22500Km and the little computer in the V7c told me it was time for a maintenance

At first it was the dealer who did it,
but now I figured it was time that I got my fingers dirty
so, I bought me some stuff:
engine-oil
gearbox-oil
brake-fluid
oil-filter
valve cover seals
air filter
brake pads front & rear

some disclaimer could be in order:
this is not intended to be a manual
just a description of how I did my maintenance
OK, let's get busy:
Well, I had to clean the bike first
As you'll know, it's my commuter-bike, so it gets dirty, a lot,...

and some time later: this is the bike I want to work on:

Here's where the center stand comes in handy

let's start by draining the engine-oil:
two bolts (17mm & 19mm),but why couldn't Luigi use two of the same size?


Then the oil-filter (loosen the 13mm bolt)
Thanks to the Stucci-crossover I mounted some time ago
draining the Gearbox-oil is easy now
While the oils are dripping,
I've got time to change the air-filter.
First I've got to remove the fuel-tank by loosening the 10mm bolt

Lifted tank a bit and put a bit of wood underneath so I coud reach the fuel-line connection
remove fuel-line
remove drain-hose
disconnect contacts
Well,
it was supposed to be that way,
but I couldn't disconnect the fuel-line
no matter what I tried,
nothing moved.
It's supposed to be simple enough:
push fuel-line forward,
pull grey ring back
remove fuel-line.
I then called my dealer and he told me it was correct what I was trying to do,
but he also warned me not to break the red connector: that would cost me 700 Euro's to replace
(It comes as a set with the whole fuel-pump assembly)
So I had to figure a way to remove the air-filter without removing the tank
By that time it was noon
and having a good dinner can help setting the mind straight
After dinner I started filling the various oils back
Engine-oil:
first put the two bolts back
then fill with 1780ml

Gearbox-oil:
put drain-plug back in
put bike on side-stand, 'cause the level-plug has to act as fill-plug.
fill with 1 liter of gearbox-oil


With that out of the way I could concentrate back on the fuel-line
but after some trying and thinking about the 700 Euro's
it was time for plan "B"
I could remove the 4 screws from the air box lid
It was a tight fit but I managed to wiggle the lid out of the way
(now you see why I moved the two horns to the front of the bike right after I bought it?)
Look What Luigi did:

His filter wasn't placed right ):

Old and new filter
New filter in,
but correct this time


Wiggle some to get the air box back together again
fuel tank back in place
done!
Now on to the brakes
Front brake first
A 7mm Allen-key removes the assembly

pull out two pins
remove old pads

Two spacers must not be forgotten

rear-brakes
removed by removing two 13mm bolts
and a stubborn pin holds the pads

Old and new:

While at it:
draining the fluid
front

back:
the reservoir is hidden behind a panel

same technique as the front

fresh fluid in the reservoir

In the rear-system there was real brown brake-fluid,
so it was realy needed
Time to do the valves while the engine is cold!

remove plastic shields Allen-key 4mm

remove valve-cover (6 Allen 5mm)

There's a hose attached
but it's long enough to let it connected
just put aside

Spark-plugs out
alternator-cover removed
and with 24mm spanner I could turn the crank

check clearances:
0.15mm inlet
0.20mm outlet
they were still good at both sides
didn't have to correct

Putting things back, I put oil on the seals

Done

on to the 30000Km maintenance
Materials I used

It took me 5 hours to complete the job (And I really enjoyed it a lot getting my fingers dirty)
And it costed me 150 Euro's
Also changed the bevel-box oil
but I didn't take pictures of that
Christiaan