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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project...
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
lol ^
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
Cabon wheels make a **** load of difference to any bike. Its all about removing 'unsprung weight'
My mates R6 is mint with them on. I've had a go on it with stock wheels and the carbon ones and it flies in and out of corners with ease. Some bike mag types reckon you could knock 2 secs off a lap with this modifiaction. now that is a massive amount of time!!! The only down side is its very flighty over crests and lifts the front easily. This could be a problem with the SV as its torquey. Good luck and hope to see some pics of the transformation soon |
Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
what is it about the SV that will prevent you losing your life or your licence more so than a 600SS? Ignoring the 600SS is better because..... discussions. The SV hardly places you in the riding sedately bracket.
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
Well, I have a BST front wheel on order for my pointy, so I guess I'm insane :) My reasoning was about the same as yours... plus I like building and fiddling, so it's win-win.
It will fit into the K4 GSXR600 forks with matris 25mm cartridges which I've further modified and re-valved. I have a WP4618 shock from a GSXR, with a custom linkage. There are also curvy intake cams in place of the exhaust cams, a LeoVinci full system and... 46mm de-restricted Ducati 748 throttle bodies. Plus a bunch of other stuff. With the BST, total weight with an empty tank will be 154kg (including road gear). The rear wheel is trickier. I have a ZX6R wheel, because it was easier to modify the cush drive to narrow the chain-line. TWF now do a kit for the 2006+ GSXR wheel. The question is, how much is it possible to do this on an after-market wheel like a BST? In total, the chain line is off by 7mm. Flipping a front 520 sprocket and putting a 2.4mm washer behing it, you can move the chain out 4mm, but that's about the limit. You can run with the alignment off by a mm or so without grief (as I found out due to sloppy measurements :rolleyes: ). So at a minimum, you need to move the sprocket in 2mm, ideally 3. Certainly if you can get someone to mill your sprocket, taking out 2mm should be ok (but a 520 sprocket is only 6.3mm thick...). I'd be surprised if you couldn't shave 1-2mm out of the cush set-up on a BST. I'm holding off ordering a rear until I get some machine shop facilities set up in the new house :) |
Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
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Aprilia RS250 Mine was a toss up between the SV and the RS, the only reason the SV won was because I use the SV to commute on a nice day and generally I dont like to play pretend motogp racers at 6.30am! Or, what about the ZXR400, RVF400 or dare I say it an RS125? I had 4 RS125's, very tunable and quicker in the twisties than my mate on a 600, yeah might get blasted on the straights but theres no skill in winding a throttle open! Also why dont you just put a 14 tooth sprocket on the front?!, Ok no better handling, but quicker to accelerate! Anyways keep a running thread open of the mods you make, should make an interesting read! |
Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
125s... meh, alright for very twisty roads but no good for say going to the other end of the country to try the twisties there.
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Re: Carbon Fibre Wheels. Insane project.
Journalist friend who raced a TZ125 did a road test on the RS125: reckoned it would be easier to keep his license on a 'busa. The problem with the 125 was that you had to ride it flat-out, all the time, to have any fun :)
Yeah, rode an RGV250 on the road for a few years. Definitely good fun in the twisties, but thirsty, unhappy on any sort of freeway and a nasty maintenance schedule. |
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