I saw other forks on e-bay but these ones had the brake calipers/master cylinder included (ect. all that you see in the pic). I don't know if this was a good buy or not, in fact I don't even know if they will fit on my bike. It was kind of an impulse buy- the guy was selling both rear and front wheels for a good price ($175 + shipping including sprockets and rotors)- almost jumped on those too... but since this is a winter project I decided to buy one thing at a time so I won't feel it in the bank as much.
I did a little research on the forum and found that might have some clearance problems. I also will have to eventually buy a swing arm so I can match the rear and front wheel (something to do with tire traction).
How much modifying am I looking at to get these on my bike? What wheels will fit on this (other that what is intended for it)?
Also this winter I plan to get a 4 into 1 exhaust and pods- but if I don't will these work (clearance wise) with my stock exhaust?
Finally (for now), what swing arm can I use, that will fit on my bike (I have a welder but not really interested in a mono-shock conversion) that will fit the latter generation wheels (whatever matches the front)?
I know these are a lot of questions, but I think that they are all relevant.
Thanks a million again...and again....
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It's pretty much the same length as your GS forks so clearance shouldn't be an issue even with a 4 into 1 and pods. The USD forks have a lot less travel than the GS forks. However, with the bigger than stock tires (120 up front, 180 in the rear), but stock steering geometry, it'll steer like a Winnebago stuck in molasses unless you raise the rear end up a bit. You could get the bike to steer faster and gain a bit more ground clearance if you got some longer than stock rear shocks like the ZRX1200 shocks.
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