So I get the input shaft seal in place with no issues, easy as pie, I don't know how I mucked it up in the first place. I guess it's held in there by the tapered bearing behind it and the clutch plate in front of it as it didn't take much force, only hand pressure, to slip it in, once slightly lubricated. And then the fun began, refitting the gear box cover. Turned out to be quite an adventure.
I smeared some silicone sealer on both sides, i.e. the box and the cover, and that was the first mistake. Should only have smeared the box's edges because I had to handle the cover much more than I expected. I'm about to start tapping it down with a rubber mallet, but am not convinced it's lined up properly so I pull if off, and with it came a shift fork pivot shaft, the one with two forks on it, I think for gears 1-4. Lovely. So, it just slips right back in, yes? No. I can't line the forks up with the receptacle hole in the back of the case as the forks and the bottom spacer have also shifted. So I monkey around with it trying to lift and slide and slip everything back together, and a small bushing/collar slips off the lower shift forks foot/peg, that slides into the shift drum groove. Lovely.
So after thinking about taking it the the dealer and surrendering to experienced mechanics to fit it back together, I decide to use an extendable small magnet to hold the collar, and moved and lifted etc the shafts and bottom shift fork and magically it slipped back on, and lined up. All shift forks back in their grooves and both fork pivot pins nicely tapped back in, all lined up.
Before starting to refit the cover, I greased up the ends on the pins and the inside receptacles of the cover in case I wanted to lift it off to realign the cover again before tapping it down, but once the pins were refitted and aligned and the shafts aligned properly the cover went on fairly smoothly. Next time I'll know, if I see any of the shifter forks pins out of their shift drum grooves, that the shafts needed to be realigned ever so slightly before trying to refit the cover. Should see very little of those bright bushings/collars.
Man I hope this thing doesn't start leaking again anytime soon, like as soon as I fill he box up again. :Norton:
Why do we go through these tortuous repairs on these 25+ year old K75's again? Oh yeah, their one of BMW's best ever. :riding: