The NGW Project Bike. Wheel rebuild
Moderator: Whiskerfish
- Zryder
- True Blue Steel Biker
- Posts: 2954
- Joined: Tue Dec 14, 2004 2:12 pm
- My Album: http://www.ngwclub.com/gallery/v/wingmans/zryder/
I Thank You kindly Octane . Just want I need for my reserch . So far its on the drawing bourd that I may trike my bike so I am looking into the internal workings of the swingarm in mounting the rear of the trike assembly . In Adam Es words and I also feel You are the Master .
1982 GL 1100 std. Custom
To my album ; http://www.ngwclub.com/gallery/v/wingmans/zryder/
To my album ; http://www.ngwclub.com/gallery/v/wingmans/zryder/
- Annie's Boyfriend
- Silver Member
- Posts: 567
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2005 4:05 pm
- Location: Netherlands
Don't be so modest, we are all very happy with the info that you provide.
So far it has been a great help
Bart
So far it has been a great help
Bart
Annie
Dreamboat Annie
Little Ship of Dreams ...........
( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)
[url]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/gallery/Dreamboat-Annie[/url]
[img]http://www.hondagoldwings.com/images/cliparts/eagle3_small.gif[/img]
[img]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/forum/images/flags/Netherlands.gif[/img]
Dreamboat Annie
Little Ship of Dreams ...........
( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)
[url]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/gallery/Dreamboat-Annie[/url]
[img]http://www.hondagoldwings.com/images/cliparts/eagle3_small.gif[/img]
[img]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/forum/images/flags/Netherlands.gif[/img]
- rrgrassi
- Chrome Member
- Posts: 194
- Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 4:18 pm
- Location: Royse City, TX
Hey Octane,
Also make sure to get your speedo recalibrated. Smaller diameter wheel turns faster than a larger diameter.
As I recall from my automotive experience, reducing wheel diameter did cause problems with ground clearance and ride height and angle of deflection when bumps and dips were encountered while driving.
Also make sure to get your speedo recalibrated. Smaller diameter wheel turns faster than a larger diameter.
As I recall from my automotive experience, reducing wheel diameter did cause problems with ground clearance and ride height and angle of deflection when bumps and dips were encountered while driving.
RRGrassi
75 GL1000 With 80 CB900C suspension and Lester wheels.
Keep the rubber side down!
75 GL1000 With 80 CB900C suspension and Lester wheels.
Keep the rubber side down!
- Needle
- Zinc Member
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Sat Dec 31, 2005 10:07 pm
- Location: Mililani, Hawaii USA
Thanks Octane,
You answered a lot of my questions, before I asked them. I am trying to a similar thing with my front wheel off my 75 Wing. I bought an extra 17 rear rim that I want to lace to my front hub. That will give me 140's front and rear. Can I use a die and just thread the spokes farther down and cut them to the size I need? That way I could use the original front spokes. I also want to paint my spokes like you did, your wheels look awesome. Thanks for documenting all your hard work it is an invaluable asset to all of us!
Mahalo,
Needle
You answered a lot of my questions, before I asked them. I am trying to a similar thing with my front wheel off my 75 Wing. I bought an extra 17 rear rim that I want to lace to my front hub. That will give me 140's front and rear. Can I use a die and just thread the spokes farther down and cut them to the size I need? That way I could use the original front spokes. I also want to paint my spokes like you did, your wheels look awesome. Thanks for documenting all your hard work it is an invaluable asset to all of us!
Mahalo,
Needle
Aloha,
Needle
75 GL1000
78 XS750SE
83 GL1100 (Donor Bike)
00 XL883
Put something exciting between your legs.....ride a motorcycle!
Needle
75 GL1000
78 XS750SE
83 GL1100 (Donor Bike)
00 XL883
Put something exciting between your legs.....ride a motorcycle!
- octane
- SUPER BIKER!!!!
- Posts: 3763
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 3:24 pm
- Location: Denmark
Hi RR Grassi, thanks.rrgrassi wrote:Hey Octane,
Also make sure to get your speedo recalibrated. Smaller diameter wheel turns faster than a larger diameter.
