Yamaha Vstar 650 97-11 Rear Wheel Removal and Installation and Spline Lubing

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  • Опубліковано 10 жов 2022
  • This video is for Informational Purposes Only.
    I am not a licensed mechanic, just a young kid who likes to learn and do things himself. Also, Video was set to 1.4x speed if you're wondering.
    Yamaha Vstar 650 97-11 Rear Wheel Removal and Installation and Lubing of the Splines
    Drop your email down below if you want me to email you the Yamaha Vstar 650 Shop Manual 1997-2011 or just search up on Google for free PDF's on the forums.
    Here are other Videos and Information Related to this Video.
    Info on Splines and Final Drive Shaft
    www.650ccnd.com/shaft2.htm
    Rear Wheel Change
    • Yamaha V-Star 650 Rear...
    Front and Rear Wheel Change
    • 2009 Yamaha V star 650...
    Spline Lubing
    • All the V Star 650 own...
    Below is the Product Information and Links
    Motorcycle Jack
    www.ebay.com/itm/Wide-Deck-11...
    Loctite Moly Paste LB8012
    www.ebay.com/itm/Loctite-2342...
    Honda Moly Paste M77
    www.ebay.com/itm/Honda-43383-...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 22

  • @SunClaw
    @SunClaw Рік тому +3

    Thanks for posting.

  • @robertsebastian787
    @robertsebastian787 Рік тому

    I like your video! I bought a new coupler when I replaced my pinion shaft bearing and seal and I get in there and grease her up every time I replace my rear tire 🦅

    • @ellatingo1850
      @ellatingo1850  6 місяців тому

      Thank you sir, appreciate it 🙏

  • @andymilani4954
    @andymilani4954 6 місяців тому

    I just took this apart on my friends Vstar 650 to replace the rear tire. Took the wheel and new tire to yamaha to have it installed and asked about lubing the splines while I was there. After walking to the back to ask one of the mechanics, the guy came back with a tub of plain old waterproof grease and told me to use that. When asked if i needed to wory about lubing the splines every time in the first place, they said "if theyre dry". Why is it that the dealer hands me a tub of regular waterproof grease, when everything else says it has to be a very specific product? 😅 More confused than ever.

    • @nicholasmurphy1847
      @nicholasmurphy1847 12 днів тому

      Just go to a local marine shop and they will have spline shaft grease. Pretty cheap and will get the job done. As long as they are lubricated you will be good 👍

  • @milan1969
    @milan1969 9 місяців тому +3

    Please us metric tools on that metric bike.

    • @ellatingo1850
      @ellatingo1850  6 місяців тому

      Yes you're probably right, gotta make do with what you got sometimes. All the tools I have are hand me downs from my father. I will keep using them in the meantime. Thanks for the heads up though 👍

    • @AUSEE77
      @AUSEE77 16 днів тому +1

      ​@ellatingo1850 Milan is in FACT right.
      I like how the bike is jacked up with rear wheel in air but you have it in first so it doesn't roll away 😂
      I'm guessing you PROBABLY don't understand why that's funny
      Good on you for doing the job yourself though mate 👍

  • @littletigger2008
    @littletigger2008 Рік тому +2

    its in 1st gear so it doesnt roll back on you? the rear wheel is in the air so it doesnt matter

    • @ellatingo1850
      @ellatingo1850  6 місяців тому

      My garage is at a slight slant, better safe than sorry

    • @AUSEE77
      @AUSEE77 16 днів тому

      ​@@ellatingo1850oh dear

  • @steveguinn9740
    @steveguinn9740 10 місяців тому

    Why does most everyone suggest using high % moly when the service manual recommends regular lithium grease?

    • @kenwittlief255
      @kenwittlief255 9 місяців тому

      @@weyb6957 the big gear inside the wheel hub is also a spline, its not an axle or bearing - it requires 60% moly
      the Yamaha service manual can be found online as a free pdf down load. There are NO mistakes in the Yamaha manual!
      all the spines are lubed with 60% moly ONLY

    • @BigOldCarChannel
      @BigOldCarChannel 8 місяців тому

      The confusion comes from the fact that there's a lube that contains moly that has "60" in the name. People think that number is a percentage but it isn't. M-60 Moly has about 2% (I think) molybdenum in it.
      Use what the manual says, or use the best stuff you can find. But at the end of the day, "something" is better than "nothing," especially if it's applied regularly (at each tire change).

