Midle Age Warrior Posted June 10, 2017 Posted June 10, 2017 Hello guys a quick question about the size of the rear main oil seal of a 2001 Greeny V11 Sport here. I found locally a seal 68 53 8 (quick and cheap) but per the manual the seal size should be 68 53 10. My question is if the less taller seal will fit and what I must expect of it. Thanks in advance
swooshdave Posted June 11, 2017 Posted June 11, 2017 I'm not sure what kind of answer you expect. I doubt most people would fit a smaller seal and be able to tell you what might happen. That means that you can and let us know how it goes. Is finding the right size that hard?
Lucky Phil Posted June 11, 2017 Posted June 11, 2017 You would need to be mad to fit an underwidth seal considering the hassle if it leaks and considering the cost saving I would go with the OEM seal. Also I bet the generic seal you're looking at is NOT an anti clockwise directional seal as the OEM one is. As I said an under width and bidirectional seal where a wider anticlockwise seal is specified is a little misguided. Ciao
luhbo Posted June 11, 2017 Posted June 11, 2017 The smaller one will probably show only one lip. The second lip is called 'dust lip', at least in German, so there's a good chance that the smaller one will work, too. Be careful: 53mm is a rather big diameter, so calculate the resulting rim speed at 8000 rpm and check, whether your choice is able to cope with this. Besides that, a leaking seal is not a common problem, in most cases the oil comes from a leaking cam cover. Unless you see a real mess below the bike it's probably not the ring. 1
Midle Age Warrior Posted June 11, 2017 Author Posted June 11, 2017 You would need to be mad to fit an underwidth seal considering the hassle if it leaks and considering the cost saving I would go with the OEM seal. Also I bet the generic seal you're looking at it NOT an anti clockwise directional seal as the OEM one is. As I said an under width and bidirectional seal where a wider anticlockwise seal is specified is a little misguided. Ciao Thanks for the responses I did not know the main seal is directional specific, that is a reason to choose the OEM instead of the one I found.Suggestion where can I get it in USA? Thanks Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
Lucky Phil Posted June 12, 2017 Posted June 12, 2017 You would need to be mad to fit an underwidth seal considering the hassle if it leaks and considering the cost saving I would go with the OEM seal. Also I bet the generic seal you're looking at it NOT an anti clockwise directional seal as the OEM one is. As I said an under width and bidirectional seal where a wider anticlockwise seal is specified is a little misguided. Ciao Thanks for the responses I did not know the main seal is directional specific, that is a reason to choose the OEM instead of the one I found.Suggestion where can I get it in USA? Thanks Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk Try MG cycle or failing that Motointernational. I learned the hard way with regard to the seals. Guzzi use directional seals just about everywhere as do other automotive manufacturers on seals that are difficult to access. (ie crank, driveshaft and gearbox seals) If you look at a Guzzi rear crank seal photo on MG cycle or the HMB guzzi site you will see small ribs on the sealing lip face these are the directional component and the ribs slope one way or the other depending on whether or not they are clock or anticlockwise. Ciao
gstallons Posted June 12, 2017 Posted June 12, 2017 It is a good idea to purchase O.E.M. seals for important applications. e.g. Do you want to do this twice ?
Kiwi_Roy Posted June 12, 2017 Posted June 12, 2017 M.A.W. is in South America he probably has the only Guzzi in the country and doesn't have access to all the parts suppliers like we do. But he may have the worlds cheapest gas. 1
pete roper Posted June 17, 2017 Posted June 17, 2017 Also make sure you use a Viton seal not a Nitrile one. The Nitrile one won't take the heat, Pete
swooshdave Posted June 19, 2017 Posted June 19, 2017 M.A.W. is in South America he probably has the only Guzzi in the country and doesn't have access to all the parts suppliers like we do. But he may have the worlds cheapest gas. Maybe so but is this the part you want to skimp on?
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