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Easy Fork Oil Change On Baggers

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If you ever tried a service on the front AIR FORKS on a bagger , you can appreciate this tip......
This does not work on the newer cartridge forks...Sorry!
Cartridge forks started in '02 on the left side of the touring models with fairings only. FLHT,
FLHTPI, Ultras, etc. Starting with the 06 bikes, the cartridge forks have been replaced with the normal oil type lower legs on both sides.

Best results with bike up on a lift and the suspension unloaded.
Pick up a vacuum pump either hand or electric , a mity vac hand pump pictured below will work too.( I used a vacuum pump from air conditioning service) but an old refridge motor will work just as well too if you use the suction side and a hose adapted to the air fill valve on the front end.
My A/C pump can draw 24 lbs of vacuum and the hand pump draws 26 lbs of vacuum.

What I found that helps in those stubborn cases with the thicker oil is to draw the vacuum on the leg while the front wheel is still on the ground (assuming you have the bike on a lift) and after pulling the vacuum to the max on the leg you are working on, jack the bike wheel just off the ground just prior to adding the oil. This extends the lower leg and increases the vacuum in the leg to help pull the heavier oil into the leg.
Stock weights usually don't have a problem, it's just the heavier weights that do.

Mityvac....

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It goes like this for the air assist front ends...

Remove the air from the forks first, remove the schrader valve from the air fill valve with a valve core remover , available from any parts store. Support the bike on a lift preferably and drain the oil out of one side at a time. Now here's where it gets tricky. I made an adapter to screw into the drain hole in the fork from the proper thread bolt (it's metric)( FXRT/FXRD= 4 MM X 0.7 pitch X 20 MM long) (FLT/FLTC/FLHT/FLHR/FLHTC= 8 MM X 1.25 pitch X 30 MM Long) and drilled through the center in a drill press to make it hollow , then I cut off the threaded hollow bolt about 1 1/2 inches long just below the head so that there is a smoothe end for the hose to attach to.. This bolt gets a piece of clear tubing attached to it (so you can see the oil) about 6" - 12' long. The shorter working length here will help you in the end result for drawing in more oil. This bolt gets threaded into the drain hole to be used to suck the premeasured oil for your application into the fork when you apply the vacuum to the air fill valve. Only apply enough vacuum to keep the oil in while you replace the drain screw with a new washer installed of course.This gets real easy if you have an extra set of hands around to pump while you do the rest.

Repeat this on the other side and you're done.
No tins have to come off and it is probably the easiest service you will ever do on a Harley. It usually takes me about 15-20 minutes or so once everything is set up and ready to go. Sure is quicker than removing all those tins or fairings.

To drill the bolt hollow for this , I bolted it into a piece of steel plating so it would remain perpendicular in the drill press using 2 nuts, one on top and one under the plate.

The green tubing is available from EMS services and has the adapter end built in for connection to an oxygen tank which fits very nicely over the 1/4" tubing in the tool.. It also has ridges on the inside of the tubing so it can't collapse under vacuum.

For the NON air assisted forks...

You can also use a vacuum pump to draw a vacuum from the drain hole (with the large tube) once it has drained if you make up a tool like I made shown below. The green hose on the left in the pic is substituted for the larger vacuum hose once the oil is ready to be siphoned in. The large hose is used for the vacuum process in the fork tube.
All parts are available in most hardware stores and it works well so nothing other than the drain screw has to come out. If you are using a heavier than normal oil, it may not draw in all the oil this way, that's the only drawback with doing it this way. Standard oils work fine. (5-10 wt). I used Screamin Eagle heavy (15 wt) and it pulled all but about 1/2 ounce into the fork. Then again , I run an additional 1/2 ounce over the factory specs in each fork leg for better handling.

The way it works is this..

You drain one leg at a time and when it is drained you attach the connector to the drain hole. You then draw as much vacuum as your pump will go and after that, you close the petcock so you can change the hose that was attached to the pump to a shorter one for drawing in the new oil. After the connection is made, you re open the petcock and in goes the oil. After it is all in, you work quickly and remove the connector and reinstall the drain screw. You only loose a drop of oil doing this and is nothing to be concerned about.

