I'm pretty tore up
#62
looks pretty beat up...
i think i tossed my left side radiator but i have all the plastic, not perfect but it's all mountable. i don't remember about the clipons ? 1 was a little bent iirc but you may have already 'em ? anyway... if your going to put her back together you can have any parts you need.
tim
i think i tossed my left side radiator but i have all the plastic, not perfect but it's all mountable. i don't remember about the clipons ? 1 was a little bent iirc but you may have already 'em ? anyway... if your going to put her back together you can have any parts you need.
tim
#63
2nd mouse gets the cheese
SuperBike
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Beaverton, OR
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If the parts you have are better then the parts I have I will gladly take them off of your hands. Fairings included on that. I am going to rebuild her. Probably will not be as "stock" once I am done. I have a few sets of clip-ons so I should be able to get it to work. So I only really need a radiator for the passenger side to get the repair ball rolling.
#64
i did keep the right side one with the cap... maybe you can mount that on the left side ? i don't remember how the fan mounts but that could possibly all unbolt or get cut off ?
i have the side fairings, front with the whole headlight assembly, the tail piece has been epoxied but works... bummer that i sold the tank.
tim
i have the side fairings, front with the whole headlight assembly, the tail piece has been epoxied but works... bummer that i sold the tank.
tim
#66
2nd mouse gets the cheese
SuperBike
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Location: Beaverton, OR
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i did keep the right side one with the cap... maybe you can mount that on the left side ? i don't remember how the fan mounts but that could possibly all unbolt or get cut off ?
i have the side fairings, front with the whole headlight assembly, the tail piece has been epoxied but works... bummer that i sold the tank.
tim
i have the side fairings, front with the whole headlight assembly, the tail piece has been epoxied but works... bummer that i sold the tank.
tim
#70
2nd mouse gets the cheese
SuperBike
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its broken, just like the frame I fixed for Trinc. So ironically now I have to do the same job again on my bike. Truthfully I am actually looking forward to getting to fix the bike back up. It is a kind of therapy for me. I have a few custom things I may do to spice up the bike a little. I am sure I will have the time.
#71
2nd mouse gets the cheese
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the forks are bent too. I still have my old set so that should be an inexpensive fix.
After much thought and deliberation I have finally come up with a theory of what happened. I can't prove it but it makes the most sense in explaining everything.
I had recently replaced my original forks with the upgraded forks from trinc. My theory is I didn't get the stick out height of each fork exactly the same, which could have caused my forks to bind under braking force then release at the worst time when I was at a good lean in the apex causing the suspension to unload immediately at once slipping the front out from under me in a blink. Just a theory, if any one can poke holes in my theory I would love to hear it. I need to figure this out.
Some extra details about the crash. It isn't a sharp turn I crashed in in fact I had been through a tighter turn just before it at an even faster pace. There was nothing to cause me to slide anywhere. No gravel no oil ice leaves nothing. The front slid not the rear, there was no warning no head shake no slipping prior no panic on my part. I have ridden the road 100's of times and this turn I would rate easy. The rider behind me saw the whole thing and didn't see anything that would cause this to happen. Thanks everyone.
After much thought and deliberation I have finally come up with a theory of what happened. I can't prove it but it makes the most sense in explaining everything.
I had recently replaced my original forks with the upgraded forks from trinc. My theory is I didn't get the stick out height of each fork exactly the same, which could have caused my forks to bind under braking force then release at the worst time when I was at a good lean in the apex causing the suspension to unload immediately at once slipping the front out from under me in a blink. Just a theory, if any one can poke holes in my theory I would love to hear it. I need to figure this out.
Some extra details about the crash. It isn't a sharp turn I crashed in in fact I had been through a tighter turn just before it at an even faster pace. There was nothing to cause me to slide anywhere. No gravel no oil ice leaves nothing. The front slid not the rear, there was no warning no head shake no slipping prior no panic on my part. I have ridden the road 100's of times and this turn I would rate easy. The rider behind me saw the whole thing and didn't see anything that would cause this to happen. Thanks everyone.
