. It seems to me he said they had a way to lock the splines so the driveshaft effectively became one piece.
The installer for my Champion S/A showed me a drive shaft split in 2 or 3 places with pinch bolts that clamped it all together.
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. It seems to me he said they had a way to lock the splines so the driveshaft effectively became one piece.
I am no means a mechanic so I called my local Honda dealer about the recall. They told me yes, it needed to be looked at. After all said and done, they told me they replaced the 2 cylinders. I feel a difference in braking..and like the change.
Just saying....
In my owners manual it says the driveshaft should be greased annually. Today I talked to the Honda dealership service manager that did my conversion to make sure on the brake recall and After finding out the Roadsmith didn't need the recall I mentioned the next time was in i wanted them to grease the u joints on the driveshaft and he said they never needed to be greased again, do I go with the manual or the service manager.
Find this thread interesting, different opinions on whether to grease the drive shaft or not. My 2012 has two zerk grease fittings, that means a 'grease gun' to me, so I grease. Be good if Roadsmith would post here and settle the issue. Since Taylor left, we don't get much input. Maybe business is so good they don't have the time. Customer support is a valuable product.
The installer for my Champion S/A showed me a drive shaft split in 2 or 3 places with pinch bolts that clamped it all together.
I called Roadsmith and found out they changed several years ago and the driveshaft doesn't require grease. Unfortuately, they left the zerks in so it appears it does need grease when in fact it does not.
Maybe a Roadsmith rep will clear this up.