Repeat this on the other side and you're done.
Again, No tins have to come off and it is probably the easiest service you will ever do on a Harley. It usually takes me about 15-20 minutes or so once everything is set up and ready to go. Sure is quicker than removing all those tins or fairings.

Here's what the tool consists of.
The brake tubing along with the compression fittings is 1/4" and uses a larger (maybe 3/8") petcock with reducers to the 1/4" fittings. The clear tubing is 3/8" ID to fit over the ¼" OD brake tubing and a couple of mini clamps with an "O" ring on the end to seal it against the fork.

Fork oil weights... Fork Oil Weights - Harley Davidson Community

http://www.hdtimeline.com/chassis_suspension_and_front_end/778-fork_oil_weights.html
 
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OK, I read through this before I did my fork oil. I decided that it was easier to do it by the manual. This is just my uninformed opinion, I say uniformed because I haven't done it any other way.

Who has done the fork oil as described by this tip? Do you have pictures of your device? I would love to find a different (easier) way, but I am skeptical about the accuracy of the volume using this method.:newsmile106:

Please don't be offended by my skeptisism, my desire is to find the easiest way to do the forks. I have an extensive maintenance resume, so don't be afraid to use big words in your explaination.:guitar
 
How much easier could it be with just removing TWO drain screws and nothing else.
If you use a measuring cup to measure the amount you need and it gets sucked into the fork tube until the cup is empty, that's IT!:D
 
How do you know what is still in the forks?

How do you put the screws back in without losing oil?

How do you measure what is left in your tool, lines, etc...?

I want to do it this way, just haven't gotten over my own internal reservations about this method.:newsmile08:
 
How do you know what is still in the forks?
You drain it out with the fork drains and refill the specified amount. As long as they are even , there's not a problem.

How do you put the screws back in without losing oil?
The vacuum that is in the forks that pulled the oil in keeps the oil in if you move right along, you don't loose but a drop if that.


How do you measure what is left in your tool, lines, etc...?
I usually add a very small amount (drops) to the measured oil for the forks to compensate for what is in the tools/lines. It's NOT really that much in the tools/lines and the amount that is in there even if you didn't compensate for it will make NO difference at all. If you think about this, how accurate is YOUR measurement of the oil to begin with?

I want to do it this way, just haven't gotten over my own internal reservations about this method.:newsmile08:

I'm absolutely anal about everything and I have NO problems doing it this way. Have many times not only on my bikes but for friends too.
Only problem (if it is one) is that if you use the SE heavy 15 wt fork oil, it's a struggle to get the last drop in but with the stock 5wt or even 10wt it's a breeze. (E or B fork oil)
 
OK, as I trust your judgement and experience; though I never doubted them, I will attempt to knock out this task in the manner you describe the next time I am due to change oils in my forks. Thank you for you patience and time.:bigsmiley8:
 
So I am getting around to changing the fork oil.
I made up the valve/assembly and have everything ready.
Raise the bike up on a lift..
On the left side fork, when I take the drain screw out, oil comes flying out. Like it was under pressure. I mean it got everywhere.
My thoughts are that it was maybe "over filled" (this oil is the original oil fromwhen the bike was built).

I let the fork drain for an hour. Set up the vacuum and so on...it works like a charm. The oil gets sucked up and I shut the valve. Now, I know I added the exact amount of oil for a 2007 Ultra Classic (319 mls per the manual and I used a graduated cylinder to measure). When I remove the assembly to re-install the drain plug/screw, oil comes flying out. I probably lost 2 oz or more.
I guess I could have moved faster but I really didn't expect it to be under pressure.

I then move to the right side fork. When I took out the drain plug I was prepared for oil to come flying out.... nope! Just a slow trickle. From the description on this board the right side is exactly what I expected.

Any ideas with my left fork? Is something broken?
From the expolded diagram of the fork, it just doesn't make sense why the left side would seem to be "under pressure".
 
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