#72
Corn, I am gonna say this as i heard it. There are 2 types of motorcycle enthusiasts, those that have been down, and those that will go down. I know its cheep talk, but for me it was always a reminder to wear my helmet and protective gear. I would hazard a guess you have alot more miles under your belt than I have this decade, but in previous decades that wasnt the case. Another thing I heard awhile back is that "**** happens".
Love life and live it to the fullest. I know the point at which you are at at the moment. I have been there. I have reviewed in my mind what happened and tried to make sense of it. I am overly analytical when it comes to something I am pasionate about. I know for you, you are looking at how to avoid it in the future. I know you will find the answer. We all do. The one thing to remember is that riding a motorcylce has its own set of inherent dangers. We all know this and the sane ones of us respect this. We choose to live this lifestyle. We learn from our mishaps and we go on to become more skilled than ever. I apreciate knowing you and being associated with you as an enthusiast on this board.
If i can ever be of help let me know.
Cheers, Walt
Love life and live it to the fullest. I know the point at which you are at at the moment. I have been there. I have reviewed in my mind what happened and tried to make sense of it. I am overly analytical when it comes to something I am pasionate about. I know for you, you are looking at how to avoid it in the future. I know you will find the answer. We all do. The one thing to remember is that riding a motorcylce has its own set of inherent dangers. We all know this and the sane ones of us respect this. We choose to live this lifestyle. We learn from our mishaps and we go on to become more skilled than ever. I apreciate knowing you and being associated with you as an enthusiast on this board.
If i can ever be of help let me know.
Cheers, Walt
#73
Andrew,
good to hear that you're gettin well enough that you're thinking about gettin the hawk back together again.
you're bike looks worse than mine and I was doing about 85-90mph when the front tire let loose and i was down so fast i thought I hit ice. It was a right hand curve and me and the bike slid across the oncoming lane and into the grass and ended up in a ditch. That was in '02'. I believe that big stock muffler sticking out there may have served as a frame slider. haha
Anyway I was lucky no one coming the other way and didn't hit anything hard except the ground. And had ATG on.
hope you figure out what caused your lowside faster than I did because it took me 7 or 8 years.
heal fast and post what you need as soon as you assess everything> maybe you'll be goin naked for your next redo?
good to hear that you're gettin well enough that you're thinking about gettin the hawk back together again.
you're bike looks worse than mine and I was doing about 85-90mph when the front tire let loose and i was down so fast i thought I hit ice. It was a right hand curve and me and the bike slid across the oncoming lane and into the grass and ended up in a ditch. That was in '02'. I believe that big stock muffler sticking out there may have served as a frame slider. haha
Anyway I was lucky no one coming the other way and didn't hit anything hard except the ground. And had ATG on.
hope you figure out what caused your lowside faster than I did because it took me 7 or 8 years.
heal fast and post what you need as soon as you assess everything> maybe you'll be goin naked for your next redo?
#74
I had the front slide at the dragons tail (bad set up) as I transfered from a left to a right. I bottomed the suspension and slid the front tire about 1.5 ft across the road. scared the poop out of me. Not saying that is what happened, but sometimes the crap just surprises you.
#75
I have a working left rad that's yours if you want it, so you don't have to do any editing to a right one. It's painted black, but worked nicely when it was on... I ended up with the frame you helped Trinc with, so full circle I guess...
May have some other parts too- let me know if you want me to check (I've gone naked and swapped front ends, to give you an idea of the parts I may have... clip ons, stock forks, etc)
May have some other parts too- let me know if you want me to check (I've gone naked and swapped front ends, to give you an idea of the parts I may have... clip ons, stock forks, etc)
Last edited by 7moore7; 10-26-2010 at 05:52 PM.
