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Lowering front forks...an offer
- Mcdroid
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Several months ago I purchased a set of 1978 KZ1000A2 forks off of eBay. I opened them up, removed the contents (without really looking at them)...replaced the fork seals. After reassembling, I swapped these out with the forks on one of my 1977 KZ1000A1's (on which the fork lowers were trashed). Went for a ride and noted the the front end was about 2" lower than when I started. Got home, pulled the fork springs and they were not standard length (no s**t Sherlock). Turns out the guy I bought them from had probably swapped out fork springs to lower the bike. I replaced the springs with those from my original trashed front end and all was well.
Standard KZ1000A springs = 533mm X 25mm, 10 coils/3 inches.
My short springs = 463mm X 25mm, 11 coils/3 inches.
So, these coils are shorter and have less rebound. Any take a gander at what they are? It occurred to me this is a instant and easy way to lower your KZ1000 (A/B models). If anyone wants to do this, I'll swap your old stock springs for these
Post edited by: Mcdroid, at: 2006/10/22 07:41
Michael
Victoria, Texas
1982 GPz750
1977 KZ1000A
1978 KZ1000A
1982 GPz1100
1975 Z2A
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- Mcdroid
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Michael
Victoria, Texas
1982 GPz750
1977 KZ1000A
1978 KZ1000A
1982 GPz1100
1975 Z2A
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- wireman
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Post edited by: wireman, at: 2006/10/23 05:48
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- pyxen
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if the spring isn't long enough to cover the entire distance from damper to the top of the tubes, that leaves space for it to rebound way too much unless you swap out shorter tubes, right?
84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
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- Patton
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wouldn't that cause some seriously dangerous topping ?
if the spring isn't long enough to cover the entire distance from damper to the top of the tubes, that leaves space for it to rebound way too much unless you swap out shorter tubes, right?
Or just use a spacer.
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- pyxen
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84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
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- Patton
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but that defeats the purpose - as a spacer would just push your trees back to where they were, and not lower a thing. You'd just get less travel
I concur with Pyxen about less travel when using a spacer to adapt too-short springs into the forks. Would think it best to use proper spring lengths for the forks under most circumstances. The spacer would be a quick interim fix if needed to get back on the road until able to install the proper length springs.
Although some handlebar types (drag style?) may not allow sufficient tank clearance (especially at lock), those seeking a lower front end often simply raise the fork tubes in the triple clamps. Probably effects rake and trail (adversely would be my guess) unless compensated by also lowering the rear end.
Happy trails.
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- wiredgeorge
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wiredgeorge Motorcycle Carburetors
Mico TX
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- pyxen
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84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
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- Leather
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- 77KZ650
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it depends on where the spacer is placed. you can lower forks by just adding a spacer in the right spot, by placing it in another spot you just make the ride stiffer. there have been discussions on this, do a search;)but it doesn't actually lower anything, right?
07 MDP Rookie of the Year
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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- pyxen
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The only real challenge there would be finding a spacer that works..though I guess as long as the spacer tube wall isn't thicker than 2-3mm you'd be fine, since the seal is about 4-6mm thick. You'd need a really really close to 36mm ID though, to ensure that it doesnt move around very much.
Post edited by: pyxen, at: 2006/10/24 07:44
84 KZ550-F2 LTD
93 ZR550-B4
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