Stripping the bike down, hosing it off good and starting with a clean slate is probably the best way to find this leak. It's very hard to find a leak in an oily mess.
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Stripping the bike down, hosing it off good and starting with a clean slate is probably the best way to find this leak. It's very hard to find a leak in an oily mess.
Keep the guesses coming - sounds like they need it. .........but keep the ideas and such coming my way as I am sharing with the service department. I also have been told that they have been on different forums looking for anything similar in nature to my problem, so they are using the power of the internet as well...
Putting the degreaser and cleaning the thing down clean, then run it or take it for a short spin should make it rear it's ugly head I would think!! My 2 cents!!
Dye in the oil is a sure fire way.
The OP needs to find an ex-spurt, also known as a former drip under pressure.
I thought the days of having to park your ride over a cookie sheet were over, but, I guess not. Hope your leak is a simple fix. My issue is my 1330 drips coolant only when it's 30 or below outside. Had it in for a fix but it has never stopped.
:shocked: here’s what happened to my 998 SE5 not sure if any help but shows how well they can hide :
https://www.spyderlovers.com/forums/...ranny-heads-up
I can't believe no one mentioned it sooner. Severe oil leaks can often be more difficult to diagnose than small ones, mainly because there's so much oil covering everything that finding the source of the leak can be difficult. That is what UV dye is for.
OP, I'd ask your service advisor if they've considered this option. If they aren't familiar with the process, I'd seriously consider taking it to a place that is.
When folks become frustrated things can be exaggerated, and as time and frustration builds conditions can also become overstate. Yes, when it comes to blood and or oil, estimations can be quite overemphasized.
Hey y'all - nothing much to update with at this time except to say that the bike is still apart and the repair shop has reached out to BRP and they're waiting for a response. I appreciate all of your responses, as I have been sharing them with the shop (the only one in town and for quite some miles). I will continue to update periodically until it has been repaired. Thanks again! Gwen
Wish you luck with this one, keep us posted.
Just seems very odd to me that it is taking so long to locate the leak. That should be the easiest part of the job.
Just throwing this out as “food for thought” and an event I experienced. I had an oil leak in a VSTAR a number of years ago and I traced it back to a broken graphite like gasket between the exhaust and engine head. I’m not sure how the Spyder is set up and if this is even possible in your situation but in my case the leak was not where I figured a leak would occur.
Poasttown, 2019 F3L
On Tuesday February 4, 2020 the shop called to say my bike was repaired and put back together, test driven twice and all was right with the bike. I brought my Spyder back home on Thursday 2/6/20. I will post detailed repair info soon, as I currently do not have all the proper names of the parts, etc. I can say that the oil leak was an overfilling situation, but due to the problem that caused it to live at the repair shop for the last 16 weeks - which was - if we all know with 100% certainty that there is exactly 5 quarts of oil in the bike and did the BRP recommended procedure for checking the oil with the dipstick, then WHY was the oil not registering ON the dipstick? The dipstick was verified to be the correct one for that bike, mounted correctly and in good working order. Turns out that had the bike not ejected the excess oil thru the air filter and then out of the bike entirely, no one would have known that the oil reading 'low' on the dipstick was not an indicator of a need for oil, but a small, oval-shaped gasket that was missing, therefore not letting the engine build up pressure enough to return the oil to the reservoir from the crankcase, but would occasionally get up enough oil to show a need to add oil, when in actuality there wasn't. So once the leaking oil problem was solved, the next step was to go thru and replace all the gaskets, 2 O rings and test the system again. After numerous emails to and from the engineers at BRP Canada and BRP Juarez, Mexico it was decided to double-check 4 potential causes of why the dipstick readings were showing to add oil when the system was full. One by one things were checked and rechecked, items were replaced, oil refilled, but still no luck - until they get to #4 of 4 things to check. #4 turned out to be a missing gasket on the right side, possibly falling out/off when that cover was removed to replace one or both solenoid. And since the mechanic apparently did not see that gasket fall out when the cover was removed, no gasket was replaced when the cover was replaced. So, a missing, small 1.5 inch, oval-shaped gasket was the root cause of all of this mess. My Spyder and its issues have become well known throughout BRP. Thanks to all who offered suggestions and who were just as interested and perplexed as I was. Gwen
:clap::clap: Glad you got to the bottom of it!!! Now get out there and ride that thing!!
I've been working on machinery for 40 years. Copiers and printers specifically, but many intricate mechanical systems with precise repair procedures and adjustments. A piece of paper is about .002 thick. Some of my adjustment specs are +/- half that.
In life, the motto is don't sweat the small stuff, in repair, it's often the small stuff that makes you sweat.
Don't overlook that a mechanics job is often to find out what it isn't, so you can find out what it is. That takes time.
Glad for you it's repaired. Quite possibly more glad you know who and what you are vs. some of the confused youngn's I see coming up behind me.
Go for a ride!
Well, the fun will have to wait a few days - I work weekend night shifts and it is too chilly for me to ride at night...soon though, very soon. I did take the bike on a victory lap around the shop's parking lot during the day - that felt WONDERFUL! And I see some lovely road trips in my near future, although I think we will go back to Tombstone/Bisbee later in the fall again...with much better results this time 😉😉😉
Well, the fun will have to wait a few days - I work weekend night shifts and it is too chilly for me to ride at night...soon though, very soon. I did take the bike on a victory lap around the shop's parking lot during the day - that felt WONDERFUL! And I see some lovely road trips in my near future, although I think we will go back to Tombstone/Bisbee later in the fall again...with much better results this time 😉😉😉
Glad to read that the issue was identified and fixed.
We will be heading to Bisbee on the 17th and stay at a B&B for two nights. We have been told by a number of people not to miss seeing Bisbee, so going to do that as my birthday gift.