Grumpycat
Super Member
Lie to them, they deserve it. “This is a 2019 model!”I was give the liability excuse. What frosted me was that the parts counter guys knew I wanted the new tires mounted and the bearings replaced. Which I could have just bought on line for far less. And it wasn't till I had made an extra trip, bringing in the perfectly cleaned and waxed rims that, the mechanic then called me to say his manager would not let him mount the tires or change out the bearings on anything older than 10 years! And this was the only Yamaha dealership in town. It was a hard lesson. But I did figure out how to do the work my self and get the wheel weights right and torqued the bolts to the correct values using a service manual.
The strangest part is that the 2021 SR 400, which they had one on the show room floor, was basically the same as my SR 500. And I had to needle the mechanic as to if he would work on a 2010 SR. He said, no, they will not let him work on any thing older than 10 years. Even though the 2010 SRs and, the one they were selling in 2021, were the same exact spec bike.
OTOH I believe you are better off mounting and balancing your own tires, installing your own bearings.