Z750 B1 Gets Minor Routine Maintenance

It’s a bank holiday weekend in the UK so consequently it’s cloudy, showery and changeable on the weather front. So as I won’t ride in the possibility of rain I decided to do some maintenance on the Z750 twin. Nothing too drastic, some minor lubrication and simple routine stuff was all I had in mind, about ten minutes of fettling in other words.

Firstly I decided to grease the rear swing arm bushes, which Kawasaki made provision for on the Z750 B1 by putting in a grease nipple on the swing arm. I retrieved the grease gun from my company van, and found it empty as I had left it. Located the grease cartridges and changed it. That sounds easy enough as I write it here, but it took 20 minutes to find the grease cartridges and to coax it into the grease gun which didn’t seem to want to screw back together afterwards.

After some persuasion and naughty words (the wife and kids were out so it was ok to use them instead of words like “oh bother” and “deary me”) I was ready to hit the grease nipple with the nozzle. Kawasaki saw fit to give us a grease point, but not to make it accessible. You can see it between the frame and the rear brake line I have ringed it on this blurred picture for you

Z750 twin B1 swingarm grease nipple location

It even looks accessible until you push the grease gun nozzle in the gap. I tried several different ways, and a lot of the swear words I knew before getting the nozzle on the nipple and pumping grease on the swing arm at the same time as into the nipple. I spent the next ten minutes with a bit of stick and rag cleaning the excess grease off the swing arm to prevent it falling on the tyre while I am riding one day.

With the swing arm having got as much grease as my blood pressure was going to allow before breaking out of several veins in my brain, I set about the simple task of lubricating the chain. Have you ever noticed how the nozzles of cans of spray (such as the chain spray I was about to use) have a habit of going missing?

Having located the chain spray nozzle I realised I was unable to spin the rear wheel to access the entire chain. I had to get the bike higher in order to get the rear wheel off the ground. I found a piece of wood, placed it carefully under the centre stand and heaved the bike up the extra height. The wheel spun freely and I lubricated the chain. It has been said at times I work on the wrong side of safety, decide for yourself now :-(

dangerous motorbike centre stand on wood

I noticed the wood had moved as I was about to take the bike back down off the stand, it didn’t fall so it must have been safe like that right? You can comment below if you’d like to :-)

By now the 10 minute routine lube jobs had run into an hour and a half, and I decided I’d had enough for one day. It is after all a holiday so I am going to rest now.

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