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Frankin bike GPZ900r rear suspension issues
- Street Fighter LTD
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- TURBO, Its Better to be Blown than Injected
You will get it done and Im sure you will love it.
Reminder on bike weight. Lighter wheels are great but that raises the question is your diet working on sprung , or unsprung weight ?
Meaning has the sprung weight taken a significant loss ? Or is the majority on weight loss due to lighter wheels and other unsprung
Suspension and brakes ?
Just thinking out loud
Dave
Original owner 78 1000 LTD
Mr Turbo Race Kit, MTC 1075 Turbo pistons by PitStop Performance , Falicon Ultra Lite Super Crank, APE everything. Les Holt @ PDM's Billet Goodies . Frame by Chuck Kurzawa @ Logghe Chassis . Deep sump 5qt oil pan. RIP Bill Hahn
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- Bozo
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Street Fighter LTD wrote: Hey Jon
You will get it done and Im sure you will love it.
Reminder on bike weight. Lighter wheels are great but that raises the question is your diet working on sprung , or unsprung weight ?
Meaning has the sprung weight taken a significant loss ? Or is the majority on weight loss due to lighter wheels and other unsprung
Suspension and brakes ?
Just thinking out loud
Dave
Dave, here goes -
Unsprung weight
the wheels do weight a lot less (suspect - guess 5kg for both=11lb, maybe more), discs and calipers are about the same.
Rear aluminium swingarm (I suspect is a bit less but not much with linkages)
All else is about the some.
Sprung weight is where a lot of gains were made-
I have a 530 chain setup which weights less
Lithium battery
Exhaust etc
First Permanent ride the Z1R since Dec1977 (220,000km) as of June 2015
Second permanent bike 1989 FJ1200 dyno'd 140RWH, great bike.
Third ride is now the Frankenstein 1981 GPZ1100B1, 1983 fully recon motor fitted LOVE THIS BIKE
Forth my work bike FJ1200 1989 (same type as FJ above)
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- 750 R1
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PS, love the weight measuring device.... :woohoo:
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- Bozo
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750 R1 wrote: I was curious of the weight in relation to spring rates, the GPZ900R is 228kg dry, add 5 kilos for the five litres of fuel and another 3 or so for oil and you are still lighter than the 900R in comparison, around 20kg lighter, maybe part of the problem is the spring rate is just too heavy...? Do you have any room to back the spring off to make it softer..? {sorry if you've already covered that} Check those linkages closely with the 900R still...
PS, love the weight measuring device....
The spring is internal, I don't think it can be removed (it has air pressure), I might have to eventually get another shock with an external spring. If anyone knows of an equivalent, let me know.
I have to admit I expected 230Kg so I was surprised when I saw 215kg.
The measuring device is from work. Just now I'm getting the fuel mixture correct, I hope tomorrow that part will be finished
First Permanent ride the Z1R since Dec1977 (220,000km) as of June 2015
Second permanent bike 1989 FJ1200 dyno'd 140RWH, great bike.
Third ride is now the Frankenstein 1981 GPZ1100B1, 1983 fully recon motor fitted LOVE THIS BIKE
Forth my work bike FJ1200 1989 (same type as FJ above)
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- 750 R1
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Bozo wrote:
750 R1 wrote: I was curious of the weight in relation to spring rates, the GPZ900R is 228kg dry, add 5 kilos for the five litres of fuel and another 3 or so for oil and you are still lighter than the 900R in comparison, around 20kg lighter, maybe part of the problem is the spring rate is just too heavy...? Do you have any room to back the spring off to make it softer..? {sorry if you've already covered that} Check those linkages closely with the 900R still...
PS, love the weight measuring device....
The spring is internal, I don't think it can be removed (it has air pressure), I might have to eventually get another shock with an external spring. If anyone knows of an equivalent, let me know.
I have to admit I expected 230Kg so I was surprised when I saw 215kg.
The measuring device is from work. Just now I'm getting the fuel mixture correct, I hope tomorrow that part will be finished
215kg is a pretty good number for a bike this big with fluids, I'd certainly be happy with that....
Read this just now, this effects damping so that could be your problem, worth a try...
The GPZ900R rear shock damping goes off when the oil in there gets old. But it's easy to put right: just remove the shock, unscrew the air pressure hose that goes into it, and tip out the old oil into a measuring cup. Then re-introduce that same amount of fresh oil (I used a 10W viscosity) into the shock with a syringe. It will take about 200ml of oil
Check the 900 manual {or google} for air pressures, or just experiment...
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