I'm taking the rear tire off this weekend and will check the swing arm then. I was planning on removing the swing arm but saw some guys saying you could slide the pivot shaft the the right and remove the left bracket and squeeze the belt by. I will remove the whole arm and check everything from the shaft to bushings. Thanks for the input. I couldn't find any videos of someone doing this job. Just bits and pieces of steps.
Dolt...I value your knowledge and I just did this job about two months ago....just don't see how I could've gotten that drivebelt between the swingarm end and the frame???? I can understand getting it around the front sprocket if the inner primary wasn't removed but.......In any case....completely removing it once everything was pretty much apart added minimal time to my job. If you can indeed use that trick, I stand corrected but just can't see how or why there'd be that much space between the frame and swingarm from an engineering standpoint????You don't have to remove the swing arm to replace the drive belt. You can do as you mentioned; slide the pivot shaft out, rotate the belt about 45* and slide it between swing arm and frame. Don't know how many miles on the bike but doubt that shaft or bushings need replacing. However, replacing the rubber isolators would not be a bad idea; not expensive and worth doing.
More importantly, since the inner primary is off and parts are cheap, replace all the seals behind the inner primary and maybe the inner primary bearing. If the race looks OK, you can reuse it. Tape the splines on the main shaft to avoid nicking the IPB seal when installing the inner primary; very easy to do and it will leak if nicked.
Dolt...I value your knowledge and I just did this job about two months ago....just don't see how I could've gotten that drivebelt between the swingarm end and the frame???? I can understand getting it around the front sprocket if the inner primary wasn't removed but.......In any case....completely removing it once everything was pretty much apart added minimal time to my job. If you can indeed use that trick, I stand corrected but just can't see how or why there'd be that much space between the frame and swingarm from an engineering standpoint????
Edit: Disregard....my apologies, memory is coming back and the tight interface was between the inner swingarm and the transmission boss now that I think about it. Mind is in first gear and typing in fifth, lol. There may be enough space as you mentioned. But, I'd still just yank it to check everything anyway and clean it well