Got the brakes sussed finally.
Today's job. Finish making the loom Sidecar shaped.
All up the bloody thing owes more than twelve hours, for a poxy goddam 380grams!
But it's tidy now and just needs wrapped. Before shot is actually half way through the job.
More updates.
All the work I did on the loom, was put to the test on Thursday when we got to work to be ready for the test day at Manfield on Friday. FAIL!!!
No fuel pump priming, or suggesting it even wanted to. Nor any power to the injectors. OH FUCK. I've cocked something up in the shortening of the loom. I did the job one wire at a time very carefully to avoid just such an occurrence god damn it.
So after wasting the day trying to find the cause, I gave up and came home in a thoroughly foul mood. Alan took to the interweb and searched forums the world over. Luckily again, kit car owners like the 12 as a power plant, and it turns out that the little grey wire to the ignition switch which essentially just joins the main feed for everything else, is a signal wire for the ecu to measure a voltage drop. Try and hot wire a ZX12, and computer says NO. The section of wire it was spliced into was in the area to be removed. So thinking I was copying the last dude I just added it to the join where I wanted it. Alas, he had done it with a resistor I hadn't seen.
Anyhoo, we've got that sorted now thanks to Alan's god like problem solving skills.
Got the gear lever all set up on the right hand side today, and took it for a hoon around the block. Despite the brake lever needing adjustment, we seem to be ready for next weeks test day. We're gonna meet Ian Staples there and get our inspection done at the same time as having a bit of a play.
Love the bars being low and close to the wheel. Soooo much more feel, and it's easier to steer the thing. Seems counter intuitive that the wide bars would be harder work, might have something to do with having my arms straight ahead of me, instead of out the side.
Discussing with Al today, I'm tempted to arsehole the double master cylinder operated by the foot. Instead use the bar mounted master for the front, and the foot for chair and drive wheels. It makes sense, because the bias is always whatever I need rather than set for a whole session. Also means I can trail the rear brakes into tight right handers, without losing any steering feel.
Food for thought.
If it made that much sense I reckon the guys that have been building them for decades would be doing it that way
In saying that the first sidecar I passengered was set up like that and with 320kg and a old lightly modded GSX1100 was good for 1.49 around Ruapuna, it just comes down to whatever works best for you
I thought about this too. Set the brakes up biased slightly rearward all the time, and regulate it with the hand operated front.
But taking that to it's logical conclusion, lets save a kilo or two. If it works for us to use hand and foot together, I can take off a caliper from the front and a master in the middle. Might even save the amount I had to add to rebuild the front end.
"You never understood that it ain't no good, you shouldn't let other people get your kicks for you" - Bob Dylan
One of them was important too. Bloody resistor where a wire branched off.
Took it to Manfield today. Was going pretty good in the first and only seesion we did. Tech inspection, and a complete brain fart got noticed on the drive wheel brake caliper. So back in the truck, and bring it home.
Only thing it failed on though, so it's pretty good news really.
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