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Location: Saint John, NB, Canada
I am just wondering if it is possible to turn the stanchion/outer fork tube in its cross braces, say 90 degrees, or if it has to be in a fixed preset position. The reason I am asking is that I have a bit of a forward/backward free play in right fork, most probably a wear in bushings (plain bearings) inside. My reasoning is that if I turned the stanchion 90 degrees, I might eliminate or at least reduce this free play.
BMW R1200RS for touring, Royal Enfield Int 650 for rural and secondary roads.
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I see no reason why this couldn't be done.
How many miles/km on the bike? Are the seals leaking? If there is movement between the outer stanchion and the inner tube I would suppose the seals would suffer.
Frank
'23 R1250RS, 9000 mi. 1 yr., '03 R1100S BCR #6/200, '85 K100/1100RS- 38 yrs. 331,000 mi., '17R1200RS- 51,054 mi. (gone), '16 R1200RS- 28,322 mi. (gone), '11 R1200RT-30,000 mi. (gone), '05 R1200ST-58,000 mi. (gone), '96 Ducati 900SS/SP-89,000 mi. (gone), 560K+ BMW miles
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The bike has 55k kms. The seals are not leaking.
BMW R1200RS for touring, Royal Enfield Int 650 for rural and secondary roads.
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While I understand wanting a cheap alternative, the correct maintenance would be to replace the worn bushings and install new seals. IMHO that's what you really need to do.
Happiness comes not from what you have, but from enjoying all that you do have no matter how much or little that may be.
Be stubborn with your dream but flexible with your path
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Location: Saint John, NB, Canada
I’ll see if anything prevents me turning the stanchion without taking the fork apart. Otherwise I just postpone the rebuild (already have new seals, waiting for bushings), the free play is actually not that bad.
BMW R1200RS for touring, Royal Enfield Int 650 for rural and secondary roads.