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attn: Bandit rear swap experts

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    attn: Bandit rear swap experts

    What is your measurement for the shock tabs you put on. How far from the rear of the swingarm did you place it. Did you use clevis shocks or eye shocks?

    #2
    Mario,

    I'm trying to figure out the same thing.

    You can buy everything complete from Katman http://www.parts.suzuki-katana.com/ however I like to do things myself. Also I hate badgering Katman/Rob for info since I'm not buying the components from him. I did get some parts from him for my ES Sprocket/spacers. I've asked around on the forum and have got some info from members and from past builds.

    I had these cut by a local machinist after I came up with a drawing with measurements.




    I estimated some, but Jwhelan65 was nice enough to give me some better measurements of the mounts.

    Height 35mm
    Length (base) 50mm
    Width 20mm
    ID for bushing 22mm
    Bushing ID 10mm
    Bushing length 22.5mm

    I centered the bushing with 5-6mm of meat on the upper part of the mount.

    Seems like alot of the bandit arms I've seen have the mount located directly over the weld before the axle:



    However, on a stock 1100 arm the Shock mount center to center of the pivot bolt is right at 18.5" or ~470mm which would place the mount location on a bandit arm here in stock format:



    About 3/4-13/16 of an inch further forward.

    Additionally, it seems that longer shocks are used when the mounts are over the weld:

    Posplayr mentioned

    "Alot of guys are running 14.0+" long shocks to quicken the suspension.

    The SU-145 are about 350-370mm vs. 330 for the SU-143's which are closer to the 13" OEM's."

    So for stock length shocks...move the mounts forward from the mount a bit that is assuming guys are running longer than stock shocks.



    On a stock arm the measured from the outside of the mounts on either side is right at 12". I'm using a 1000 arm for reference.




    Measuring the width of the Bandit arm from the outside edge of each leg is 13" give or take a 16th.

    Measure a half inch in and you should be 12" from the outside of each shock mount. Which would place the mount this far in from the edge of the arm:




    Some of this is conjecture and my measurements might not be 100% correct (me using a ****ty tape measure...) but it at least is a start point, and if others would like to take some measurements and or add some input that would be great.


    Nic
    Last edited by niclpnut; 12-12-2013, 09:33 PM.
    83 GS1100ES rebuild:

    http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

    Budget GSXR Conversion:

    http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

    New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

    Comment


      #3
      Also found a shot of a bandit arm that Katman uses on a turbo kat. Notice where the mounts are located (yes it has extensions)







      And some interesting info on trail in regards to his set up and the stock set up of a gs1100/kat and gsxr that kataman posted in the same thread. http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...wingarm+shocks

      Was doing some "TRAIL" measuring today and here are my results.

      I found the correlation between engine cradle angle and trail effect is about 1inch per degree.

      I measured the trail with the bike sitting at 3.5 degrees, gsxr 750 29" front fork setup, 17" front wheel. Don't ask me about other setting as this is an excersize in differentials not actual numbers for a particular bike..

      That being said, I reset the bike using a 19" front wheel, same forks. That gave me a new angle of the engine cradle of 2.5", increased the trail by 1" to 4.25" from 3.25".

      Now I set up the bike like it would sit weighted with proper sag numbers of 40mm rear and 60mm front (ride height total sag recommended figures from Ohlins USA). This puts the bike in the actual attidude it will have when I am riding it. Here are some stock trail numbers:
      GS1100E 4.06"
      GS1100 katana 4.65"
      GSXR 750w 3.7"
      Ducati 1098 3.85"
      2008 busa 3.66"
      zx14 3.7"

      According to the information above my goal is somewhere between the katana and the GSXR (closer to the GSXR). After setup I measured the trail to be 3.75". Now, from the angle numbers above I could predict the new engine cradle angle to be 3.0 degrees. I checked it and it was 3.1.

      In the picture below you can see the difference between the 19" and 17" wheel. With the 19" wheel the trail increases by the steering stem angle increasing and the axle actually moving back.