  • @kenholt8297
    @kenholt8297 5 місяців тому

    Japanese motorcycle nuts, bolts, fasteners in general are in Milimeters NOT standard. 😮😂😂😂

  • @kenwittlief255
    @kenwittlief255 9 місяців тому +1

    your video is hap-hazard and hard to follow, and you skipped some important things
    but most important you got the correct 60% Loctite moly paste, which is crucial! If anyone puts axle grease on any of the splines they will eat themselves in a few thousand miles, and it cost $500 for a used rear wheel hub and drive shaft assembly. So I give you an A just for that.
    But... you dont have to lube the splines every time you take the rear wheel off for a new tire (about every 10k miles) at all! The splines are lubed from the factory for the LIFE of the bike - about 100,000 miles... so maybe when you change the tire for the TENTH time, lube all the splines. You are more likely to mess something up, or miss one of them, if you do it with every tire change, so its not recommended. BTW, that big gear inside the wheel is a spline: It needs the same moly lube as the drive shaft, not axle grease.
    And I will add, if you just got the bike, and you dont know how well it was maintained, it would be good to lube the spines yourself with the loctite Moly paste, just so you know its right.
    You dont need to put axle grease on those spacers or the inside of the bearing where they ride on the rear axle - those parts do not spin! The bearing spins inside where you cant see it - if you replace the bearings you have to pack them with new grease - not when you pull the wheel off.
    One thing you skipped over that is important: with the 650 custom you can pull the rear wheel straight back off the bike. With the Classic the rear fender is in the way, so you either have to get the bike WAY up in the air (which most MC lifts like yours cannot do), or you have to take 4 bolts out of the rear fender, unplug the connector by the battery, take the seats off, and swing the fender up to get the rear tire off. You skipped this, I dont know how you got the tire out from under the bike and back in.
    And you can find the VStar 650 factory service manual all over the internet as a free download PDF file. It has the step by step instructions for taking the rear wheel off, putting it back on, and it has the drawings that show where those odd spacers and all the washers go. If you forget the spacer or put it in the wrong place the rear wheel will be screwed up when you torque it back on. And it has all the torque specs right on the drawings.
    Good to see you wrenching on your own bike - that is half the experience of owning a motorcycle, they are simple and elegant machines and a joy to work on and maintain. Letting someone else work on your motorcycle is like letting someone else sleep with your spouse, and having to pay them to boot!

    • @ellatingo1850
      @ellatingo1850  6 місяців тому

      I appreciate the words, and I do appreciate your help. You are correct, there are parts that I could have filmed better and things I could have done more correctly. As for the wheel I just jacked up the bike as high as it could go and then angled it out. I did have to have help putting it back it on because I couldn't do it alone. As far as it being a hard video to follow, I tried to make it better and more information than any other video on UA-cam and I think I was successful in that. Thank you and stay safe ✌️

    • @andymilani4954
      @andymilani4954 6 місяців тому

      When I went to the Yamaha dealer to drop off the rear wheel and new tire to have it mounted, they just sold me a tub of waterproof grease to put on the splines. I'm a little skeptical that they gave me some basic waterproof grease when everything I'm seeing online says that it takes a very specific moly paste. Really don't want to screw up my buddies bike, any insight?

    • @ellatingo1850
      @ellatingo1850  6 місяців тому

      @@andymilani4954 I'd get the right Moly Paste just to be safe. The name/link should be in the description of the video. Good luck 👍

  • @earlgallup5223
    @earlgallup5223 5 місяців тому

    Goofball

  • @terryrobertson111
    @terryrobertson111 Місяць тому

    Should have had someone else hold the fucking camera. I'm seasick just from watching this.