ass off...I'm like is this guy talking to me...gone through everything word for word with how I came to the conclusion about the final drive bearings....bought the bearings took to a small bike shop they pressed in and out for $25
I'm off to the dealer today to buy a set of front bearings for my ride because I hit a pothole the size of California and now when in a turn I feel roughness. Took a look and yep - grease stain on the ABS bearing. Oh well.
Had a rear wheel bearing failure on my 2008 Buell Ulyesses . The rear wheel had two small bearings. I did some research and found out that Buell made an upgrade in 2009... The new wheel has 3 larger wheel bearings instead of two smaller ones.. I found an old Stock new wheel with the wheel bearing axle and spacer kit for $700.00 All Balls Wheel bearings cost 25% of what HD sells them for .. You China bearing puller kit should have wheel bearing installers too, thus you can press the new bearings in yourself.. You might want to put the new bearings in a freezer overnight..
LOL, you're right about 99% of the Harley touring wheel bearing vids not showing or even talking about the sprocket bearings! I did see one the other day that does show changing the sprocket bearings though. Hell, my Chilton's service manual wheel diagram for a 2013 FLTRX doesn't even show the sprocket bearings! WTF? As far as leaving the wheel on the bike...I would think that would be more difficult. You already have the axle and belt/sprocket removed, all you have to do is drop the wheel out at that point. Having said that, I haven't tried this method.
I have an 08 Road King Classic. The 08 touring models have an isolator basket that bolts on...that I suppose isn't the point. I believe the 08 only has a double row bearing with an extended race. Part number 9285. It's the only thing shown on the parts diagram. So in the case of the 08 models, you only have 3 bearings(technically) because the double stacked sprocket bearing sits inside one housing. I'm not sure the MoCo even makes it anymore. We keep rolling via dead stock parts.
They are a pain in the butt...that said I kinda feel sales are down to price..the average age per harley owner is 50 per a Google search..the younger generation of riders can't afford a harley in this economy and trend toward the cheaper yet still reliable metric bikes till they get all their finances in order and buy what everybody wants when the time is right
Brother you had me laughing my ass off...I'm like is this guy talking to me...gone through everything word for word with how I came to the conclusion about the final drive bearings....bought the bearings took to a small bike shop they pressed in and out for $25
I'm off to the dealer today to buy a set of front bearings for my ride because I hit a pothole the size of California and now when in a turn I feel roughness. Took a look and yep - grease stain on the ABS bearing. Oh well.
@CaveCreekOracle could have been much worse for sure
Had a rear wheel bearing failure on my 2008 Buell Ulyesses . The rear wheel had two small bearings. I did some research and found out that Buell made an upgrade in 2009... The new wheel has 3 larger wheel bearings instead of two smaller ones..
I found an old Stock new wheel with the wheel bearing axle and spacer kit for $700.00 All Balls Wheel bearings cost 25% of what HD sells them for ..
You China bearing puller kit should have wheel bearing installers too, thus you can press the new bearings in yourself.. You might want to put the new bearings in a freezer overnight..
Great information! Just what I was looking for
Thanks for posting this video. I was looking for info on the bearings in the pulley. Hate that my ebay bearing puller will not work for it.
My 09 street glide has a bearing with a spacer built in it in the pulley too. Not sure on 09 and later
Just want to say thank you. I appreciate you
Thanks very much! Good to hear.
Hi friend, when should I change the rear pulley of my Street glide 2011? Thank you
No way I can say, that's an inspection item to determine need.
LOL, you're right about 99% of the Harley touring wheel bearing vids not showing or even talking about the sprocket bearings! I did see one the other day that does show changing the sprocket bearings though. Hell, my Chilton's service manual wheel diagram for a 2013 FLTRX doesn't even show the sprocket bearings! WTF?
As far as leaving the wheel on the bike...I would think that would be more difficult. You already have the axle and belt/sprocket removed, all you have to do is drop the wheel out at that point. Having said that, I haven't tried this method.
Great video thank You
I have an 08 Road King Classic. The 08 touring models have an isolator basket that bolts on...that I suppose isn't the point. I believe the 08 only has a double row bearing with an extended race. Part number 9285. It's the only thing shown on the parts diagram. So in the case of the 08 models, you only have 3 bearings(technically) because the double stacked sprocket bearing sits inside one housing. I'm not sure the MoCo even makes it anymore. We keep rolling via dead stock parts.
I just change all bearing and brakes. When I change tires.
That's the best practice for sure. My sorry (and overweight) carcass may not be worth much, but it's worth taking good care to keep my bike safe!
My pulley just sheered the bolts. The wheel doesn't spin
well, if you watch my video, it isn't that big a deal to fix it.
New Harleys are too much trouble. And they wonder why sales are down.
They are a pain in the butt...that said I kinda feel sales are down to price..the average age per harley owner is 50 per a Google search..the younger generation of riders can't afford a harley in this economy and trend toward the cheaper yet still reliable metric bikes till they get all their finances in order and buy what everybody wants when the time is right
New bearings everytime I change tires. It’s cheap insurance.
👍👍
REAR WHEEL COMPENSATOR BEARING
REMOVER / INSTALLER TOOL #947 made by jim's
Jim's makes good tools, should be a first go-to when looking for the right tool.
Wonder if it works for the 08 models...Seems like it should.