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Motorcycle Tools

oldmxracer

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 29, 2006
Messages
1,204
Location
Ohio
I need to stop bullshittin and get one of these...my only concern is...my garage is a one car garage...Worried about how much floor space it will take up with 2 bikes, tool chest, work bench, etc...

I only have a one car garage so My fix was to recess it in the floor !
 
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bwringer

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,250
Location
Indianapolis
I work on a lot of old Suzukis with shim-over-bucket valves.

They run very small valve clearances - .03 - .08mm, and the clearances tend to decrease over the miles. If you neglect this, the bike gets harder and harder to start and eventually will burn a valve.

Note that this is mm, not inches; one very common mistake is to mix up units; one thousandth of an inch is .025mm. So a .003" feeler is .076mm.

Anyway, one tool that is still surprisingly difficult to find is a decent quality set of metric feeler gauges that go down to .03mm (which is damn near foil-thin) and are NOT crapped up with inch approximations. Basically, metric only with no inch markings.


So anyway, one essential of any motorcycle garage where you work on stuff that revs is the tools and materials needed to check and set valve clearances. You can get everything you need for far less than the cost of paying a dealer, and you'll learn a lot.

Also, it's very difficult to find a dealer or shop that will actually perform a valve check properly without shirking large parts of doing a proper job; there are many, many tales of people who mark a few valve cover bolts, only to find that they haven't been touched.

Or they'll leave valves alone that are sitting at the bottom end of the spec. Valve clearances on most bikes tend to decrease over the miles, so it's good practice to go ahead and change out shims on tight valves in order to get the clearances into the upper part of the range.
 

Mike.ASC

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 21, 2010
Messages
880
Location
East coast
A few specific motorcyle tools that I have and like are the motion pro axle socket. Next up is the DID KM 500 R chain cutter and rivet tool. Its for 520 to 532 chains and the most durable ive owned thus far. Another motion pro product I use is the chain alignment tool. Fairly simple and cheap but works. I would love a laser one but I cant justify it. Next up are my pit bull stands. Very sturdy and durable. A cheap homemade tool that i find useful is a wooden dowel rod slightly undersized compared to the axles. Wrestling a tire in place, while aligning brakes and wheel spacers is a pita. For rear tires, I insert it first into the brake caliper hole while on the slider, through the wheel spacer and hub on the non drive side, and finally through the drive side hub and spacer. I then use my axle to push out the dowel and aligning everything easily.b6e4d70ff5a5e315ac888011b7d5de43.jpg3c73ef99f7196e8abd5a11565b55f18b.jpgb0d2c6910f7db20f62ef0ef9f68fce92.jpg

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Where did you purchase the DID chain tool from ?
 

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TalonFE

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2016
Messages
191
Location
New Mexico
A Stockton chain tool set. It's a solid piece of kit that will handle any chain pitch you're likely to encounter. Easy to operate, with a variety of inserts to break the chain, press on side plates and peen rivets if it's an endless chain or with a master-link. Comes in a case too.....you can order from Cycle Gear, on sale all the time.
https://www.cyclegear.com/accessories/stockton-chain-breaker-and-rivet-tool-kit
 

disston

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 1, 2012
Messages
941
Location
Silver Spring, Md
I own and maintain a 1975 BMW r90/6, I have a drawer full of special tools for this. Maybe a $1000 worth, maybe more. I do have the Motion Pro piston pin removal tool.
 

ptgarcia

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 15, 2016
Messages
1,202
Location
Alta Loma, CA
Spoke ****** torque wrench.

pp3312-web_1.jpg
 

DFB

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 7, 2016
Messages
5,765
Location
Southern VT/Western Mass
tools like the Sealmate.

Coincidental...

Guy come in the shop yesterday for an inspection sticker on Kawa...Z6 ? Anyhow said he had a second machine that had leaking fork seals and was looking for someone to do his seal replacements as he didn't like the quote the dealership gave him


I watched the video on that today :wtf:

And then the one where a guy made his own from scrap material :spit:
 

seang81

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 13, 2015
Messages
54
Location
New Carlisle, IN
My motorcycle work has been all on dirt bikes for the last 7 years, so what I have now is geared towards them. I only work on my own, so what I have is just for my convenience/sanity. I also have the chain breaker press tools etc.,I just didn't get pics.

