Page 5 of 5

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Jun 12, 2018 5:02 am
by cobbadiggabuddyblooo
No reason to remove oil pump cover purely for an oil change.
Just be mindful of the small brass bush that slips into the outer filter/engine case that the small o ring goes around. Some have not realised and it’s fallen into the oil when removing the case.
10Nm on the bolts too.

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Jun 12, 2018 5:14 am
by wreckage
Cheers, Brian.

I was wondering why it was included in the original parts list...
:?

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Jun 12, 2018 9:41 am
by HolerTogni
wreckage wrote: From what I can see I would need only parts from the below list... Am I right?

Image

Oil Filter : 4X7-13440-01 (1996 TRX) [4X7-13440-90 - #19 in above illustration]
...
Oil filter housing large O ring: 93210-64297 [#21 above]
...
Oil filter housing small O ring: 93210-12790 [#73 above]
...
Sump plug crush washer: 214-11198-01 [#48 above]
...
Hi wreckage!

As already said before, definitely no need to remove the oil pump cover when only changing the motor oil ...

But be sure two have both washers for the both oil drain plugs - in the list of the first post as well in your list only the sump plug washer is mentioned but not the washer for the oil tank drain plug (see first picture in first post here).

As far as I remember, there is no picture of the oil tank drain plug in the parts catalog, even the people in the dealer's workshop couldn't find it when I pointed them to it.

I'm not sure, whether it is a plug of 10 mm or 8 mm in diameter, but any average copper or aluminium washer for a 10 mm or 8 mm screw should do the job.

... maybe the first post should be corrected / complemented ...

Indicating greetings from Munich!

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Wed Jun 13, 2018 4:54 am
by wreckage
Thanks, HolerTogni

Yes, I've made use of the oil tank drain plug and had a similar experience with dealer parts people claiming they had no part number for a washer/gasket for it.
Mine doesn't have a washer and it never leaks. I have spare crush washers for the sump plug.
... maybe the first post should be corrected / complemented ...
I'd love to see that... I'll give it a bash after I've done the filter/oil change if nobody beats me to it. :)

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:14 pm
by Trx850dirk
What are the moments for the 2 drainplugs and the 4 bolts of the cover?
Not shure what the service manual refers 2?

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:26 pm
by cobbadiggabuddyblooo
It has a dry sump so the drain plug next to the oil filter drains the top sump and the drain plug on the bottom engine pan drains (around 500mm ) that’s like the collection pan for the oil and it gets scavenge pumped from there to the top sump.
Be mindful only 10Nm on the bolts that retain the oil filter cover.
There is also a small brass sleeve and o ring too at the narrow end of the oil filter cover that can easily fall into your oil change collection bucket.

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Tue Mar 17, 2020 12:51 pm
by HolerTogni
Hi Trx850dirk!

The torque for the drain plug of the engine case (the one on the lh side) is 35 Nm.
The torque for the drain plug of the oil tank (the one on the rh side) is 30 Nm.

As cobba already wrote, the torque for the screws of the oil filter cover is (only!) 10 Nm.
But, as far as I remember, there are 5 screws.

Happy draining!

Manual reading greets from Munich!

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Wed Mar 18, 2020 6:31 am
by ekoja
I never trusted torque wrenches on the sump bolts, they always felt like you were over tightening while waiting for the click or whatever noise your wrench has.
I used the screwdriver socket handle.
There was no way doing the bolts up with that that you could apply enough force to strip them.
Can't know what foot pds I got but they never stripped or leaked. The tip originally from Kev.

Re: The TRX Oil Change

Posted: Thu Mar 19, 2020 8:47 pm
by HolerTogni
Hi ekoja!

To be honest, I always tighten the oil filter cover screws only hand-tight. I never had any leak or damaged threads.

"As tight as necessary, as loose as possible!" is my motto with these screws.

Sensitive greets from Munich!