I usually "ruin" (my personal term) at least one bearing when I take them out, because of the pressure (even on my press) against the inner bushing needed to push out the first one. I have several of "the other side" of those bearings that were not beat up when I had the spindle(s) out and removed the other side with a long, thin punch on the outer race. This isn't possible with all of these wheels, but with some of them it does work.
What most often makes me change them is the old, dried grease that Honda installed 50 years ago: if the bike is not frequently ridden this stuff turns to a waxy state and stands proud of the balls, so no lubrication happens - even if the bearing gets pretty warm. This causes the wear I sometimes see, which lets the wheel 'wiggle' at the outer rim. This 'wiggle' can be felt as looseness if the wear is great.
But, speaking in performance terms: you can buy extra-tight bearings (as discussed in my books) for these wheels, which are sometimes (in the USA) called "Class C" (or "reduced clearance") bearings. They cost extra, but have only 20% of the normal clearance between the balls and races. This difference can be felt in the curvy Rockies when I ride up there, and especially when riding heavy (touring 2-up with gear) as more precise steering and a more 'friendly' feeling overall in the chassis when less heavily loaded. Many years ago my 750 would 'shake its head' when coasting down steep slopes riding 1-up with only a light grip on the throttle (as did many of these bikes) because of the offset of the front wheel that was done by Honda in the later K0 chasses with the "new" front hub (it fits 2 disc brakes if you want to): the wheels were then laced up approximately 3mm away from the original disc, for whatever reason Honda wished. (This shows up in the spoke nipple threads as 1-2 thread difference, side-to-side). In the post-K0 bikes, this causes side-loading to the [front] wheel bearings when toured (like mine) for many, many tens of thousands of miles, making them wear unevenly. Then the wheel can be [measurably] wobbled (by pressing sideways on the rim), and when this reaches 1mm of looseness, I replace the bearings regardless. The handling always improves: the last 750 I just did simply stopped 'shaking its head' during a steep decel test from 80 MPH (throttle and downshift, no front brake applied) when I installed new, low-clearance bearings. The owner immediately noticed it on his first ride after he got the bike back, too.
And nowadays I lace the wheels back up on-center with the rear wheel when doing a front one. I'm still not sure what the definitive reason(s) were for Honda offsetting the front wheel of the 750 (I've heard several reasons for it), but they did it up to the 750K6.
