
Originally Posted by
F5 Dave
Yes, but at wrong end of the country for you. You need to find a gnarled old toolmaker still with manual machinery and a few motorbikes tucked into the recesses of the bombsite of a workshop.
If you have to cut the wheel back, say to inboard the disc a little that requires quite a big lathe.
Kawi onto Kawi should maybe be easier if not generations apart. I've done it maybe a dozen times both ends.
The most important starting point is axle diameter and then if you can line up discs and drive clearing frame and bigger rear tyre while staying in centre and inline with other wheel.
Alternative bearings can sometimes help with axle issues but need to consider bearing rating and complete left to right interface with other parts. Internal hub and cushdrive spacers need to still be there to take the load or bad things will happen fast.
Consider calipers. I made a stunning improvement using CBR calipers on my old GS11. But about when I was selling it they started bringing in LVV certification so the poor guy who bought it may have failed a wof the time after next inspection I guess. Sorry dude not my fault. So if you change any brake parts from std you may need to get an inspection certificate from an engineer.
Or if keeping it in the family GPZ era you might expect they will not notice and this model just happened to have that. I'm applying that approach to a bike I got LVV certification but later updated calipers but looks stock.
It used to be you could change wheels and shocks without certification, as people do that all the time on cars.
But rock on up with GSXR wheels and upside down forks and expect to get serious push back from wof guy.
Don't ask, don't tell. USD forks on the KLR (but with KLR disk and caliper) and Concours calipers and CBR disks on the GS1100GK have passed warrants. Won't say where.
it's not a bad thing till you throw a KLR into the mix.
those cheap ass bitches can do anything with ductape.
(PostalDave on ADVrider)
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