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Shipping's a little stiff.
I searched 650 seat in the for sale section and found nothing but wompin's postHow much do you want spend on a seat? Another member on here had one up for less than $100
It was this thread I was thinking about:
http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum/showthread.php?t=202057
Coming along, nice work thus far.
Are those clubman handlebar's? If so, how do they feel?
BRAKES
I was going to just replace the brake pads, but I took a look at the calipers/pads and they had so much crap in the body of the caliper it was disgusting. I have decided to do a full rebuild for all the calipers since I took a look at one of them. Better to do it now, rather than have a troubled time doing it half-assed. Might also go with SS lines, but I may not have enough cash.
Good to replace if it looked dodgy. A broken clutch cable out on the road is no fun. Maybe PO put some stronger aftermarket springs in the clutch? I've read that the OEM ones give the best feel and won't slip until they get really old and loose their springiness.CLUTCH CABLE
Replaced, but feels the same. So, it may just be a hard clutch. Oh well, the cale still looked rusted and old and probably needed to be replaced regardless.
Good decision on rebuilding the calipers. On a used bike, I would never trust a set of brakes that haven't been rebuilt by myself or someone I know to be competent.
You can save almost 50% on the price of SS brake lines if you build them yourself following the instructions on BassCliff's site and threads around here. I haven't done it yet (waiting on parts), but lots of people say it's pretty easy and based on what you've done so far, I think it would be well within your grasp. But if you decide to go rubber, only get brand-new lines since they have a limited life span.
Good to replace if it looked dodgy. A broken clutch cable out on the road is no fun. Maybe PO put some stronger aftermarket springs in the clutch? I've read that the OEM ones give the best feel and won't slip until they get really old and loose their springiness.
Good decision on rebuilding the calipers. On a used bike, I would never trust a set of brakes that haven't been rebuilt by myself or someone I know to be competent.
You can save almost 50% on the price of SS brake lines if you build them yourself following the instructions on BassCliff's site and threads around here. I haven't done it yet (waiting on parts), but lots of people say it's pretty easy and based on what you've done so far, I think it would be well within your grasp. But if you decide to go rubber, only get brand-new lines since they have a limited life span.
Good to replace if it looked dodgy. A broken clutch cable out on the road is no fun. Maybe PO put some stronger aftermarket springs in the clutch? I've read that the OEM ones give the best feel and won't slip until they get really old and loose their springiness.
Seat, tank, fender mockup
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It looks amazing just like this! Just figure out a way to refine it a bit. A cut here a blend there and whammy! Keep the frame black. If you paint the frame to match the body work it will make the bike look bulky and strange because the tank and tails' lines will blend with the off angles of the frame (contradictory/vertical+horizontal lines=unpleasant to the eye). Plus that paint scheme is pretty sweet. Just my two cents. Sweet bike/project!