My cush drives started getting sloppy at 21k miles on my 12 Monster 1100 evo. This resulted in abnormal wear on my DID chain and sprockets.
With new sprockets required, I decided to replace the entire drive train at the same time.
Superlite Polyurethane bushings
Superlite Carrier
Superlite 40 tooth rear sprocket (one tooth higher)
Superlite 15 tooth front. (I don't mind the stock 15T fronts)
AEM Factory hub
Lightened Washer
DID 120ZVM
Fit and Finish and weight savings:
Superlite products seem to be well engineered solid billet. Their Poylurethance bushings seem to be a bit stiffer than the stock bushings but I will update the review with long term comments. Overall the weight of all the rear sprocket components (minus the chain) come in at 3.74 lbs vs the stock setup of 5.25 lbs (including spacer). That's not a bad savings on rotating mass. The cush drives have absolutely no play. The rear sprocket is rock solid.
Notes:
- No instructions at all.
- The cush drives are very tight. You need some silicone lubricant (WD-40 Specialist) a flat washer to distribute the load and an extension socket to get them pushed into the superlite carrier hub.
- The carrier hub has beefier sized nuts for securiing the AEM factory plate to the carrier hub. No torque specs. They are M10 so I used the standard specification of 45NM to secure them. You need a vice to torque these down properly. Vice grip a socket and insert an allen on the bottom while torqueing the top.
- For the quick change sprocket, the nuts were M8 so I used 25 NM as a reference
- If you go up a tooth in the back. Expect to increase a link and dont be stupid like me assume the stock length will work. You'll just end up buying more rivet links.
2012 Ducati Monster 1100 Evo stock rear sprocket and carrier2012 Ducati Monster 1100 Evo Superlite Setup w/ AEM Factory Hub