The place to come to share your technical expertise, or just find out what the little springy thing is that's just pinged out of sight under the work-bench.
Hello, yesterday I accidentally bought a 1990 exup, its streetfightered so it has bits missing. I'm leaving it as a streetfighter but I have questions.
Should it have a reserve switch like the RU, it doesn't seem to have one?
It needs tyres, what tyres are people using?
Ta.
If I have to understand, don't bother to explain.
Yoda wrote:Well mental bikes though, suits you sir.
Last year I was running Bridgestone S20 Evo's and managed to get nearly 6,000 miles out of them and that's with using various speeds.
After talking to a few riders last year who we're running Bridgestone S21's. They say it out performs the S20 with lots more grip and harder wearing too.
That's what I'll be fitting at the end of this month ready for the sticky summer tarmac.
Bit of advice. Buy a good bed and a good pair of shoes, because if you aren't in one you'll be in the other.
Right! I've got my carbs in bits to give them a clean, should I replace the emulsion tubes/needles etc while they're in bits or what, anything else I should do/replace also?
Oh and why does it have two filler plugs on the engine, sort of side by side?
Cheers.
If I have to understand, don't bother to explain.
Yoda wrote:Well mental bikes though, suits you sir.
Paul, after years advising others how to recommission their bikes you're going to have to practise what you preach. I'm looking forward to your stage by stage reports with Pix. Start with a big reveal of the bike emerging from its shroud.
I've wondered for a while about why there's 2 oil filler caps. I modified one of them on my Exup-R & machined a spigot to go in the centre so that I could use it as a crankcase breather.
Keep an eye on the lower suspension nuckle bearings as well. They're needle rollers but when I serviced my one when I first bought my bike in '92 it was dry as a bone.
The rear shock on my bike was set up all wrong as well, with the rebound clicker turned out 15 clicks from hardest. Not realising this as I didn't have a manual, I did loads of work to the front forks & it still pumped down at the back end when the going got a bit....spirited. Once I bought the right preload adjsuting spanner I set that to maximum & the rebound clicker 2 out from hardest & it transformed the handling. This became even better when I changed the rear dogbones from 165mm between centres to new ones 5mm shorter at 160. This brought the rear up by about 25mm & essentially moved the centre of gravity forward, as well as giving me better ground clearance.
Looking forward to seeing the pictures. I no longer use photobucket but something else...which i've forgotten the details for. It's on here somewhere so i'll have to look it up
Two things made big improvements to my Foxeye.
155mm bones lifted the rear end and COG. Shortened wheelbase and sharpened steering angle. The bike became really flickable instead of lazy long wheelbase.
Second thing was to change the gearing. -1 tooth at the front sprocket and +2 on the rear. This further shortened the wheelbase by pulling the rear wheel forward. Also closed up the ratios in the gears so it was snick, snick, snick, snick chasing the revs through the box. Acceleration became manic. Biggest problems were keeping the front end on the ground and not spinning the rear.
Happy days.