- jmaslak wrote:
The oil seal and bearing must be replaced from the inside - I.E. you have to disassemble the final drive to do it.
You definitely shouldn't pack grease between the bearing and the dust seal. You'll make a mess as it slings grease out.
Now that I have the rear wheel off and have viewed the manual transmission diagram on Bearing Replacement on page 11-5, I have no intention on replacing the Oil
Seal on Bearing as it would involve a whole lot of complicated (for me) transmission work - and has been pointed out it is not necessary (no loss of oil and bearing is fine).
The Part Number for the Dust
Seal is 91205-MM5-003 which is shown on the parts assembly schematic (online) of the Swingarm. On page 11-5 of the manual it looks as if it can be pressed on from OUTSIDE the transmission - but when I match the NEW dust
seal up against the OLD installed dust
seal it seems as if the NEW
seal is a bit bigger than the OLD
seal making me wonder if indeed it needs to be installed from inside the transmission. I am not going to try to pull the OLD dust
seal out from OUTSIDE the transmission until I can get confirmation that it indeed it can be removed/installed this way - otherwise I will have a major unnecessary repair job. For now, I am going to pack the space between the Dust
Seal and the Bearing with Lithium Grease No. 2, then push in the spacer - then take it out to remove excess grease before putting it all back together. I might add that the annular space in a very small cavity that does not hold much grease. I did this last tire change and now I am seeing a bit of white grease in there - but before that the grease was very nasty/dirty looking. IMHO keeping grease in this cavity will keep dust from getting to the bearing which in turn will help lengthen the life of my bearing. I have 45,000 miles on my SWing and hope to extend the bearing life as replacing it would be quite a chore - which I am hoping to forever avoid. I am also planning on greasing the splines as they are an avenue for dust to get into the space between the bearing and the dust
seal. Last time I did this there was a bit of grease that would splatter on the wheel - but it never got on the rotor - but not much and easly to clean off the wheel. In 8000 miles I will change my rear tire again and see how things look. I am only using Lithium Grease No 2 for this as it is suited to this task more so than other greases that may flow more easily. This is not a hot application. My theory is that a dust
seal working properly will not allow grease to escape. I pack lithium grease no 2 in all cavities durnig ever front tire change. No grease escapes past the dust
seal during operation during the 16,000 miles it took to wear out the front tire - and when I took the front axle out the grease was as white as snow - it looked very clean. I am not recommending that you pack any grease - just Lithium No 2. I would use (or try) lithium no 3 - but it very hard to get - this is the grease Honda recommends to pack the needle bearings/spaces in the final - sometimes folks refer to final drive bearings as dry - in reality it is just a very viscous grease.
Some may say 'don't fix if ain't broke' - but keeping dust from getting to your bearings is Preventive Maintenance - and if I wait for my bearing(s) to fail when I can extend their life then my maintenance is not very pro-active.
My question remains, "Has anyone replaced the Right Side Axle Dust Seal and was it done from INSIDE or OUTSIDE the transmission." Thanks for providing your opinions and insights on this topic.
PS - The difference between the hole ID on transmission (measured from outside the transmission) and the OD of the Dust
Seal is 0.095 inches making it, IMHO, impossible to drive the Dust
Seal from the outside of the transmission case - but maybe I am wrong.