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Thread: RG150 fork help

  1. #1
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    RG150 fork help

    Ok, I am doing the fork seals on a set of forks from a RG150, now after a little frustration I managed to get the damper bolts out and procced to remove the damper rods, expecting that the inner tube has nothing holding it in and it should just slide past the rooted fork seal allowing me to replace it, but it wont!

    What am I missing? I have the workshop manual and it says to "remove the oil seal by slowly pulling out the inner tube", so does that mean the seal has to come out first? and does anyone have any recomendations on how to go about this?

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

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  2. #2
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    If its similar to the Zeal, there will be a brass type sleeve between the fork tube and housing. If you remove the circlip and fork seal and you should see it. I had to convince it a little to come out when i was rebuilding my forks (springs/seals/said sleeve etc)

    However I could of done the seals without removing the tubes out of the housing if thats what was required (however i was rebuilding the whole lot so cant say for sure as they came out when i removed the tubes)

    Anywho I checked me spare bike (RG150), popped the dust seal and same thing
    circlip and seal.

    So in theory you should have done something like this:

    Removed forks from said cycle
    popped off the dust caps and removed
    removed circlip
    removed fork seal - perhaps two hooked picks into it
    greased new seal with rubber grease and slide down tube into place
    put circlip back in
    put dust boots back in
    There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. Some kind of high powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die.

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  3. #3
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    Thanks Jeaves, hmm so I will need to remove the fork seal before the inner tube will come out, was thinking that may have been the case but wanted to confirm that was the case before going rip shit and bust.

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

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  4. #4
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    wait, these are 'normal' forks without any cartridges etc?

    you remove the inner tube by shocking/yanking it. often the brass sleeve is a very tight fit, and often the manufacturing innacuracy means one fork is nigh on impossible to dismantle while the other falls apart. of course reinstalling the brass sleeve is a right prick of a job if it's a tight fit (yes it's meant to be an interference fit, it's what keeps it all together)

    i've always removed the inner simply to check all is in order, and i can never get the seal out otherwise anyway

    so in theory, remove dust cap and circlip, hook out seal. in practice i do what you've done and show some balls when it comes to the inner.

    no i'm not a qualified mechanic, but over 4 sets of forks sofar and it's always worked

  5. #5
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    By inner tube, you mean the stanchion? If so, generally, some bikes have a brass collar on the bottom of the stanchion. Easy way to get the seals out like this -- grab the stanchion and tug it and the seal should pop out with it eventually with a bit of muscle.

    When I was doing my 250RS forks I expected them to be like this (that's what Mr Haynes says), but I had newer model forks which didn't have the brass collar at the bottom, so the stanchions just came out and left the seals in there. I spent the best part of a day trying to get the old, hard, stuck seals out. Massive pain in the arse.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by motorbyclist View Post
    wait, these are 'normal' forks without any cartridges etc?
    That is correct

    Quote Originally Posted by motorbyclist View Post
    so in theory, remove dust cap and circlip, hook out seal. in practice i do what you've done and show some balls when it comes to the inner.
    Quote Originally Posted by xerxesdaphat View Post
    Easy way to get the seals out like this -- grab the stanchion and tug it and the seal should pop out with it eventually with a bit of muscle
    Yea all good in theory but these seals dont seam to want to budge, had a bit of a fight with them tonight, gave up and will try again tomorrow.

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

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  7. #7
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    Be careful with the seals.. can you get new ones if you need to before tearing th old ones out???

    I have a set i got from suzuki and they said they had to source them from other shops (new 'old' stock) as the original seals are no longer produced. They may cross reference with another seal from something else, but probably worth checking availability just in case

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by speights_bud View Post
    Be careful with the seals.. can you get new ones if you need to before tearing th old ones out???
    New seals and dust caps are sitting in the tool box waiting to go in as soon as I manage to get the old bastards out

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

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  9. #9
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    COOL

    I haven't done the RG ones yet that i have but have the seals etc ready for when the spare time comes up between racing
    So sorry cant help with the accurate details of pulling the RG ones apart in particular

  10. #10
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    assuming the bike is securely propped up, put the inner back in the triple clamp, get a rubber hammer/mallet/hammer with block of wood/big bit of 4x4 and smack the outer off it

    (seriously, i've done it before)

    or put outer in the vice and give the inner a few good yanks - the brass collar will be difficult to pop out but keep at it - make sure you've removed that circlip though!

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by motorbyclist View Post
    assuming the bike is securely propped up, put the inner back in the triple clamp, get a rubber hammer/mallet/hammer with block of wood/big bit of 4x4 and smack the outer off it

    (seriously, i've done it before)

    or put outer in the vice and give the inner a few good yanks - the brass collar will be difficult to pop out but keep at it - make sure you've removed that circlip though!
    Tried it, both of those idea.

    This is really anoying now, Im trying to break down the rubber seals using a sovent at the moment as a last resort

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

    Quote Originally Posted by Yow Ling View Post
    Pumba is a wise man.

  12. #12
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    what sort of solvent? wouldn't want to damage the fork internals/chrome

  13. #13
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    Just a bit of brake clean, should ust soften up the rubber seals without damaging any thing else (he cross fingures and hopes)

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

    Quote Originally Posted by Yow Ling View Post
    Pumba is a wise man.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pumba View Post
    Just a bit of brake clean, should ust soften up the rubber seals without damaging any thing else (he cross fingures and hopes)
    Well that didnt work anyone else got any ideas cause im just going to end breaking shit out of frustration shortly

    For the record Qkkid was in my bed, not the other way round

    Quote Originally Posted by Yow Ling View Post
    Pumba is a wise man.

  15. #15
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    When you yank the top stanchion, you need to be damn near brutal. Its not just a gentle tug mate.


    Lock the bottom in the vice, grab the top stanchion, push it in a bit then YANK THE LIVING FUCK OUT OF IT! Did you drain the oil, take out the spring, remove dust cap, remove the circlip and remove the damper rod bolt?

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