#76
the link below is what finally illuminated the cause of my lowside after all those years. Search "anyone trailbraking" on this forum for a more in depth discussion.
I believe if yours were a fork issue it would have showed itself earlier via instability/wobble when leaned over on a bumpy or wavy road. I had a fork sticking from a too tight fork brace and the bike was squirrely if you were leaned over on any road that was not perfectly smooth. So think about all your riding after the fork install and remember if you were leaned over on any uneven roads and if there was any signs of wobble or other instability. If not, probably not the cause.
I know that i never loaded the front tire for turns, but instead did most of my braking before the apex and then added neutral throttle to bring the front suspension back up from dived position, and this is what finally got me on that turn. As the I rolled onto neutral throttle, the front forks were already rebounding and when i added that little bit of throttle it was enough to loose front tire grip. Had I kept the the front end loaded with the brakes to increase the front tire contact patch as I rolled on the neutral throttle, it would have likely held.
Anyway, you were there so you may know something I don't. I do know that before and after the aforementioned lowside, I had never had a get-off that i didn't understand and it haunted me until I finally was able to resolve the mystery. This happened after i started investigating and using trailbraking and then read the below link. It all came together for me.
the below link seems to be inaccessible, but I'll try to find it if I can.
http://www.safetycenter.navy.mil/med...side_line2.htm
I believe if yours were a fork issue it would have showed itself earlier via instability/wobble when leaned over on a bumpy or wavy road. I had a fork sticking from a too tight fork brace and the bike was squirrely if you were leaned over on any road that was not perfectly smooth. So think about all your riding after the fork install and remember if you were leaned over on any uneven roads and if there was any signs of wobble or other instability. If not, probably not the cause.
I know that i never loaded the front tire for turns, but instead did most of my braking before the apex and then added neutral throttle to bring the front suspension back up from dived position, and this is what finally got me on that turn. As the I rolled onto neutral throttle, the front forks were already rebounding and when i added that little bit of throttle it was enough to loose front tire grip. Had I kept the the front end loaded with the brakes to increase the front tire contact patch as I rolled on the neutral throttle, it would have likely held.
Anyway, you were there so you may know something I don't. I do know that before and after the aforementioned lowside, I had never had a get-off that i didn't understand and it haunted me until I finally was able to resolve the mystery. This happened after i started investigating and using trailbraking and then read the below link. It all came together for me.
the below link seems to be inaccessible, but I'll try to find it if I can.
http://www.safetycenter.navy.mil/med...side_line2.htm
Last edited by nath981; 10-26-2010 at 07:12 PM.
#77
the forks are bent too. I still have my old set so that should be an inexpensive fix.
After much thought and deliberation I have finally come up with a theory of what happened. I can't prove it but it makes the most sense in explaining everything.
I had recently replaced my original forks with the upgraded forks from trinc. My theory is I didn't get the stick out height of each fork exactly the same, which could have caused my forks to bind under braking force then release at the worst time when I was at a good lean in the apex causing the suspension to unload immediately at once slipping the front out from under me in a blink. Just a theory, if any one can poke holes in my theory I would love to hear it. I need to figure this out.
Some extra details about the crash. It isn't a sharp turn I crashed in in fact I had been through a tighter turn just before it at an even faster pace. There was nothing to cause me to slide anywhere. No gravel no oil ice leaves nothing. The front slid not the rear, there was no warning no head shake no slipping prior no panic on my part. I have ridden the road 100's of times and this turn I would rate easy. The rider behind me saw the whole thing and didn't see anything that would cause this to happen. Thanks everyone.
After much thought and deliberation I have finally come up with a theory of what happened. I can't prove it but it makes the most sense in explaining everything.
I had recently replaced my original forks with the upgraded forks from trinc. My theory is I didn't get the stick out height of each fork exactly the same, which could have caused my forks to bind under braking force then release at the worst time when I was at a good lean in the apex causing the suspension to unload immediately at once slipping the front out from under me in a blink. Just a theory, if any one can poke holes in my theory I would love to hear it. I need to figure this out.
