Awesome fab work in this project, looks like your skills have come a long way
One suggestion for the swingarm pivots would be notches in the frame sleeve and then one in the inner bushing to help with alignment from side to side. Keep it up.
Thank you. and on the note of alignment, the clamps are not done. they get one more special feature to index them evenly - lock them in place.
Everyone in this thread stand up and salute this man. On my way to ring shop for my girl and I came across this tread. Put it this way, you prolly just put an end to this union before it even started with this thread. I am 30 and always wanted to do stuff like this but I traveled and moved around too much to have a place to work from. Love your work and how everyone in here supports. effin good stuff. Best tread i ever seen.
Thank you and your welcome I guess. Dont let me break anything good up. But if its bad Ill take full credit. Speaking of which Im about to attempt to make my girl a Titanium ring for a christmas present. I wonder if she is suspicious when I mike'd her ring she normally wears.
I've seen the adjustable setup on a few Ducati racebikes previously -- not for the street itself.
I've offset bore the cases and then spacer / eccentric to get my DesmoDevil's lower than you can with the factory swingarm pivot point location. I had to do to get chain travel on the underside of the swingarm! But if you measure out the sprocket location, swingarm pivot itself and the rear hub location in terms of geometry -- it's almost factory setup in regard to torque application via centerline measurement.
One thing to be aware of is that changing the swingarm pivot point can do some interesting things ala geometry / torque application to the rear hub due to the chain. Also your shock geometry can change also when moving things around quite a bit. You are generally fairly safe if you move the swingarm pivot down when you move the rear hub down (ie: raise the ride height). Conversely the same for moving pivot up and rear hub higher (like my DesmoDevils)
I'd avoid extreme setups ala raised swingarm pivot and moving hub down (more ride height) -- things might get interesting when you least expect it.
Definitely do reading on rear suspension squat / anti-squat, etc -- it isn't difficult to change things that aren't great for a street ridden motorcycle.
Also understand that rear suspension setup / geometry affects front suspension as well.
yes. I have been doing alot of research and design work to get this bike how I want it. When I de radke the forks there is a reason I modified the frame to get the rake number I wanted, instead of rotating the entire frame - engine forward. The engine is still relitavly close to the stock orientation. Right now I have a base 12.5 swingarm angle with a little adjustability.
Im still torn between swingarm length and wheelbase. thus why I have not actually built the swingarm yet.