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Gotcha. I thought you were referring to the stator cover itself. I'll have to look at this a little closer for myself now!Shocka311 wrote:There is an oil seal between the motor and the stator housing, and I know it could be coming from there but with everything i've done I don't think so. The oil pan is a great idea and I'll check there next. Thanks for the help.
Where is that picture of that guy from the archives that found a tie wrapped around that area?Luke-a-Tron wrote:Pull your sprocket cover off and clean up the mess that's in there. It will take some serious effort as there's probably a solid 1/2 inch of thickened up chain lube and road grime caked on everything. Go do some riding and remove the sprocket cover again when you get back. My guess is it's coming from the seal around the clutch push rod. It may be that the oil is leaking out when you're riding and then then drips down when the bike is left leaned over on the stand. Or it could be that hot oil is thinner and sneaks past the seal more readily.
That seal fails frequently because as the shaft moves in and out, the seal has to scrape off all that gritty road junk and it gets torn up. Every other oil seal is for a rotating shaft which doesn't have to deal with debris trying to be forced through it. The good news is this is the easiest seal on the whole bike to replace. Maybe a 5 minute job.
It should be easy enough to tell after everything is cleaned out from the cover. It will probably be nearly impossible before to see without doing so. I'd recommend some rubber gloves for the cleaning as chain lube is difficult to get off your hands. Mineral or cooking oil can help with that.
Yep. Here's a couple before & after pics from when I cleaned up my front sprocket area:Luke-a-Tron wrote:Pull your sprocket cover off and clean up the mess that's in there. It will take some serious effort as there's probably a solid 1/2 inch of thickened up chain lube and road grime caked on everything. Go do some riding and remove the sprocket cover again when you get back. My guess is it's coming from the seal around the clutch push rod. It may be that the oil is leaking out when you're riding and then then drips down when the bike is left leaned over on the stand. Or it could be that hot oil is thinner and sneaks past the seal more readily.
That seal fails frequently because as the shaft moves in and out, the seal has to scrape off all that gritty road junk and it gets torn up. Every other oil seal is for a rotating shaft which doesn't have to deal with debris trying to be forced through it. The good news is this is the easiest seal on the whole bike to replace. Maybe a 5 minute job.
It should be easy enough to tell after everything is cleaned out from the cover. It will probably be nearly impossible before to see without doing so. I'd recommend some rubber gloves for the cleaning as chain lube is difficult to get off your hands. Mineral or cooking oil can help with that.
And keep in mind that Brandon's was waaay over on the fairly clean side to start with! Like Luke-A Tron said...it's prolly a half inch thick in there and yeah, that pushrod seal is very failure prone.fzrbrandon wrote:Yep. Here's a couple before & after pics from when I cleaned up my front sprocket area:
http://www.fzrarchives.com/ipb/index.ph ... ost&id=799
http://www.fzrarchives.com/ipb/index.ph ... ost&id=800
Brandon
Awesome, that's extremely helpful and that gives me somewhere to start. Thanks alotLuke-a-Tron wrote:Pull your sprocket cover off and clean up the mess that's in there. It will take some serious effort as there's probably a solid 1/2 inch of thickened up chain lube and road grime caked on everything. Go do some riding and remove the sprocket cover again when you get back. My guess is it's coming from the seal around the clutch push rod. It may be that the oil is leaking out when you're riding and then then drips down when the bike is left leaned over on the stand. Or it could be that hot oil is thinner and sneaks past the seal more readily.
That seal fails frequently because as the shaft moves in and out, the seal has to scrape off all that gritty road junk and it gets torn up. Every other oil seal is for a rotating shaft which doesn't have to deal with debris trying to be forced through it. The good news is this is the easiest seal on the whole bike to replace. Maybe a 5 minute job.
It should be easy enough to tell after everything is cleaned out from the cover. It will probably be nearly impossible before to see without doing so. I'd recommend some rubber gloves for the cleaning as chain lube is difficult to get off your hands. Mineral or cooking oil can help with that.