Make sure you have a replacement filter and the replacement gasket for the filter case. 4 quarts of oil, either 10w40 or 10w30. A low height pan that can hold more than a gallon and plenty of paper towels.
First, start your bike and let it idle for 2-3 minutes. This will heat the oil and make it more viscous. It will also help to run the oil through the filter and get some of the last remaining impurities out.
Put your bike up on the center stand. If your bike doesn't have a center stand, park the bike with the front wheel on the curb and try to have the bike sitting straight up, not leaning to the side that the kick stand will do.
Find the drain nut toward the front of the oil pan, place the pan underneath both the drain nut and the oil filter. Loosen the drain nut, try to catch it before it falls into the pan. The oil will start to drain. Now loosen the filter holder nut in the center. it will start to drain oil when loose so make sure that oil finds its way into the pan. Keep loosening it till the filter cover comes free. Watch carefully if the filter cover has any guides so you know how it will go back on.
Remove the old filter and wipe it clean. Don't use water. Put the new filter in exactly like the old filter.
When all the oil is drained, reinstall the filter remembering how it was oriented when you took it off. Check the exact specs on oil capacity. Do not add more than specified. Open the oil fill knob, add all but 1 quart of oil. Close the cap, start the bike for 30 seconds and turn it off. Check the oil level and add the remaining oil. Start the bike and run it again for 30 seconds.
Move the bike to flat ground and check the oil again. It should be full. If it's not, start the bike again and let it run for a minute. Check the oil again, it should be good now.
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Make sure you have a replacement filter and the replacement gasket for the filter case. 4 quarts of oil, either 10w40 or 10w30. A low height pan that can hold more than a gallon and plenty of paper towels.
First, start your bike and let it idle for 2-3 minutes. This will heat the oil and make it more viscous. It will also help to run the oil through the filter and get some of the last remaining impurities out.
Put your bike up on the center stand. If your bike doesn't have a center stand, park the bike with the front wheel on the curb and try to have the bike sitting straight up, not leaning to the side that the kick stand will do.
Find the drain nut toward the front of the oil pan, place the pan underneath both the drain nut and the oil filter. Loosen the drain nut, try to catch it before it falls into the pan. The oil will start to drain. Now loosen the filter holder nut in the center. it will start to drain oil when loose so make sure that oil finds its way into the pan. Keep loosening it till the filter cover comes free. Watch carefully if the filter cover has any guides so you know how it will go back on.
Remove the old filter and wipe it clean. Don't use water. Put the new filter in exactly like the old filter.
When all the oil is drained, reinstall the filter remembering how it was oriented when you took it off. Check the exact specs on oil capacity. Do not add more than specified. Open the oil fill knob, add all but 1 quart of oil. Close the cap, start the bike for 30 seconds and turn it off. Check the oil level and add the remaining oil. Start the bike and run it again for 30 seconds.
Move the bike to flat ground and check the oil again. It should be full. If it's not, start the bike again and let it run for a minute. Check the oil again, it should be good now.