
The good news, however, is that it took up virtually all the slop in the rear suspension, so once I get a better bolt and caps for it, then I'll be ready to rip!


Very cool. Thanks for the response. I noticed in one of your previous threads you mentioned grease fittings for the swingarm? I hope I did not dream this up. Anyway I don't have my shop manual yet-where are said fittings?-assuming I did not dream this up. Thanks.dfeckel wrote:I took the old '87 down to Hatfield-McCoy and rode it for two days. It is a very fun bike. Super light weight, great low-to-mid power (not much on top), lugs down at low rpm very well, and the stock suspension was great for a day of relaxed, rocky exploration. Very comfy seat, but weird ergos if you are used to modern bikes. The bars have a lot of rearward sweep, they're narrow, low, and feel like they are in your lap. Back brake was wooden and took a lot of effort to lock up, but the front was okay.
Problems I encountered included a cracked gas cap, and a pretty good squeak somewhere in the rear suspension, probably in the rocker arm. However, it ran like a top and was fun as hell. It's a keeper. I might try to get a tag for it and run some enduros.
I posted this elsewhere before, but I'll put it here, too. It's just a short helmet cam clip of a piece of single track in the Indian Ridge trail system.
Thanks for letting me know. Got it greased today. I just used some Valvoline bearing grease that I had. Next time I will try to get some motorcycle/waterproof stuff.Jason wrote:If you look at the diagrams on the Kawasaki site, you can see the '86 and '87 had grease fittings on the swingarm, as well as the two dogbone bolts. The swingarm sleeves have a hole on opposite sides, allowing grease to go from the center of the swingarm through the sleeve into the needle bearings. I have no clue why they dumped it for '88.
$74 is getting on up there. Somewhere I still have a receipt for paying around $21 each back in the day.