I won't go into the how-to as to taking the wheel off and such, this will serve as a parts advice guide if anyone else needs/wants to do the same thing. Thanks to salty_monk and former member 8 track for their work on this, some of the below is copied from their threads. Most of the used parts I reference were found on eBay. I do not post eBay links since they only last 90 days or less. If I posted them, someone reading this thread 2~5 years from now will experience frustration when they can't see what we were talking about since the link is dead.
This is a work in progress thread, but I hope to have it completed in a month or so. I'll follow up with some pics as I make progress.
Parts-
Brackets
Custom brackets from member salty_monk. Link to his thread $83 shipped. You will also need 2x 10mm x 40mm bolts, 2x flat washers, 2x lock washers, and 2x 10mm nuts for the bottom hole. Figure another $5 at your hardware store for these, but use at least a grade 8.8 (10.9 or higher preferred).
Calipers
2 x calipers from various bikes, mainly Kawasaki models-
EX 250 Ninja 1988 to 2007 (single caliper on right side)
EX 500 Ninja 1994 to 2007 (single caliper on right side)
ZL 600 B1 Eliminator 1995 to 1996
ZR 550 B1/B2/B3 Zephyr 1990 1992 1993
ZX 600 C1-C9 Ninja 600 R 1988 to 1996
ZR 750 C1/C2/C3 1991 to 1993
ZX 750 F1/F2/F3/F4 Ninja 1987 to 1990
ZG 1000 A9-A20 Concours 1994 to 2006
ZX 1000 B1/B2/B3 Ninja ZX10 1988 to 1990
Suzuki also used this caliper on the VX800, GS500 and the GSX1100G
I found a pair of calipers from a Concours for $42 shipped on eBay. UPDATE- they were not the right ones- they were from an earlier model. Fortunately this was resolved before shipping. If buying Concours calipers, be sure they are the dual-piston ones from 94-06. The earlier 86-93 ones are single-piston and won't fit. Shop around by model on eBay, you'll find the prices vary a lot for the same thing. It's also usually cheaper to find a pair of calipers than buying them one at a time. Be sure you are getting left and right calipers and that each caliper has the bolt for the banjo fitting in it. I found an even better deal for a pair of ZX600C calipers for $25. I think you can find decent used calipers for $50 or less, so that's the allowance for this item.
Pads
Your choice on these. Expect to spend anywhere from $20~40 per set, so budget $60. I found a set of organic EBC pads for $20/set $40 total shipped on eBay that were new old stock still in the package. Be sure the pads match the calipers you bought, and you need two sets since you have two calipers! The EBC organic pads part number I bought is FA129.
Rotors
2 x rotors, 295mm. I have posted more than you need to know about donor rotors here. It boils down to:
a) Solid GS rotor from a:
GS 550 C/N/EC/EN 77-79
GS 550 LT 80
GS 750 C/N (8 Valve) 78-79
GS 1000 C/N 78-79
b) Vented (one way, the slots will face the "wrong" direction on one side, but this is not known to be an operational problem) GS rotor from a:
GS 550 LX 81
GS 550 LZ 82
GS 550 TX 81
GS 650 GLX/GLZ/GLD 81-83 (NOT the 650G standard)
GS 750 TZ/TD (16 valve) 82-83 (NOT the 750E)
Make sure what you get is the larger (295mm) single rotor from the L/GL/TZ. The standards of this era used the smaller 276mm dual disks. Ask the seller to measure it before you buy- it will save a lot of headache when you get the wrong one.
You may be able to use certain Honda CBR rotors, but I didn't pursue those since the bolt circle was off by 2mm (GS=76, CBR is either 74 or 78 depending on the model & year). See salty_monk's update on this item below- they need to be re-drilled.
I decided on a pair of GS650G rotors. I found them from 2 different sellers on eBay for about $60 total.
Like many, I fall into the "while I'm at it..." trap. So, while I'm at it, I'm going to replace the wheel bearings (not relevant) and replace the rubber brake hoses with braided stainless steel ones. I did this on the ST1100 and it was a worthwhile investment.
Hoses/plumbing
The plumbing will be as follows (parts were sourced from Summit Racing):
Master cylinder: 10mm banjo fitting
Fragola PN 332020 AN3 teflon-lined hose w/ black plastic cover with 10mm banjo to straight AN3 female, $20. Runs from master cylinder to tee.
Fragola AN3 bulkhead tee PN 583403, $6. This tee has 3x AN3 male fittings, and a nut so you can mount it on a bracket if desired. I plan on making a small aluminum bracket to mount it in the stock location.
Fragola AN3 bulkhead nut (optional if you plan to make a bracket for the tee), PN 492403, $1.
2x Russell 18" long AN3 DOT legal hoses with a 90 degree end and a straight end. I found they were either PN 655040 ($25 each) or 655042 ($30 each), for a total of either $50 or $60. Note Summit lists two 18" hoses that are identical in the catalog. One costs five dollars less than the other. My best guess is that the more expensive one is DOT approved, since the 655040 ones I received were not DOT labeled despite the website saying they met the same DOT standard as the 655042 hoses.
2x Russell 35 degree AN3 to 10mm banjo adapters, PN 640511, $8 each for a total of $16.
Bag of 10 aluminum crush washers, PN 999210, $4.
You'll also need some chemicals & fluids- your choice on these.
The total cost breaks down as follows:
Brackets, hardware: $88
Calipers: $50 (I spent $25)
Pads: $60 (I spent $40)
Rotors: $60
Plumbing: $107 or $97
Total: $365 or $355
That's a lot of dough, but the results should be worth it. Stay tuned for updates.
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