In the fun and exciting realm of motorcycle repair and maintenance, not all good deeds go unpunished. I have performed numerous good deeds on the GPX so I knew that statistically at some stage there would be some kind of punishment.
This is the rear sprocket carrier from the subject GPX.
- Looks innocent but it harbours a dark design secret.
- gpx750r_sprocket_carrier.jpg (236.41 KiB) Viewed 9474 times
In the perfect world of the Factory Shop Manual, special tools are close to hand and things come apart the way they are supposed to.
Replacing the sprocket carrier bearing should simply start by banging on the inner ring of the bearing and the whole bearing should gradually slide out, right? No, not in the real world.
In the real world, the inner ring and the cage and balls come out and the outer ring stays firmly in the sprocket carrier, like this:
- [sigh] What can you do?
Normally this should not be a problem as any sensible designer of something that holds a bearing with an interference fit would provide a couple of recesses where a drift rod would catch on the edge of a bearing outer ring (or cup in the case of a tapered roller bearing) and let you tap it out.
Not so the rear sprocket carrier here. In this case, the sprocket carrier has a lip just behind the bearing outer ring.
Closeup:
- Somebody has had a go at this in the past. I suspect there was no success and the worn bearing inner ring and cage was whacked back together.
- gpx750r_brg_outer_ring_closeup.jpg (231.68 KiB) Viewed 9474 times
Getting the remnant of this bearing out will be umm, "interesting", no thanks to insufficient design.
I
was looking forward to trying out new chain and sprockets in combination with a non-wobbly sprocket carrier bearing.
The tight spot on the old chain probably didn't help the cause of the old bearing.