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- Wookie58
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I love the CAD work - I am still scratching drawings on scraps of paper with a pencil about my limit is 2D in excelYep, that's exactly what I did. Here they are naked away from all the other bits. Exact same part left to right.
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- zed1015
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Wouldn't it not be able to do that anyway, because it's captive by the axle collars?
It's impossible for the wheel to float if the spacers are registered against the immovable fixed points of the fork inners and it removes any side loads from the collar arrangement which could cause movement even though the collars have the stepped locating lips.
It's just my belt and braces approach and maybe over cautious but i feel would be good engineeing practice to do it that way and then the whole assembly is locked in.
AIR CORRECTOR JETS FOR VM CARBS AND ETHANOL RESISTANT VITON CHOKE PLUNGER SEAL REPLACMENT FOR ALL CLASSIC AND MODERN MOTORCYCLE CARBURETTORS
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- Stereordinary
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A breeze from the west.
‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Stereordinary
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A breeze from the west.
‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Stereordinary
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A breeze from the west.
‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Stereordinary
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I wanted to ask if anyone has an opinion on materials for the lower yoke. Stock on the Zephyr is steel, while the ZX6R is alloy. It seems like alloy would be the more upscale way to go and I believe it would be less expensive. I have reservations about it though, because I would need some kind of mechanical means of clamping the stem into it. If I make it out of steel on the other hand, I could have the stem welded in for a sure bond. I'm inclined to do that, not just for the security of mating the two pieces together, but also because I have a little more faith that a steel part will be strong and won't ever break on me. I could have it made from something like 4130 steel as well, so while it may not be as light as alloy, it could potentially still be lighter, or at least not much heavier than stock. What do you gentlemen think?
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‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Wookie58
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PS: the factory alloy bottom yolk is "cast" and it's "hollowed out" on the underside whereas I assume you are planning to use solid billet so it would be far stronger than a stock item (they are designed that way so they would "give" in a moderate frontal impact to reduce the risk of bending the frame)
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- Stereordinary
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‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Wookie58
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The weight saving would be negligible. Most vehicle manufacturers engineer in weak points (crumple zones in cars etc) car suspension arms etc are designed to bend in a curb impact rather than damage the chassis. However trying to replicate this requires a great deal of specialist structural engineering knowledge so the safe bet is "billet"Interesting! I assumed they were hollowed out for weight relief, and because totally solid isn't necessary. I was planning on designing the top one solid for simplicity and cost savings (less machining), but the bottom one hollowed out to some degree for weight. But I suppose making them both solid would make my life a lot easier.
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- TexasKZ
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1982 KZ1000 LTD parts donor
1981 KZ1000 LTD awaiting resurrection
2000 ZRX1100 not ridden enough
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- Stereordinary
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I knew that about cars, but didn't know it applied to motorcycles in any way. Learn something new everyday.Most vehicle manufacturers engineer in weak points (crumple zones in cars etc) car suspension arms etc are designed to bend in a curb impact rather than damage the chassis.
I have ad blockers on all the time, so I was unaware. Thanks, I'll check it out.Have you thought about contacting PDM Fabrication? This is exactly the kind of work he does, and he is a forum member. There is a link at the bottom of the page.
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‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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- Stereordinary
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So my question before I go with the original plan of a dropped top yoke is if there are aftermarket replacement top caps with less height? Like even if it's a pre-set sort of deal where I get a certain size for them to set preload, but then the they are no longer adjustable. Or, if a complete replacement cartridge kit might achieve that?
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‘90 ZR550 Zephyr
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