Some extra details about the crash. It isn't a sharp turn I crashed in in fact I had been through a tighter turn just before it at an even faster pace. There was nothing to cause me to slide anywhere. No gravel no oil ice leaves nothing. The front slid not the rear, there was no warning no head shake no slipping prior no panic on my part. I have ridden the road 100's of times and this turn I would rate easy. The rider behind me saw the whole thing and didn't see anything that would cause this to happen. Thanks everyone.
they would have to be way out if one tube hit the limit ( compression or rebound ) before the other.
did you check the sag after you installed them ?
i didn't see a good shot of the front tire... did you mount the Q2 up front ?
tim
#78
2nd mouse gets the cheese
SuperBike
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Beaverton, OR
Posts: 1,697
I have a working left rad that's yours if you want it, so you don't have to do any editing to a right one. It's painted black, but worked nicely when it was on... I ended up with the frame you helped Trinc with, so full circle I guess...
May have some other parts too- let me know if you want me to check (I've gone naked and swapped front ends, to give you an idea of the parts I may have... clip ons, stock forks, etc)
May have some other parts too- let me know if you want me to check (I've gone naked and swapped front ends, to give you an idea of the parts I may have... clip ons, stock forks, etc)
I definitely need the left radiator. PM me with details.
All I know about how strange this is is also that I recently put a pair of already broken in q2's on a much stickier tire then the original pilot road tire I was running before. I never slid it on the roads there or even close on the "roads". It just seems like a mechanical failure or a fault. I did an entire fork swap just prior. Yes I road the bike for about 40 miles on a ride a few nights before the pace was similar. That doesn't mean that the variables in the corner I crashed in where the same maybe the problem was not apparent before the bike sure seemed to be stable. It sure would be nice to have had it on video. Then I could say analyze away people.
Its driving me nuts, to just get slammed so hard and not know why. It doesn't help I don't remember the entire crash. Shoot guys thanks for putting your heads together to attempt sorting this out with me.
#79
2nd mouse gets the cheese
SuperBike
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Beaverton, OR
Posts: 1,697
Tim, I just put them on...
I didn't check anything setting wise because I figured that you where close enough to me I could ride and make small adjustments as needed. Maybe this was foolish.
I didn't check anything setting wise because I figured that you where close enough to me I could ride and make small adjustments as needed. Maybe this was foolish.
#80
I definitely need the left radiator. PM me with details.
All I know about how strange this is is also that I recently put a pair of already broken in q2's on a much stickier tire then the original pilot road tire I was running before. I never slid it on the roads there or even close on the "roads". It just seems like a mechanical failure or a fault. I did an entire fork swap just prior. Yes I road the bike for about 40 miles on a ride a few nights before the pace was similar. That doesn't mean that the variables in the corner I crashed in where the same maybe the problem was not apparent before the bike sure seemed to be stable. It sure would be nice to have had it on video. Then I could say analyze away people.
Its driving me nuts, to just get slammed so hard and not know why. It doesn't help I don't remember the entire crash. Shoot guys thanks for putting your heads together to attempt sorting this out with me.
All I know about how strange this is is also that I recently put a pair of already broken in q2's on a much stickier tire then the original pilot road tire I was running before. I never slid it on the roads there or even close on the "roads". It just seems like a mechanical failure or a fault. I did an entire fork swap just prior. Yes I road the bike for about 40 miles on a ride a few nights before the pace was similar. That doesn't mean that the variables in the corner I crashed in where the same maybe the problem was not apparent before the bike sure seemed to be stable. It sure would be nice to have had it on video. Then I could say analyze away people.
Its driving me nuts, to just get slammed so hard and not know why. It doesn't help I don't remember the entire crash. Shoot guys thanks for putting your heads together to attempt sorting this out with me.
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