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Take the socket appropriate for that nut, put it on a short extension, place it in your drill. If handheld, use a bench vise to hold a file and grind the socket against the file until it fits the opening. If using a drill press, hold the file against the socket. I did this years ago to service my airhead swing arm.
I am curious what the nuts look like. I don't currently have an Airhead but when I did I removed these nuts with a normal (10mm I think) 12 point box end wrench.
I am curious what the nuts look like. I don't currently have an Airhead but when I did I removed these nuts with a normal (10mm I think) 12 point box end wrench.
Me too. Wonder if something changed with the late model single-side versions, as on my earlier bikes it was never a problem.
Me too. Wonder if something changed with the late model single-side versions, as on my earlier bikes it was never a problem.
View attachment 84952
I can understand people's confusion, since I've rarely heard people ask for clarification on these nuts. I've never owned a dual shock version--just the mono-shock version. The nuts appear to be a 12mm, 12-point nuts, but don't quote me on it. As you can see in the above picture, the 12-point box wrench that came in the took kit does not fit. The wall thickness of the wrench is too thick to fit between the nut and the driveshaft tube. I may just have to make my own tool, but I was hoping not to go down that path.
Take the socket appropriate for that nut, put it on a short extension, place it in your drill. If handheld, use a bench vise to hold a file and grind the socket against the file until it fits the opening. If using a drill press, hold the file against the socket. I did this years ago to service my airhead swing arm.