honda305 Home honda305 Auctions honda305 Gallery honda305 Forum


honda305.com Forum

Login
□ Search
□ FAQ 
□ 
Vintage Honda Owners,
Restorers, Riders and
Admirers

CB160 fork seals

CB160, CB350, CB360, CB450
Geeky160
honda305.com Member
Posts: 138
Joined: Tue May 13, 2008 6:00 pm
Location: New Mexico, USA

Post by Geeky160 » Sat May 31, 2008 10:47 am

I was just trying to figure out the easiest way. I don't think the uppers need to come apart. So at what point are the the lowers released? It can't be the fill bolts.
'67 CL77 (337, gears X'd)
'65 CB160

cribbs74
honda305.com Member
Posts: 135
Joined: Sun Jul 09, 2006 3:42 pm
Location: Cibolo TX

Post by cribbs74 » Mon Jun 02, 2008 10:55 am

Geeky160,

I took a look at the manual from the link you posted. Seems pretty straightforward, actually seems to be very similar to the CB77 forks.

You will need a strap wrench or the correct tool to loosen that chrome collar, I think you will have to dissassemble the entire fork assembly to put the new seal on. This includes speedo, headlight bucket, fork cover, wheel and fender removal.

Should only take a weekend to accomplish. Read that shop manual a couple times and go for it.
Ron Cribbs
1966 CL77
1965 CB160
1974 Triumph T150V

LOUD MOUSE
honda305.com Member
Posts: 7817
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 8:23 am
Location: KERRVILLE, TEXAS

Post by LOUD MOUSE » Mon Jun 02, 2008 12:39 pm

Remove the wheel, fender and loosen the chrome seal holder then remove the sliders and all the parts on the lower end of the tubes and the chrome seal holders will slide off the ends/bottoms. ..............lm

cribbs74 wrote:Geeky160,

I took a look at the manual from the link you posted. Seems pretty straightforward, actually seems to be very similar to the CB77 forks.

You will need a strap wrench or the correct tool to loosen that chrome collar, I think you will have to dissassemble the entire fork assembly to put the new seal on. This includes speedo, headlight bucket, fork cover, wheel and fender removal.

Should only take a weekend to accomplish. Read that shop manual a couple times and go for it.
RIDE IT DON'T HIDE IT!

Geeky160
honda305.com Member
Posts: 138
Joined: Tue May 13, 2008 6:00 pm
Location: New Mexico, USA

Post by Geeky160 » Mon Jun 02, 2008 1:37 pm

Thanks LM, that was what I wanted (needed) to hear.
'67 CL77 (337, gears X'd)
'65 CB160

LOUD MOUSE
honda305.com Member
Posts: 7817
Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 8:23 am
Location: KERRVILLE, TEXAS

Post by LOUD MOUSE » Mon Jun 02, 2008 5:39 pm

Ya welcome. ................lm

Geeky160 wrote:Thanks LM, that was what I wanted (needed) to hear.

Geeky160
honda305.com Member
Posts: 138
Joined: Tue May 13, 2008 6:00 pm
Location: New Mexico, USA

Post by Geeky160 » Tue Jun 17, 2008 4:08 pm

I got the first seal out, it was stuck pretty good. There is a "race" for lack of a better word that the seal seats into. I think I may have to replace it because the rubber seal had become one with it plus I dinged it removing it. I'm soaking in goo gone to see if it will clean up. I think I would buy the race ahead of time if I were going to do it again. Stay tuned.
'67 CL77 (337, gears X'd)
'65 CB160

Geeky160
honda305.com Member
Posts: 138
Joined: Tue May 13, 2008 6:00 pm
Location: New Mexico, USA

Post by Geeky160 » Sun Jun 22, 2008 2:00 pm

I ended up dremeling the rubber from the removeable race thing. Straightned it up pretty good the the seal just barely pressed back in, it was real tight. Slapped it back together with the clip and assembled the rest. Drained and purged the other side and charged both with 170 ml of Mercron V I had sitting around for the truck. Then drained a little back out of each because they were too tight. Seem to work fine now and no leaky.
Whew
'67 CL77 (337, gears X'd)
'65 CB160

Post Reply




 

CB-77 | CYP-77 | Road Test | Riding Log | Literature | Zen | Marketplace | VJ Survey | Links | Home