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Its definitely worn. As far as replacement, check ebay but more than likely that price will be the same as getting one from the dealer. I personally went down a lot of teeth on mine to get more top end, but have yet to get it finished.
I will let some of the others chime in on opinions, etc
Its definitely worn. As far as replacement, check ebay but more than likely that price will be the same as getting one from the dealer. I personally went down a lot of teeth on mine to get more top end, but have yet to get it finished.
I will let some of the others chime in on opinions, etc
Chain is a brand new, less than 200 miles. Front sprocket looks brand new, my father in-law replaced it before I got the bike but obviously he did not replace the rear. I weigh 170 also and shed some weight off the bike.
It is a D.I.D O-Ring, got it from a local shop. Wasn't there highest grade one but good from what I was told. Is there an easy way to determine if the chain has been damaged from that short amount of time on the bike?
From the facts given just fit a new steel aftermarket rear,it should be O.K.Don't have the chain adjusted tight.You should have 1 1/4" to 1 1/2" total up and down movement in the middle of the chain when you sit on it.Don't pressure wash or use gas to clean the chain or blow air at it.Don't spray good quality chain lube at it a lot.Most o-ring chains get way over lubed and it just attacts dirt and wears everything out faster.
Will do, and I agree. I know about the slack in the chain etc... I never pressure wash my bikes, always by hand.
My front tire showed up just now. I have the stocks sitting in the car, on my break I will have them mounted and will post pictures then. I'll have them mounted over the weekend.
Tires mounted, look pretty slick on the stock mags. Will look even better on the bike....finally get to make it a roller and get her started this weekend and maybe test ride 8)
as for the battery I think i'm going to go the a123 route to for the smallest possible footprint and easier in the end not having to worry about where to mount the battery
I just wish I had more time on my hands. Lot's of little details I would like to accomplish but also trying to get it ready to ride. 45 hours a week at work, house work, married + dogs & horses. Keeping up our land etc... I usually only have a few hours a week to work on it.
I made the tray removable as along with all the electronics. In case I change things around it will be easier in the long run. I wanted to run one of those super small battery's but didn't feel like spending $100-170 on one. I guess it would be worth it, less hassle etc...
I am starting to literally hate the seat, about to ditch the hole thing. I got an idea in my head for a seat pan and keep the stock raised rear hoop.
The project is looking great man. I used a smaller battery on my project gs450, it helped in locating a better position for a battery box. Your stock battery looks about the same size as mine was, I went to WALLY WORLD and picked up the smallest motorcycle battery they have for like 29$.
The project is looking great man. I used a smaller battery on my project gs450, it helped in locating a better position for a battery box. Your stock battery looks about the same size as mine was, I went to WALLY WORLD and picked up the smallest motorcycle battery they have for like 29$.
Thanks, I guess to me overall the bike is "okay". I was limited on time working on it, 1-2 hours here and there over the course of....months....you don't get a lot done. I wanted a large attention to detail, nice parts. But that wasn't going to happen. The wife hates the motorcycle, hates me buying things for it, and hates me working on it. So even getting this far I am happy. I had a 04' GSXR 750 5-6 years ago when I first met my wife, had a close friend pass away and sold the bike shortly after. She knew how hard it was for me, and having this KZ handed down to me, well it was her idea. So props to her IMO.
It's actually slightly smaller than stock. I tried to find something with same specs to stock and enough to accommodate the electrics. It's a BikeMaster TrueGel. I wanted super small, but didn't want to pay the super big price for one.
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