What brand and model is the slide hammer kit with red box?
 

Bagherra

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2012
Messages
768
Location
Virginia Beach, VA
I'm still setting up my 1 Car garage that measures 12x22.

I have a Handy Lift MC table set in the middle of the floor. That lift measures 24"x81" with the drop down ramp removed. I have 24" deep benches and roller cabinet, toolbox and various shelving and equipment running down the full length of the garage on both sides. I have a 24" bench on the front wall of the garage.

I have the front of the lift set back 5 ft. from the front bench. That gives me a 5'D x 7'W work space in front of the lift and 30" of working space on both sides of the lift, which leaves about a 8'D x 7'W work space or parking space from the back of the lift to the overhead garage door.

So in answer to your question, yes I think you'll have plenty of room depending on how you set it up. Of course your not going to be able to park a car in the garage, but you'd have enough space to pull it in to do oil/filter changes.

Once you get a MC lift you'll wonder how you survived without one.

I only have a one car garage so My fix was to recess it in the floor !

Would love to see pix of you guys garage setup!!!
 

gmcgeo

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 11, 2019
Messages
3,701
a must have for my bike is a pbr chain rivet and cut tool best tool i have ever purchased
 

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rpcraft

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Joined
Aug 14, 2014
Messages
1,057
Location
Waco
I only have a one car garage so My fix was to recess it in the floor !


I've wondered how possible that would be to do and then move my welding table on top of it and align it in the middle of the shop and park the motorcycles around it against the walls more or less. Possibly have a second pit next to it with another lift table and use it for projects that require a but more than 2 x 7 working space.
 

ttpete

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 8, 2011
Messages
6,737
Location
Dearborn, MI
I get a lot of use out of a Milwaukee 12 volt pistol grip driver that uses 1/4" hex tooling. It's handy for dealing with bodywork and smaller fasteners. I use mostly Allen and Torx bits depending on which bike I'm working on. I also have a 12volt hex drive impact when it's needed. One of the previous pics of a bike on a lift shows a scissors type jack that's almost a must to have for wheel and tire work. Ducatis require a big socket for the rear wheel and a big torque wrench for replacement.

Bikes with 320 mm front brake rotors require that pads be retracted to remove the calipers from the rotors, and I have a small pad spreader to do this.

If you have compressed air, an air operated vacuum bleeder makes life easier for brakes and clutch when changing fluids.
 

Brand X

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2014
Messages
240
http://www.marcparnes.com/

By the way, some decent tire spoons too.. I use the balancer a lot for my stuff, even with a electronic Wheel balancer setup for Motorcycles.
 

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Here2Learn

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Messages
342
Location
Alabama
huge tire irons

JIS drivers (Vessel Impacta)

t-handles if you have a dirt bike

lots of Scott blue paper towels

**** ton of oils and chemicals

best thing to buy is the service manuals!!
 

drsung

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 27, 2011
Messages
274
Location
Louisiana
I just got my set of KOWA T handles in after reading this thread. Wow, they are stout! I do a lot of wrenching on old Honda 3 wheelers and I had no idea they were the OEM for most honda tools. They will definitely come in handy dealing with those 30+ year old JIS (I never knew they weren't phillips) screws.
 
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ptgarcia

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 15, 2016
Messages
1,202
Location
Alta Loma, CA
Vessel screwdrivers for me.

For my road tool kit I carry this spark plug socket. Doubles as the axle tool for wheel/tire related repairs, too.

lg_08-0649_copy.jpg
 
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old_smokey

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2018
Messages
410
Location
Manitoba
I'm also working on bikes in a small single car garage - 11x20 ish give or take. I have three complete bikes in here, plus two projects, tools, a bench, a full size stove for heating cases for bearings and paint, and a pile of other ****. So a full size lift would have been a major challenge. I found this one at princess auto, by Red Rock. It easily supports my XR650L (330lbs) and I've heard it's more than adequate for full size sport touring bikes. I'd never put a touring bike on it though. It has a removable extension for longer bikes. Pneumatic or manual lift. but the best part is that it folds up totally flat and stands vertical, like an ironing board, so storage is super easy. It takes up less space than a drill press when folded.

c4f9ec73d32b4a5c68eed5a73ac513ba.jpg
 

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bwringer

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,250
Location
Indianapolis
Motion Pro titanium wrench set (8,10,12,13). Super light and I just keep them in my gear bag or in a pack for trips (dirt bike/dual sport). Stupid expensive and I'd never buy them, but they sure are light. I won them in a raffle...

https://www.motionpro.com/product/08-0478


It's always killed me how lovely yet stupid expensive these things are.

