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Assuming the swing arm is square (which you need a true jig to prove otherwise) you can measure the distance from back of the slides to back of the axel blocks and align it that way.

That pretty much what I had to do with mine, as I didn't have a rear stand for it when I do the 500 mile maintenance.

I also overtighted (rusty with dual side swingarms) and had to move the wheel foreward ghetto style. Loosened the adjusters, put it in gear, and pushed it against the front brakes and re-aligned. I learned that trick on an old dirtbike that the the back wheel NEVER wanted to go forward when I was trying to change sprockets. I'd spin the adjusters in till they wouldn't move anymore and romp it till the chain skipped.

I don't recommend that one though, pretty easy to seriously break something expensive on a Daytona.
 
So has anyone done this differently than the first post. I've been doing it like the first post and now I am going to try it not on the stand with a 2x4 holding it up straight. After reading all the other posts after the original, it makes sense what everyone is saying in regards to the slack and how you measure the free play.

PS: hate to revive an old thread too!
 
So I did this again last night and the difference in slack is crazy! First off I was doing the chain adjustment based on the first post. I started to read the rest of the posts and went and did it a different route. This is what I did:

I enrolled the help of my wife and she rolled the bike forward and backward for me to see where the tightest spot on the chain was. She didn't sit on the bike and roll it but rather stood in front of the handlebars and walked backwards holding the bike upright. Once I found the spot with the least amount of slack, I put it on the side stand. Oddly enough the spot of tightness is the same whether you check it on a stand and roll the wheel or have someone roll the bike for you. I stood the bike upright by using a 2x4 under the side stand. I then measured the chain by pushing down and annotating that number and pushing the chain upward and then annotating that number as well. I took the two numbers and subtracted them and that was the amount of freeplay I had. To my surprise it was 87mm and some change! So I went through the process of tightening the chain as described in the original post and then re-measured when I got both chain adjusters equal. I re-measured the slack again pushing down and annotating that number and then again pushing up for that number. My chain slack is now 35mm and some change!

I was very hesitant riding with this new adjustment since I've been adjusting my chain the "old" way but after I took her for a ride it made a huge difference. More so a difference in a slight vibration I was feeling and faint noise I was hearing. It's gone now and I assume it's because I adjusted the chain in this manner. Just my two pennies but I wanted to share it with you all. Again, I know this thread has been dead for almost a year now and I'm sorry for bringing it back to life!
 
I noticed a discrepancy with this How To method and the service manual...

The service manual defines the range of free play to be measured (35 to 40mm) as the total vertical movement range - both upwards and downwards...

This How To suggests measuring free play from rest and upwards only, and does not account for the amount of downward free play in the chain.

Just wondering what anyone thought about that, as it would seem that based on this, following this How To could lead you to inaccurate measurements and actually adjusting your chain to be too loose.

The method from the Service Manual states that when you have found the tight spot on the chain, with the bike on level ground (not on a rear stand, and nobody sitting on it) measure the full range of chain's vertical free play (by pulling down and pushing up on the chain), which should be 35-40mm. (See Number 1 in picture below, what they call "Maximum Movement Position")

Image
Very nice writeup! Anyone have any comments regarding the aforementioned post?
 
I either have my wife hold the bike up straight for me or I put it on a rear stand and then wedge a short 2x4 piece of wood in the space from the tire to the ground. This simulates it being on the ground and provides the tension on the chain. I then push down on my chain and get that measurement and then push up and get that number. Take the two numbers and subtract and that is your play at the tightest point of the chain. Should be between 35-40mm.
 
I either have my wife hold the bike up straight for me or I put it on a rear stand and then wedge a short 2x4 piece of wood in the space from the tire to the ground. This simulates it being on the ground and provides the tension on the chain. I then push down on my chain and get that measurement and then push up and get that number. Take the two numbers and subtract and that is your play at the tightest point of the chain. Should be between 35-40mm.
what do you mean you subtract the numbers? my understanding is, you push down on the chain (this is the first point) then push up on the chain (this is the second point) the distance between these two point is your chain slack
 
For example only:

I push down and reads 100mm; then push up and reads 65mm. Subtract 65 from 100 and 35mm is what you have and that falls in the spec of 35-40mm play.
 
:laugh: my blonde moment for the day, thats gets the same measurement as my method.
 
Hey guys, I just wanted to add my little nub insight lol. Maybe the OP can edit it in to his post for clarification? My former bike had the swing arm adjusting bolt attached to the swingarm sliders so that when you TIGHTENED (clockwise) the adjusting bolt, it would bring the wheel further back, thus reducing the chain slack.

I didn't realize until maybe 10 minutes later why the chain slack wasn't tightening. I went to peek at the manual and noticed it said rotate the adjusting bolts COUNTER clockwise to REDUCE chain slack. I slapped myself in the forehead and realized it was the adjuster bolt backing out that pushed the axel back and that was it! Then the part about "pushing the wheel forward against the adjuster bolts" made sense.

I made the stupid mistake of assuming it was like my other bike (suzuki) and thought I was forgetting to do something.

So that's my nub FYI in case anyone else runs in to the same problem as me lol.

-Steven
 
:laugh: my blonde moment for the day, thats gets the same measurement as my method.
:rofl2: No worries. When you replied I started to think that maybe I did something wrong and my numbers were off. HAHA!
 
Revive an old thread but I just took a look at the manual and it now reads the chain free play is 24-30mm!!! That's pretty damn tight don't you think?
 
Revive an old thread but I just took a look at the manual and it now reads the chain free play is 24-30mm!!! That's pretty damn tight don't you think?
Yeah - I just found this too!

In my '12 Street Triple manual the thing says:

"For Street Triple and Street Triple R, the vertical movement of the drive train must be in the range of 13 - 32mm."

I presume they mean pull chain down and push chain up method. Doing it that way eliminates the top chain slack from the equation.

Mine is sitting on 40mm slack. Need to find me a 3/8" 27mm socket to use with my torque wrench and then I'm in business!

Thanks for the awesome guide :)
 
I wonder if this is just for the newer models? I'm still sitting at 37mm with my 'tona. That's what it's always been at and I'm a little skeptical to change it to the new tension.

Yeah - I just found this too!

In my '12 Street Triple manual the thing says:

"For Street Triple and Street Triple R, the vertical movement of the drive train must be in the range of 13 - 32mm."

I presume they mean pull chain down and push chain up method. Doing it that way eliminates the top chain slack from the equation.

Mine is sitting on 40mm slack. Need to find me a 3/8" 27mm socket to use with my torque wrench and then I'm in business!

Thanks for the awesome guide :)
 
Anybody taken an OEM countershaft (front) sprocket from an 09 and put it on an 06? Another phrasing of my question, are 06/09 CS (front) sprockets the same?
 
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