BadMonk
Member
I'm probably overthinking this but I'll ask anyway.
I've had my '21 F3 in the air for everything from sway bar, shocks, maintenance, etc. But I've never taken off all three wheels at the same time. I'm changing out the three tires. Since the tail has to go up in the air more than the front, should I remove the rear wheel first, jack stand it and go for the fronts? Or put all three up on jacks stands at the same time? My concern is balancing the bike while removing wheels.
I have a large floor jack, small floor jack, scissors jack, four jack stands...and a Harbor Freight bike lift that I dislike using. Any thoughts on 'the process' while keeping the bike secure? Thanks.
				
			I've had my '21 F3 in the air for everything from sway bar, shocks, maintenance, etc. But I've never taken off all three wheels at the same time. I'm changing out the three tires. Since the tail has to go up in the air more than the front, should I remove the rear wheel first, jack stand it and go for the fronts? Or put all three up on jacks stands at the same time? My concern is balancing the bike while removing wheels.
I have a large floor jack, small floor jack, scissors jack, four jack stands...and a Harbor Freight bike lift that I dislike using. Any thoughts on 'the process' while keeping the bike secure? Thanks.
			
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		 hyea:
hyea: ) and your rear sprocket is already mounted correctly so that it's not got one spoke obscuring the valve stem, then mark your rear sprocket & the rim before removing the sprocket so that you can make sure it goes back on in the same place/position that it was before - and also mark each of the rubber pillow type 'cush-drive' bags wrt the rim too, so that you can make sure that they go back in the same spots they came out of!
 ) and your rear sprocket is already mounted correctly so that it's not got one spoke obscuring the valve stem, then mark your rear sprocket & the rim before removing the sprocket so that you can make sure it goes back on in the same place/position that it was before - and also mark each of the rubber pillow type 'cush-drive' bags wrt the rim too, so that you can make sure that they go back in the same spots they came out of!  It's enough of a pain if you get the sprocket misaligned during the re-install process, but it's much more of a pain if you mess up where the cush-drive pillows go & you can't get that sprocket back on properly!! :gaah:
 It's enough of a pain if you get the sprocket misaligned during the re-install process, but it's much more of a pain if you mess up where the cush-drive pillows go & you can't get that sprocket back on properly!! :gaah: 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		