Yes !
The bike actually had just under 15,000 miles, but had spent about 10 years sitting in storage. At elast the tank, etc was all in good repair, but the steering head bearings were pretty much encased in solid, dried out grease. Once things were cleaned up, oil/filter change, wheel bearings/swingarm grease, rebuild forks, new fork seals, springs, all new cables new air filter, new shocks, etc. I figured that I'd ride the bike for a few months (it was September) and then do the spline lube thing in November when I put the bikes away for winter. Put about 800 miles on the bike in September and this happened. Granted, it was probably too late to have been saved even if I had done a spline lube at that point, but the critical thing is that if you have no history on the bike to tell when/if it was done, assume it needs it.
I was writing up a process for doing this, and changing the clutch disk, as I had taken pics of the process, but have been too busy to finish it yet.
With Justin's help I did finish a procedure with pics for installing dual FIAMM horns on the wiki, and the clutch job will be coming next.
I can send you some pics and some general instructions if you're ready to tackle it before I get the wiki article done.
If you have a clutch spline failure on the road/underway as I did, it may come with no early warning signs - just a gawdawful racket and loss of all forward momentum. The input shaft splines get somewhat ground down - they *might* still work in a pinch, but these lost about 50% of their service life in a hurry. All that shiny sparkly stuff all over are metal particles.

The part that really self destructs (usually) is the center splined "hub" on the clutch friction disk. There once were nice pointy mating splines inside that center hole - now it is just some slightly wavy bumps.
