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Transforming boring into FUN! sort of a madmax/cafe look

Discussion in 'XJ Modifications' started by cruzmystar, Nov 19, 2006.

  1. jribbens78

    jribbens78 New Member

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    Great Looking bike. I have an 82 750 and am also getting pods and probably putting on some Cherry Bombs. What size jets did you use? That would give me a much easier baseline to work from. Also, I am new to the forum, so i don't know how these bikes are lowered. Could you give me a quick update on that also?
    Thanks for the help
    JR
     
  2. cruzmystar

    cruzmystar Member

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    i'll check tomorrow at work to get the exact numbers (i've got about 3 bikes apart at the moment and i can't keep my numbers straight, lol) but i know it was two sizes up on the mains and added one shim (m4 washer) to the needles. it would probably benefit from a slightly larger pilot jet, as i've got the mixture screws quite a ways out, but it's just my beat the tar out of it/ride it back and forth to work bike so i wasn't going to spend a ton of time tuning it. it takes a couple tries to get it started after it's been sitting for a week but past that it runs great.

    i cheated the way i lowered the front. like i said, being that this is my beater bike i just loosened the tripple tree clamps and slid the fork tubes up a bit. i went about 3 inches but my hoses and cables look like poo now. i'll probably go up to 2 inches. i did notice the weight transfer of the bars and lowering the front made the back a little squirly. caught myself more than once drifting the rear out of a hard corner.
     
  3. beardking

    beardking Member

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    cruz, how did you lower your seat like that? It looks like you had to cut and relocate the tubing that goes under the seat to be able to drop it like that. Unless, of course, the tubing layout is different on you 85 700 than my 82 650, which is quite possible.
     
  4. cruzmystar

    cruzmystar Member

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    no structural changes at all. the seat on this bike was always horrible. seemed like you were always sitting on your hardware rather than on your butt like you should be. so, i just went ahead and trimmed the seat cushion down until there was only about an inch left in the back/bottom. made an absolute night and day difference in the way it felt. like you said there might be some structural differences between out bikes. my frame follows the shape of the seat.
     
  5. spinalator

    spinalator Member

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    Did you trim with a turkey knife or sandpaper wheel?
     
  6. cruzmystar

    cruzmystar Member

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    here's a good article that explains how. couple of things i do differently are get the foam wet and put it in the freezer until it's frozen. it makes the cutting and sanding process much easier. i aslso don't use the carpet padding on the top of the foam. if you get the foam sanded out smooth then you don't need the padding. all it's really for is to hide the sawblade marks. if you don't have an electric carving knife then a hacksaw blade will work. just a little slower process.

    http://www.650ccnd.com/seat.htm
     
  7. spinalator

    spinalator Member

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    You freeze the wet seat? Very smart, thanks for the link!
     
  8. cruzmystar

    cruzmystar Member

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    no prob
     

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