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Front Pulley R&R - can it be done without loosening belt tension?

Question for someone with experience doing this:

Can the Front Pulley be removed and installed without loosening belt tension?
Shop manual labor is .5 hour for this proceedure. Wondering if there is a short cut to arrive in completing this operation in .5/hour.
 
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No problem, Jack up the rear wheel till tension is off the lower shock bolt, remove the bolt, raise the Jack till the belt is loose enough to remove from front sprocket. Retourqe the front sprocket bolt when finished.
 
Here's how I did it just a short while back.....
With the bike on the floor and the the parking brake set, loosen the front pulley bolt.
Release the parking brake.
Then lift the rear wheel off the floor just enough so you can rotate it as you walk the belt off the rear pulley.
When done with the front pulley, reverse the process to walk the belt back onto the rear pulley.
Lower the bike, set the park brake, torque the front pulley bolt and you're done.
P.S. Lube the splines with Moly Paste - not Moly lube.
 
Here's how I did it just a short while back.....
With the bike on the floor and the the parking brake set, loosen the front pulley bolt.
Release the parking brake.
Then lift the rear wheel off the floor just enough so you can rotate it as you walk the belt off the rear pulley.
When done with the front pulley, reverse the process to walk the belt back onto the rear pulley.
Lower the bike, set the park brake, torque the front pulley bolt and you're done.
P.S. Lube the splines with Moly Paste - not Moly lube.

All the important details; succinct. I especially like the belt on, brake on, on the ground tightening part -- minimize stress on transmission.
 
�� Ordered new pulley and bolt....I have a 2019 F3L built in 2018. Figured that a newer design pulley and higher bolt torque should resolve any future issues......I believe in preventative maintenance. Red dust is starting to show. My trips pulling a trailer are in excess of 1k.
 
I retorqued my 2015 at 10,000 miles and now have 21,000 and no problem- I have a spockett and bolt ready .
 
Yes, red dust is starting to show.

If there is evidence of red dust, the pulley splines have worn. The pulley should be replaced or if reusing, accomplish the LocTite method for reinstallation. If replacing a worn pulley with a new pulley, reassembled wet with Moly Lube or Moly Paste, not Moly based grease.

Regarding walking the drive belt off the pulley, before accomplishing this, realize that the Spyder uses a carbon fibre type belt and not a Kevlar or other more flexible fibre type belt. Manufacturers are very specific about not walking the tensioned belt off the pulley as fibre damage may occur, rendering the belt as scrap or inducing early failure. Far better to remove the shock bolt if you are set up to do so.

Consider also to lubricate the bolt flange with Moly. While many have posted the increased torque is in reference to better securing the pulley, I differ on this opinion. I suspect that when comparing the early style 2 piece bolt / washer setup to the current large flange bolt, the added friction of the large flanges drag when tightening must be overcome by a higher setting on the torque wrench, otherwise the torque would be erroneously low. Lubricate the bolt flange and use a quality torque wrench. Even consider dropping the torque setting by 5% to account for the reduced drag when torquing.

All the best however you resolve your worn pulley / red dust concerns.
 
I believe most manufacturers of timing/cogged belts recommend against "walking" the belt off mainly when the pully
has a flange. Neither pulley on the Spyder has a flange, so it really shouldn't be an issue. Done carefully, it shouldn't
be a problem.

Personally I would loosen the the tension, because it may change due to new pulley vs old pulley. Not that big of a
deal, and it would need to be checked anyway, even if you didn't loosen the tension.
 
I believe most manufacturers of timing/cogged belts recommend against "walking" the belt off mainly when the pully
has a flange. Neither pulley on the Spyder has a flange, so it really shouldn't be an issue. Done carefully, it shouldn't
be a problem.

Personally I would loosen the the tension, because it may change due to new pulley vs old pulley. Not that big of a
deal, and it would need to be checked anyway, even if you didn't loosen the tension.

Obviously you would have serious concerns walking a tooth belt over a pulley flange.

The concern here is not focused on whether or not the belt can be removed and reinstalled by walking the belt off and on, simply the materials used to make the cords in the belt. Carbon fibre filaments are far less forgiving than other filaments in regards to untypical loads.

The persons endorsing walking the belt off then on have their opinions. Considering the cost of a new belt, plus if the belt fails some distance from home, the risk vs reward of not releasing the tension is up to each person accomplishing the task. Add to this the frugalness of many Spyder owners that post here, the MSRP of cutting corners may not be on sale when you need it.

All the best to BikerChris and Merry Christmas to all of you.
 
Shop manual calls for loosening tension of belt when removing......
Shop manual labor rate shows .5 hour to replace front pulley. Seems low considering what’s involved.
 
Re my suggestion to walk the belt of the rear pulley....
I did not realize the belt was not Kevlar reinforced. All my experience with belt drives were with Kevlar belts. Good to learn about the Spyder's belts. Thanks.
 
How's your rear tire? Maybe doing that will "release" the belt. I respectfully disagree with PMK. It's rather easy to loosen the tension of the belt with the "belt tensioner" bolts, like one should do when changing the rear tire. Jack up the bike and the belt should just slip off, no walking required. As with steering tie rods, counting turns can make the restoration of the belt tension easier. Just run them back the same number (index them first so you get the proper clock). And BTW, if you have a belt idler, bunjee it up off the belt before you do anything.
 
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