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How did you grind the frame for swingarm?
- Snakebyte
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Post edited by: Snakebyte, at: 2006/02/19 11:59
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- 77KZ650
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Scott
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01 ZX-12R street/drag bike. 8.97 @155.7 pump gas, dot tires, no bars, no power adders. top speed in the 1/4: 161MPH
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- danB
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Harley Davidson- Turning gas into noise without the harmful affects of horsepower for over 100 years.
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- galaxian
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1977 KZ1000A1, 1979 KZ650 C3
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- oldschool77
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- twowheeledterror
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Don't widen the frame. Make your modifications to the swingarm only. Find a machine shop and bring your stock one for them to take accurate measurements. On my other bikes i did this on a bridgeport to insure that the hole is perfectly aligned, otherwise your bearings will suffer because of misalingment. Not to mention alignment of the wheels will be difficult. I am not knocking the hacksaw method just pointing to the fact as a warning.
Grinding the frame won't cause misalignment for the pivot bolt. As long as the bolt is still going through two holes that are the right size is doesn't matter how flush that is.
If it's not ground enough the arm won't fit. If it's overdone the arm will have left to right play.
If you want to grind it you can do so with a dremel. Just take a little off at a time from each side, mock up, grind some more, mock up, etc. until it fits.
Unless you plan on going back to stock as someone mentioned. My bikes a gonner though if I ever were to want to make it stock again. lol
Post edited by: twowheeledterror, at: 2006/02/21 14:53
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- Snakebyte
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I looked om the inside of my frame and it looks like I can grind a 3/8 of an inch on each side before hitting the frame. The only problem will be getting the swngarm pedistols flat. Like TWT said I'll have to grind a little at a time.
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- galaxian
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Does the swingarm not have enough meat to machine off? I guess i am confused why you would choose the option that is harder? Also the frame just doesn't have a hole in it, rather a steel tube that was inserted and welded. It is there for ridigitity. By grinding away at the tube you are creating a more flexiable area. Yes you can grind it but again the kz frame needs all the stiffness it can find. If you needed to remove a 1/16 or even 1/6 ok maybe i can see that as a quick fix but 3/8 from each side???!!! what is going to hold the swingarm bolt after you are done??? Seems an awful lot of material to be removed.
TWT- Actually to clear up my previous answer, yes you are right gringing wont change the geomtry but by weakening the swigarm pivot it may flex it more therefore changing the angle in a kinetic way and not in a static one.
Can you post the thickness of the piece before you grind it? I looked at my 650 frame and only about 1/4 inch portrudes inward.
Post edited by: galaxian, at: 2006/02/22 15:33
1977 KZ1000A1, 1979 KZ650 C3
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- twowheeledterror
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To the guys who decided to grind the frame I ask why?
Does the swingarm not have enough meat to machine off? I guess i am confused why you would choose the option that is harder? Also the frame just doesn't have a hole in it, rather a steel tube that was inserted and welded. It is there for ridigitity. By grinding away at the tube you are creating a more flexiable area. Yes you can grind it but again the kz frame needs all the stiffness it can find. If you needed to remove a 1/16 or even 1/6 ok maybe i can see that as a quick fix but 3/8 from each side???!!! what is going to hold the swingarm bolt after you are done??? Seems an awful lot of material to be removed.
TWT- Actually to clear up my previous answer, yes you are right gringing wont change the geomtry but by weakening the swigarm pivot it may flex it more therefore changing the angle in a kinetic way and not in a static one.
Can you post the thickness of the piece before you grind it? I looked at my 650 frame and only about 1/4 inch portrudes inward.<br><br>Post edited by: galaxian, at: 2006/02/22 15:33
I didn't recommend taking all the space away from the frame. I'd shave down the ends of the sleeve in the arm a little since they protrude, and then some on the frame as well.
The swingarm doesn't really get flex in the way you are thinking in terms of the frame spreading apart and going together there much... especially if you are running a mono and have a cross brace above and below that point. :thumbup: In terms of stiffness a support added above to hold the upper shock mount more than compensates for the ground material. But you don't want to grind it until that area is recessed obviously. lol
As for it being harder, I disagree. It's easier to shave a hair off the frame where you can have some room for error in terms of geometry than it is to chop the arm and get it right. Imagine if the arm were not paralell on each side. Then it WOULD effect handling.
Post edited by: twowheeledterror, at: 2006/02/22 16:21
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- galaxian
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- twowheeledterror
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If you cut the arm crooked it wont matter. Just imagine that the shaft is still in there in a perfect horizontal plane it wont matter if the sides of the swingar shaft are crokked or not.
It most definitely will!
Why? Because you are counting on the full end of the cylinder for torsional strength. If it's way off kilter you may have contact with just one small arc of each end, which is significantly more weak... and could cause a crease in the arm at the pivot.
Picture a rolled up tube of paper.
If you put your finger on one side of one end and push it's easy to cave that end it.
Now put that entire end in your palm and push... it's a lot more rigid. Same concept.
The frame on the other hand it much more thick and much more dense as far as the metal goes, so you have more room for error.
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