So after riding one of the newer LC4's with the dual balance shaft motor, I decided I wanted one. It was SO much smoother than my 2017 690, to the point where if you didn't know better, you'd believe it was a twin cylinder. I posted my 690 on FB and it sold quickly, I do wish I'd removed a few more things off of it before I posted it though, doh!
The search started for a newer 690/701, and all the bikes locally were grossly over priced, like $3-4000 compared to similar bikes on AdvRider. I looked at one 701 Long Range, which is a super cool, 2 year model but the guy was sky high in price. I looked at another well built 701, same thing on price. The seller reached out to me the next morning and I told him what I thought. To his credit he got it and we made a deal.
Rode it home, then put it in the shed for 10 days because I had to take an emergency trip out to see my folks. When I got back I put the bike on the lift and started to get to work. I need to baseline this bike, so that means all fresh fluids, clean the air filter, check and adjust the valves, new tires, so forth.
On the lift..
Wheels off
My favorite tires ever are Continental TKC80's, which they stopped making. I was able to score three brand new tires off FB, one front and two rears. Since I burn through the rears twice as fast as the fronts, this is perfect. Hopefully by the time I need new ones, they've either starting making them again or replaced them with something new. I took the wheels to Woody's, who will remove the rim locks, true them, mount and balance the new tires and make them perfect.
Next up the bike came with a broken rear turn signal. Blew apart the tail to install new ones, but since there are three different aftermarket parts in the tail, getting everything to line up again isn't as easy as it should be.
Complicating matters is the lower pannier mount bolts were pan head allens, which were stripped. I ended up having to drill one out, thankfully I didn't damage the threads or the swing arm. Replaced the bolts with 10mm hex heads.
License plate put on
Air filter removed and cleaned. It was filthy!
This is what came out of the air filter!
That was yesterday. I was also cleaning every part that I removed and cleaned every nook and cranny I could reach. This bike had dirt all over it, someone had a good time.
Went after checking the valves today, first off, remove the Rade Garage fuel tank
More cleaning before I removed the valve cover, which was a huge PITA! It just didn't want to come off, I had to move all sorts of other things out of the way...
Finally! Set the motor at TDC...
Checked the valves, three out of 4 were tight. Replaced the shims, set things at the loose end of the scale
When putting the bike back together, don't forget to put the inboard coil pack into the guide tube before you install the guide tube. Otherwise it won't go back into it's home.
Put the valve cover back on, then I traced the wiring for the switch on the upper left of the dash. I suspected it was for the ABS dongle, but wanted to make sure. On my 2017, the ABS dongle gave you three modes, full on (both wheels), off road (front wheel only) and full off. On the newer bike the ABS dongle only gives you full off or off road, so some people are wiring in an interrupt switch so you can still have street mode where it's always on.
Yup, that's what that switch does...
Next up was replacing the broken RAM mount ball on the dash, with the new one from the seller.
New mount
Next up was wiring the GPS, the bike comes with two accessory fuses/wiring. One is switched, the other is unswitched. I prefer to wire the GPS to switched power, that way it turns off with the key. However when I checked out the wiring, there were already two things wired to that and I'm reluctant to add a third. Ok, unswitched power it is.
GPS works
While having everything apart I found a Power Commander the seller didn't tell me about. Sweet!
I'm at a stopping point now. I need to buy coolant and a low temp fan switch, then I need the wheels/tires back so I can do an oil change and brake fluid flush. Then I need air filter oil, so I can put the air filter back on, then the seat, then my tank bag. After that I'll finally be able to ride the bike again and see how it feels. If it passes the test, I'll add a few more parts to it and it'll be ready to ride!