Rear wheel change
I removed the wheel myself and had a local shop mount the new rubber and balance the tire. Charged me $15. No torque wrench available today, so I'm gonna have to recheck all the fasteners tomorrow. Maymess with the belt tension and alignment a bit more too. Although everything felt nice on the short test ride I just took.
Some things I learned in the process ...
Do not follow the steps in the manual ... Don't even open it up. It will cause WAY more work than you need.
The instructions should be as follows:
[ol][*]Jack motorcycle up[*]Remove axle nut[*]Remove axle[/ol]
Everything else written in the service manual is unnecessary. The manual actually says to remove the brake pads

Anyway, The remove axle part is the hardest. Mine took some persuasion with a hammer that left me with some damaged threads to the nut. Just be careful. You can takethetireoff and put it back on yourself, but an extra set of hands is the way to go, so call a friend.
Take care,
And thanks to all those that replied to my axle nut post.
Ray.
my wheel is at the dealer now getting the 180 on it... i did take the caliper off, though....bled it first, then pulled the bango....no need to take the pads out....i didn't see why i'd have to do that...but removing the caliper did make it easier
No need to bleed it out and pull the banjo (next time).
With the axle, (and more importantly the spacers) out, there is ample
room to move the tireout of the way and slide the caliper off the rear fork.
Ray.
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I was able to remove and reinstall my rear wheel and skip several steps. And it went back on perfectly aligned and with the same belt tension because I did not have to touch either of those adjustments. I didn't do anything with my brakes other than set the caliper aside out of the way to get the wheel off. Just make sure the brake pedal doesn't get pushed while it's disassembled. Didn't have to completely remove my belt guard either. One of the screws was not cooperating so I removed the ones I could get out and just moved the guard out of the way.
Also, I highly recommend the generous use of anti-sieze when reinserting the axle. Goes in like butter and will come out again much easier.
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