As I recall from my automotive experience, reducing wheel diameter did cause problems with ground clearance and ride height and angle of deflection when bumps and dips were encountered while driving.
Oh yes I know I'm f.... er.. fooling with the speedo ratio and
with the whole geometric set up of the bike.
Yes you're also right about the 'deflection'-thing.
That's why off-roaders have such big (front) wheels.
Thy're much better at absorbing bumps.
We'll see how it works out.
Best regards
Octane
- octane
- SUPER BIKER!!!!
- Posts: 3763
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 3:24 pm
- Location: Denmark
Hi Needle please see my post to Bart on the previous page.Needle wrote:Thanks Octane,
You answered a lot of my questions, before I asked them. I am trying to a similar thing with my front wheel off my 75 Wing. I bought an extra 17 rear rim that I want to lace to my front hub. That will give me 140's front and rear. Can I use a die and just thread the spokes farther down and cut them to the size I need? That way I could use the original front spokes. I also want to paint my spokes like you did, your wheels look awesome. Thanks for documenting all your hard work it is an invaluable asset to all of us!
Mahalo,
Needle
I'm not a wheel build expert but I'd say, yes you can
use a die and just thread the spokes farther down and cut them to the size,
you might have a slight problem if they are
galvanized, or have some other surface treatment that you
cut into, threading them. Then again if you paint them
that should keep them from rusting.
Here's a few links if you want to dive into it:
Click
Click
Click part 1 , Click part 2
Octane
Da' Supercharged Bulldog
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection
not when there is nothing left to add
but when there is nothing left to take away"
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection
not when there is nothing left to add
but when there is nothing left to take away"
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
- Annie's Boyfriend
- Silver Member
- Posts: 567
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2005 4:05 pm
- Location: Netherlands
Ok, it is time for another dumb question.
How can I best remove my frontwheel, do I have to jack the bike up or do you have another tip for me.
Be aware that I do not have a motorlift or table to work with.
I was thinking of placing her on a big plank or something, leaving the frontwheel off of it so that I have some room to drop the axle/wheel out.
Ideas ??
Bart
How can I best remove my frontwheel, do I have to jack the bike up or do you have another tip for me.
Be aware that I do not have a motorlift or table to work with.
I was thinking of placing her on a big plank or something, leaving the frontwheel off of it so that I have some room to drop the axle/wheel out.
Ideas ??
Bart
Annie
Dreamboat Annie
Little Ship of Dreams ...........
( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)
[url]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/gallery/Dreamboat-Annie[/url]
[img]http://www.hondagoldwings.com/images/cliparts/eagle3_small.gif[/img]
[img]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/forum/images/flags/Netherlands.gif[/img]
Dreamboat Annie
Little Ship of Dreams ...........
( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)
[url]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/gallery/Dreamboat-Annie[/url]
[img]http://www.hondagoldwings.com/images/cliparts/eagle3_small.gif[/img]
[img]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/forum/images/flags/Netherlands.gif[/img]
- octane
- SUPER BIKER!!!!
- Posts: 3763
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 3:24 pm
- Location: Denmark
Yes: placing her on a big plank or something, leaving the frontwheel off of it so that you have some room to drop the axle/wheel outAnnie's Boyfriend wrote:Ok, it is time for another dumb question.
How can I best remove my frontwheel, do I have to jack the bike up or do you have another tip for me.
Be aware that I do not have a motorlift or table to work with.
I was thinking of placing her on a big plank or something, leaving the frontwheel off of it so that I have some room to drop the axle/wheel out.
Ideas ??
.-)
sounds like a brilliant plan to me.
As I do have a lot of bikes to work on I've invested
around 60 UD$ in this super-nifty little sissor-type lift:
it's very usefull for detaching/reattaching the wheels
Raise/lower lift so wheel is on the ground...detach...raise etc.