And they want another $46 for the 14mm... :mad:

Hmm, the 8-10-12-14 set is a different part number:
https://www.motionpro.com/product/08-0466

Man, I really like these stupid things, though. :thumbup:

K&L supposedly distributes a titanium wrench set but it doesn't seem to actually be for sale anywhere.


Aerostich stopped selling Titanium Tar Arns a while back; these were undoubtedly the swankiest, highest-tech, space-ageiest way to rassle rubber ever invented. I always wanted a set, but never achieved the necessary ratio of "silly money".


There was a Japanese company a while back that made a set of lightweight wrenches that were steel, but sort of skeletonized -- "Lightwrench" or something like that. Very cool, and I did my damndest to find a set, but never could locate the things actually for sale.

Edit:
Found it: Asahi Lightool. Only set I can find is open end; I might actually buy some if I could find combo style.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003B338G6/?tag=atomicindus08-20


Edit edit:
Oooh, puuuurrrrrdy:
https://global.rakuten.com/en/store/i-tools/item/359267/
So is Rakuten legit? $38.70 for the set seems decent, but the $25-ish shipping gives me pause.
 
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Leaflessshadetree

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 1, 2013
Messages
7,146
Location
Don't ask.
I purchased this lift http://www.completehydraulic.com/lifts-motorcycle-tcmlw.html when I bought it was about $650.00 I lived close enough to pick it up myself. I was tired of rolling around on the garage floor. I do use the HF motorcycle tire changer with the modifications found on line. I have 87,000 miles on the bike and have serviced it since new. I knew I was going down this road the first time I took the bike back to the dealership for the "free" 1000 mile "check-up". Good luck with you decisions.

I have the complete hydraulic lift. It has been OK, but the control pedal has acted funny a couple times. I was glad I drove over to Indiana and picked it up. I called first and they said they had them in stock. When I got there they told me they were out but expecting more the next week. Seemed a little sketchy so I started to leave. Funny but they "found one" in the warehouse. When they were loading it up I watched the fork truck operator get one off a stack, they had plenty in stock.
When I tried to get the pedal replaced I stumbled on some articles that suggested there might be some questionable business practices going on.

I also got a motorcycle jack (Pitbull brand). I use it more than I ever used the table lift.


I also have the HF tire changer. It works OK but I've spent more on "extras" rim protectors, tire irons etc. Knowing what I do now I'd spend a little more on something a little better. A sturdy stand would be almost as useful for bike tires.
 

Bagherra

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2012
Messages
768
Location
Virginia Beach, VA
I'm also working on bikes in a small single car garage - 11x20 ish give or take. I have three complete bikes in here, plus two projects, tools, a bench, a full size stove for heating cases for bearings and paint, and a pile of other ****. So a full size lift would have been a major challenge. I found this one at princess auto, by Red Rock. It easily supports my XR650L (330lbs) and I've heard it's more than adequate for full size sport touring bikes. I'd never put a touring bike on it though. It has a removable extension for longer bikes. Pneumatic or manual lift. but the best part is that it folds up totally flat and stands vertical, like an ironing board, so storage is super easy. It takes up less space than a drill press when folded.

c4f9ec73d32b4a5c68eed5a73ac513ba.jpg

How's that lift for engine removal? Seems kinda narrow...
 

old_smokey

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2018
Messages
410
Location
Manitoba
The base looks real narrow here I admit. But I’ve had no problems. It doesn’t rock or feel like it’s going to fall. If I was really worried, the legs are hollow steel pipe. I can extend their width but sliding a pipe through them.

The platform is absolutely narrow, which is the entire point. It’s a trade off. I loose some working surface but gain the ability to store the lift, and also have room to walk around it in my little shop


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