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nobasin
March 12th, 2012, 12:21 PM
In the midst of preseason teardown/buildup and wondering what is the general take on wheel bearings and how long they last and when they should be replaced? With 6+ full race seasons (plus 8-10k of miles before this bike became a race bike) on them I'm just wondering when they should be replaced? They are on a 2001 F4i.

And rybo posted up before i could even edit, which was to add that there are no signs right now that they are bad at all...smooth and quiet rolling with no play or sticking at all.

Mike-

rybo
March 12th, 2012, 12:23 PM
Mike -

Wheel bearings aren't that expensive - if you already have it torn apart replace them on a bike that old.

The other side is check them out - to they spin smoothly, any notchiness or grinding? Any lateral play in them? These are both modes of failure and will need to be replaced.

That would be my take -

Scott

nobasin
March 12th, 2012, 12:41 PM
Thanks Scott, that is my basic take as well but just want to hear other's thoughts. The stock Honda bearings are only $20/each and the shops will charge just half hour labor to replace them, so that's easy and cheap peace of mind.

marty
March 12th, 2012, 01:34 PM
sounds like a good time to go to ceramic bearings :D

rforsythe
March 12th, 2012, 01:53 PM
If they're bad, replace them. I also go by the "if they're old, replace them" addage, since they are cheap and you know you're starting the season out fresh.

My 2001 SV is stripped to the frame right now. The bearings all seem fine, but they're getting refreshed.

nobasin
March 12th, 2012, 02:02 PM
sounds like a good time to go to ceramic bearings :D

a nice thought, but given that the stock honda's have lasted this long and are super cheap, i'll just stick with those. this bike, with less than 90hp is the definition of rolling resistance so imaginary friction free bearings probably don't even help me.

and yes, agree with the "replace if old" philosophy, i just can't take that too far on this bike or there won't be any bike left, or rather there won't be any money left in my bank account.

watch out though, my new bearings might mean i'll be .0000001 seconds faster around the track.

Scored51
March 12th, 2012, 04:31 PM
...this bike, with less than 90hp is the definition of rolling resistance...


Errr, you may want to look into some internal issues of a combustion type if this truly is the case OR I could sell you an upgrade! I have an F2 engine with CV carburetors that hasn't been rebuilt since 1997. :lol:

nobasin
March 12th, 2012, 08:23 PM
...this bike, with less than 90hp is the definition of rolling resistance...


Errr, you may want to look into some internal issues of a combustion type if this truly is the case OR I could sell you an upgrade! I have an F2 engine with CV carburetors that hasn't been rebuilt since 1997. :lol:

chris, last dyno at faster 3 seasons ago it was 87 without the powercommander and 93 with on pump gas and then my powercommander blew up and i've been racing it without the last 3 seasons. stock official rating on this motor is i think 90.1, so I don't know. yeah, it's not the biggest motor out there that is for sure, but it makes the bike go forward and stops when i tell it to, so for now it's all i got.

Scored51
March 13th, 2012, 05:48 PM
Sorry to hear about your luck. I certainly would have thought 10 years of development with the might of Honda would have seen the F4i with far greater power than the pair of MRA raced F2's I know about.

I didn't intend to completely hijack the thread so if you haven't decided on bearing replacement... might as well since everything is already apart. Think of it as a birthday present to your race bike.