OK, job done and dusted and not a busted knuckle in sight. I'm just wondering, what waits to happen, job went so easy. Anyway, there were two things, that hold me up, one was the bottom race the other the installation of the stem race.
I have read the same goldwing docs, the hooked spanner and the modified large washer too, none of them worked for the bottom, there was no clearance whatsoever, so nothing to hook up things to. I cut the race diagonally with a diamond disc on a dremel, but I could not split it, as there was not enough space to cut it deep enough. So I ended up cutting channels on the top of the race left and right and modified an old screwdriver to have a very fine tip and a wedge. Hammered away at the two slits and once the screwdriver digged in, I was trying to hit the body of it, using the bottom of the tube as leverage. Needles to say, it didn't budge, so I heated up the tube with a torch locally, that finally helped. Once I got the race moving a bit, it was a lot easier to carry on, as now I had a slit all around, once I've ran out of the space on the screwdriver wedge I could just about hook in a bent threaded rod, that was filed down really narrow at the bottom. Another 20 minutes later the race popped away, the merriest sound ever - hearing the bloody thing ricocheting off the garage floor.
The stem race was easy enough to get rid of, I cut it with a diamond disc and split with a chisel, put the stem in the freezer for overnight and heated the new race up before putting it on. For some reason that was not enough as it was very tight and I kept hammering more and more desperately away on the bottom of the fork (it inverted and put in a vice, old race against the new). Again heat helped, I torched the bearing race, this time nice and proper and finally I managed to seat it tight. I stumbled once more, when I put the fork legs in when the top of the triple was already tightened down, fortunately I realised my mistake a bit later on, as the wheel axle was poking the wrong direction, e.g. 2-3 centimeters away from the opening of the other fork leg, SO I took that bit apart and set the legs with the axle screwed in as a guide.
Anyway, long story short the bike handles like a dream, I've got so used to this heavy-heavy steering the bike falls in the curves a little too fast
I started to be happy again, so guess what, I have a coolant leak. How on earth?
Anyway, I will investigate, that will be nothing compared to the steam bearing replacement...