Rig up a jig, cut the frame and reposition the steering head (with the forks and wheel attached), until you find the ideal rake angle. Then come up with a plan and good welder to finish it.
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GSX1100G rake fix?
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Originally posted by RichDesmond View Post
Rig up a jig, cut the frame and reposition the steering head (with the forks and wheel attached), until you find the ideal rake angle. Then come up with a plan and good welder to finish it.1982 GS1100G- road bike
1990 GSX750F-(1127cc '92 GSXR engine)
1987 Honda CBR600F Hurricane
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Originally posted by Buffalo Bill View PostThere's your answer Rick. Plain and simple.
Rig up a jig, cut the frame and reposition the steering head (with the forks and wheel attached), until you find the ideal rake angle. Then come up with a plan and good welder to finish it.:cool:GSRick
No God, no peace. Know God, know peace.
Eric Bang RIP 9/5/2018
Have some bikes ready for us when we meet up.
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Originally posted by Buffalo Bill View PostThere's your answer Rick. Plain and simple.
Rig up a jig, cut the frame and reposition the steering head (with the forks and wheel attached), until you find the ideal rake angle. Then come up with a plan and good welder to finish it.
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Originally posted by gsrick View PostNot so plain and simple. Like I said I'm not looking to do major altering, just some minor tweaking to make it better than it is.
Mark1982 GS1100E
1998 ZX-6R
2005 KTM 450EXC
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Originally posted by gsrick View PostWell aren't you clever, I'll let you keep that technic in Australia.
Personally I'd have no problem cutting, jigging and rewelding to achieve the desired head angle. But y'know, if good old Amurrican technology can't do it, well, go find a suitable wall....
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Don't be so worried about cutting and welding Rick, won't cost much, far less than buying the wrong forks.
"Any job worth doing, is worth doing right."1982 GS1100G- road bike
1990 GSX750F-(1127cc '92 GSXR engine)
1987 Honda CBR600F Hurricane
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Originally posted by mmattockx View PostIn that case jack up the rear 3/4"-1", drop the front 1/4"-3/8" and call it a day. Changing the forks is a waste of time and won't do anything useful for you. All of the sport bike forks have minimal offset to work with 23 degree rake angles and will result in way too much trail on a 32 degree steering head.
Mark:cool:GSRick
No God, no peace. Know God, know peace.
Eric Bang RIP 9/5/2018
Have some bikes ready for us when we meet up.
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Originally posted by GregT View PostThe brits developed many ways of changing steering head angle. Usually for trials use. From jacking the bike up in the air and heating the top tubes until the frame sagged - to, yes, running it into a wall...
Personally I'd have no problem cutting, jigging and rewelding to achieve the desired head angle. But y'know, if good old Amurrican technology can't do it, well, go find a suitable wall....:cool:GSRick
No God, no peace. Know God, know peace.
Eric Bang RIP 9/5/2018
Have some bikes ready for us when we meet up.
Comment
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Originally posted by mmattockx View PostIn that case jack up the rear 3/4"-1", drop the front 1/4"-3/8" and call it a day. Changing the forks is a waste of time and won't do anything useful for you. All of the sport bike forks have minimal offset to work with 23 degree rake angles and will result in way too much trail on a 32 degree steering head.
Mark
Rick:
To summarize, when starting with a given bike there are 4 things that affect trail. Rear height, front height, steering head angle and triple offset.
If you're looking for easy and/or low cost mods the ride heights are the place to start. Slide the forks up in triples as far as you can without causing interference (pull the springs to check at full compression) Look at the rear dogbones. If they are just flat pieces of steel you can make new ones out of steel stock with a saw and a drill. Typically, shorter dogbones raise the rear. It helps to have some idea about the linkage ratio, but 2.5:1-3:1 range is common, so if your new hole centers are 10mm closer together the rear will rise 25-30mm.
You have to be very careful about shock swaps, you need to consider both length and spring rate. It's unlikely that a shock from a significantly lighter bike is going to be both longer than what you have now and have a suitable spring rate.
On the SV 650 it takes about a 3mm change in ride height to get 1mm change in trail. I haven't done the math on a bike with significantly more rake, but I think the ride height changes would have a bigger effect. If you raise the rear 30mm and lower the front 15mm you might get a 20mm reduction in trail, which you'll be able to feel.
As I said earlier, it really helps to calculate what you have now, and if you do that you'll be able to tell how much changes in ride heights are going to change trail. A sheet of graph paper, some good measurements and a little high school trig are all you need.Last edited by RichDesmond; 09-29-2018, 11:52 AM.'20 Ducati Multistrada 1260S, '93 Ducati 750SS, '01 SV650S, '07 DL650, '01 DR-Z400S, '80 GS1000S, '85 RZ350
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