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Fitting a 6 pot caliper to KZ440
- Sdaniels2010
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1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- TexasKZ
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if you decide you need the six piston ones, be sure to buy the rebuild parts from Suzuki. They sell the seals in full kits for a fraction of the price that Kawasaki charges. Also, the Hyabusa uses aluminum pistons which are much lighter and less prone to corrosion than the anodized steel ones from Kawasaki.
1982 KZ1000 LTD parts donor
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2000 ZRX1100 not ridden enough
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- Sdaniels2010
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I had a ZRX back in the day so I know about the bleeding adventure & the rebuild kits from Suzuki. At least if this can be made to work on the 440 it's just one caliper I'm hoping someone using the caliper can measure the distance between the back of the mount bolt to the back of the caliper. There's quite a bit of space between the stock caliper & the wheel spoke. The Tokico is wider because of the opposed pistons but it looks promising...Those particular calipers can be a real pain to bleed. A bunch of ZRX guys have tossed them in favor of four piston calipers. Better brake feel, too.
if you decide you need the six piston ones, be sure to buy the rebuild parts from Suzuki. They sell the seals in full kits for a fraction of the price that Kawasaki charges. Also, the Hyabusa uses aluminum pistons which are much lighter and less prone to corrosion than the anodized steel ones from Kawasaki.
1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- ghostdive
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Suppose you could play with different master cylinders to get it under control, but I've locked the stock brakes on my 750 and my old 305.
I was looking into using 2-pot calipers from an EX500 at some point, those may be cheaper to buy/rebuild, plus the bike they come from has more similarly sized rotors. Either way you'll need to make a mounting plate/adaptor.
1982 KZ750 Spectre - 6 speed swap, BS34s, 18" rear wheel
2001 ZX-6R
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- Nerdy
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Suppose the rotor diameters aren't that different, so it would likely physically work, but I am concerned that it might be too much for our skinny tires.
And for the comparatively weak frames.
The 440s were not designed to handle that much braking force.
1967 Yamaha YCS1 Bonanza
1980 KZ440B
1981 Yamaha XT250H
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- Sdaniels2010
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Yeah, the adaptor is expected but I've done that on several bikes. Technically speaking, the stock caliper isn't sliding pin but it's similarly designed & trying to stuff a traditional opposed piston caliper in where sliding pin calipers live likely nets clearance issues. I could always use another sliding pin caliper with twin pistons to get more surface area of the pads to increase braking power. But I prefer to get the most out these things so if I can fit that 6 pot caliper, I will. There is about 1 3/4" between the back of the mounting boss & the wheel spoke, 1 1/4" from backside of the rotor & spoke. Ebay is full of 6 pot calipers for dirt cheap...might just pick one up & if the measurements don't work out it's not that much of a loss.Suppose the rotor diameters aren't that different, so it would likely physically work, but I am concerned that it might be too much for our skinny tires.
Suppose you could play with different master cylinders to get it under control, but I've locked the stock brakes on my 750 and my old 305.
I was looking into using 2-pot calipers from an EX500 at some point, those may be cheaper to buy/rebuild, plus the bike they come from has more similarly sized rotors. Either way you'll need to make a mounting plate/adaptor.
1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- Sdaniels2010
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1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- DOHC
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. There is about 1 3/4" between the back of the mounting boss & the wheel spoke, 1 1/4" from backside of the rotor & spoke.
I don't have a measurement for you, but I tried to test fit a ZRX 6-pot on a '78 kz1000 with a cast wheel. The caliper body hit the spokes.
I suspect that you would need to make a spacer to move the disk away from the wheel. There are many examples of these spacers used by other folks on this site when swapping calipers.
'78 Z1-R in blue , '78 Z1-R in black, '78 Z1-R in pieces
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- Sdaniels2010
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well shoot...not surprised though. There isn't much space to move the rotor either...rivets only leave maybe 5mm or so before they'd contact the caliper. No worries though. Think I read elsewhere that some of the early KZ1000's use the 4 bolt rotor that fit on the 440 wheel. If I can't get more braking from a caliper, a bigger rotor will work too.
. There is about 1 3/4" between the back of the mounting boss & the wheel spoke, 1 1/4" from backside of the rotor & spoke.
I don't have a measurement for you, but I tried to test fit a ZRX 6-pot on a '78 kz1000 with a cast wheel. The caliper body hit the spokes.
I suspect that you would need to make a spacer to move the disk away from the wheel. There are many examples of these spacers used by other folks on this site when swapping calipers.
1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- Sdaniels2010
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1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- Sdaniels2010
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1981 KZ440 A2 LTD
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- Scirocco
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My 1975 Z 1 B 900 Project
www.kzrider.com/forum/11-projects/605133...ears-deep-sleep-mode
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