Jump to content
IGNORED

Yamaha factory rep finally called


Recommended Posts

I just got off the phone with the factory rep. He is at Tallahassee Power Sports and just finished riding my bike. He hasn't gone into the rear diff yet but believe's the problem is dry splines. He said in the past tires lasted approx 7,000 miles and yamaha recommended greasing the splines each time the rear tire was changed. The dealers also used regular grease on the splines and this solved the problem. Today tires are lasting 12,000 or more miles and with dealers using regular grease it is not getting the job done. Also there were some problems with some rear ends going out because the shims in the ring gear were too tight. After receiving notices from the factory reps in the field about this yamaha supposedly corrected this problem. This rep recommends that the dealers now use a moly 60 lithium grease. He said he uses it the field and at home for his personal use. He likes the honda brand moly 60 grease. Tallahassee Power Sports just purchased the honda dealership in Tallahassee so he asked the service manager to go over to the honda dealership and get two tubes of honda grease. The factory rep is going to re grease the splines and check to see if there is any damage to the rear diff. He also said yamaha will be notifying the dealers to start using the moly 60 grease. I hope this is the problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yesterday the factory rep inspected the rear diff and said there was no sign of damage. He greased the splines with the Hondal moly 60 and everything is fine. Thanks KiteSquid for the article on moly grease. That was very informative. I don't understand why yamaha doesn't get this info out to the dealers. When you talk to a factory rep you find out about all kinds of info they know but they keep it to themselves. I just don't understand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yesterday the factory rep inspected the rear diff and said there was no sign of damage. He greased the splines with the Hondal moly 60 and everything is fine. Thanks KiteSquid for the article on moly grease. That was very informative. I don't understand why yamaha doesn't get this info out to the dealers. When you talk to a factory rep you find out about all kinds of info they know but they keep it to themselves. I just don't understand.

 

Maybe they spread the Words, but nobody reads the Info's ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks KiteSquid for the article on moly grease. That was very informative.

 

I was curious so I did some reasearch and thouguth I should share what I found.

 

 

We used a high moly content grease (I don't know the %) on the moving parts of an antenna for a RADAR I worked on while in the US Navy and it was wonderful!!!!!! but it sure made a mess, if you got it where you did not want it... like on haze grey paint. A shipmate of mine got it everywhere and we had to repaint the antenna to cover it up as it leached into the paint within a few minutes!!! Dry-cleaning solvent took off the grease base, but it would not remove the "Moly-B-Denim" from the paint!!!!!!!!! We wanted to kill him for the work he caused us.

 

I will purchase a tube of Moly 60 ASAP!!!!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yesterday the factory rep inspected the rear diff and said there was no sign of damage. He greased the splines with the Hondal moly 60 and everything is fine.

 

I am glad you got a resolution to this issue, even though you haven't put it through its paces yet to see how long it lasts (next tire change I guess).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...