Octane
Da' Supercharged Bulldog
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection
not when there is nothing left to add
but when there is nothing left to take away"
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
"A designer knows he has achieved perfection
not when there is nothing left to add
but when there is nothing left to take away"
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
- RebelRouser
- Webmaster (Retired)
- Posts: 7198
- Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 8:44 pm
- My Album: http://www.ngwclub.com/gallery/v/wingmans/rebelrouser/
- Location: The Dalles, Or.
- Contact:
Hey Bart, If Your Annie Is Fully Built And Weighs A Bit, Then Use The Center Stand As The First Point, Take A 2x4 And Go From Header To Header At The Front Of The Bike, Use A Standard Car Jack To Raise It, As The Weight Is Being Lifted Lossen The Nuts That Hold Th Axel Retainers And As You Lift The Bike The Wheel Will Stay Down As The Bike Goes Up.....
Hey Needle, Yes You Can Use Your Die To Shorten The Threads On The Spokes, As Long As It Is An Original Honda GoldWing Wheel, There All Stainless....
Hey Octane I Like The Red Pinstipe On Them Wheels, They Need It All The Way Around, Matches The Pinstripe And Racing Stripe Paint Job.....
Hey Needle, Yes You Can Use Your Die To Shorten The Threads On The Spokes, As Long As It Is An Original Honda GoldWing Wheel, There All Stainless....
Hey Octane I Like The Red Pinstipe On Them Wheels, They Need It All The Way Around, Matches The Pinstripe And Racing Stripe Paint Job.....
If You Didn't Build It, Customize It, And/Or Modify It, Then It Truly Isn't Yours. Rebel Rouser
- 77GL1
- Zinc Member
- Posts: 51
- Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2006 7:16 pm
- Location: a secret
- octane
- SUPER BIKER!!!!
- Posts: 3763
- Joined: Sat Jun 11, 2005 3:24 pm
- Location: Denmark
Hi 77GL1....oh yes he does77GL1 wrote:Not that "Mr" Octane needs any tips..
...right now "Mr" Octane got a tip on how he forgot to mention something in this thread.-)but I was talking to a Rolls Royce guy that was telling me he tightened the spokes on his Phantom Is by tuning them like a piano....by sound..
Honda did give torque spec. for the spokes:
20-45 Kg-cm / 17-39 in. lbs.
As I don't have a torque wrench that would work on the spokes,
I simply put the square end of the torque wrench
(where you usually put on the socket) in a vice:
..adjusted it to first 20....(afterwards to 45 Kg-cm)
..held on to the torque wrench
at the same distance from the vice
as the spanner I used for the spokes is long
...turned until the 'click'
THAT gave me a good sense of what 20/45 Kg-cm felt like...force-in-hand-wise
Eh...did that explanation make any sense?
Also I checked all spokes by tapping them with a screwdriver,
(loosely held with two fingers)
checking for a clear PLING...not a DHUMPH.
And checking if any one spoke would have a distinctively different sound
from the others.
Witch, by the way, one should do every once in a while on ones bike.
- 77GL1
- Zinc Member
- Posts: 51
- Joined: Thu Mar 09, 2006 7:16 pm
- Location: a secret
Yup....the RR guy (w/60 years experience) said exactly that.........octane wrote:Also I checked all spokes by tapping them with a screwdriver, (loosely held with two fingers)
checking for a clear PLING...not a DHUMPH.
And checking if any one spoke would have a distinctively different sound
from the others.
[url]http://www.salocal.com/parts/goldwing_parts.htm[/url]
- Strawb
- Chrome Member
- Posts: 113
- Joined: Tue Apr 03, 2007 10:38 pm
- Location: Manila, Philippines
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 109 Replies
- 13918 Views
-
Last post by NotSoLilCrippseys
-
- 12 Replies
- 1303 Views
-
Last post by Lucien Harpress
-
- 142 Replies
- 20157 Views
-
Last post by Track T 2411
-
- 12 Replies
- 1917 Views
-
Last post by duke182
-
- 10 Replies
- 967 Views
-
Last post by robin1731