      This post is for general information that some may find interesting. Also because I have seen some jacked up Gs's recently and wanted to show how little changes in a bikes attitude can change a stable bike into a tank slappin bronco buckin world of hurt. I know there are other factors involved and trail is one important part of the stability of the motocycle.

      It may be beneficial to start a seperate thead on this subject of others who need more specific information. Please don't debate it here as I feel it could be a long discussion and I don't want to get too far off track.

      My setup is gsxr 17" wheels, '94 gsxr 750 forks (29" length), 954 drop triples, bandit 1200 swingarm with extensions and custom shock mount location. Without the 4" over on the swing the trail would increase as the back end would be lowered slightly.






      Makes me think that the reason for the mounts being over the weld before the axle is for trail purposes.

      Nic
      Last edited by niclpnut; 12-12-2013, 09:30 PM.
      83 GS1100ES rebuild:

      http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

      Budget GSXR Conversion:

      http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

      New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

      Comment


        #4
        I went to a local machine shop with some measurements & he fabbed these up for $20.00. Been working great for the last 3 years. I need better shocks though, lol.
        80 gs1100 16-v ported & polished, 1 mm oversize intake valves, 1150 carbs w/Dynojet stage 3, plus Bandit/gsxr upgrades

        Comment


          #5
          Running stock length 13" shocks?

          Nic
          83 GS1100ES rebuild:

          http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

          Budget GSXR Conversion:

          http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

          New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

          Comment


            #6
            this is a picture I have available of a Katman Bandit 1200 swinger. From what I remember he spaced one side out a little more to avoid contact with the left spring of the Ohlins shock.

            These are the SU-145 Ohlins (stock length + 30-50mm)


            Comment


              #7
              Was the longer shock length a recommendation or your preference?

              Nic
              83 GS1100ES rebuild:

              http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

              Budget GSXR Conversion:

              http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

              New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by niclpnut View Post
                Was the longer shock length a recommendation or your preference?

                Nic
                It was a recommendation and it is now my preference although it is perhaps difficult to separate out the benefits of length from the rest of the SU-145 package.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Thanks pos. Indeed the quality of the ohlins is amazing.

                  Therefore moving the shock mount forward for 13" shocks to keep general stock geometry seems doable.

                  Nic
                  83 GS1100ES rebuild:

                  http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

                  Budget GSXR Conversion:

                  http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

                  New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by niclpnut View Post

                    Therefore moving the shock mount forward for 13" shocks to keep general stock geometry seems doable.

                    Nic
                    I relied on Rob for the setup but I would have no hesitation in moving the mount forward to get the increased ride height.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Where do the bushing come from? Wat are thry? Stock bushings?

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Yeah stock lower shock bushings. Press fit into the custom mounts
                        83 GS1100ES rebuild:

                        http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=170032

                        Budget GSXR Conversion:

                        http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum...d.php?t=200563

                        New to me bike: 2008 B-KING

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Checkout HJFISK and his bike. He used a bandit swingarm I think.

                          Are you doing a restoration project of some kind on a GS? Let everyone see what you are doing by posting the details here.
                          1979 GS850G
                          2004 SV650N track bike
                          2005 TT-R125 pit bike
                          LRRS #246 / Northeast Cycles / Woodcraft / Armour Bodies / Hindle Exhaust / Central Mass Powersport

                          http://s327.photobucket.com/albums/k443/tas850g/

                          Comment


                            #14
                            chain clearance from tire? I have everything set in place and the chain is only 1=2 mm from the tire. 180 tire. did you go with a 170 tire?? what did you do with the chain guide? i had to shave mine to get it to fit in the frame..

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I run a 170. Are you planning on rear sets? I retained stock but had to offset the swing arm using an offset in the top hat bushings.

                              chain spacing will depend on wheel width. Is 5.5x17" you need 5/8 counter sprocket offset. It is tight and you need the smallest chain you can find. Katman has recommendations.
                              Last edited by posplayr; 09-01-2014, 02:00 PM.

                              Comment

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