Chay Posted July 10, 2022 Posted July 10, 2022 Wee question Although it's popular to fit bandit or gsxr wheels onto our old aircooled bikes these days was wondering if efe wheels fit on to an 1100et axle without faffing about making spacers etc Must have been a common upgrade back in the day Wanting to do a more period upgrade look Quote
Chay Posted July 10, 2022 Author Posted July 10, 2022 Yes that's right Not to bothered about that for now Its more the period mod thing Quote
Tony Nitrous Posted July 10, 2022 Posted July 10, 2022 Considered wire wheels ? Huge range on size options and can look OK. 1135 wheels aren’t exactly an upgrade. 16” front and skinny 17 rear. I don’t remember anyone doing it. Quote
Tony Nitrous Posted July 10, 2022 Posted July 10, 2022 If you want to stick to 80’s Suzuki stuff like the early GSXR11 had 6 spokes like an 1135E but in 18” with a wider rear. I run that size (but different) rims on my 1100ET Quote
Chay Posted July 10, 2022 Author Posted July 10, 2022 A few 18" on the bay But they are more expensive than es/efe stuff plus add discs + hub etc it ads up. Be as well doing bandit wheels again Already got bandit wheels on my et But im wanting to do another gsx but with more 80s stuff. Nothing really to do about upgrading or handling its more about the look Quote
TonyGee Posted July 10, 2022 Posted July 10, 2022 what about early GSXR 3 spoke wheels ? 18inch. like this Quote
HUM Posted July 10, 2022 Posted July 10, 2022 Hi 16" you can forget, wobbles from about 180KM/h, We tried it in the 80s/90s, 16"sucked.. What was good, 18" PVM's, or Campagnolo's, you could get them with around 20 Then came the 18" from the first GSXR, in my opinion the breakthrough came with the 17" from the GSXR and the Bandits .. I have in my 1100 E 17" a GSXR 3.5" front 5.5" rear 120 front 180 rear. A compromise between handling and high speed stability , That means in practice, much better handling than the original, and only a little wobbling from about 220KM/h. If you want more directional stability at high speed and fast highway corners, choose 18" If you want better handling in tight corners, choose 17" The prerequisite is always that you want to talk about stability with the old tubular frames, and above all that you don't get scared if the thing wobbles at 200 km/h plus, those were mopeds for men without nerves back then , no pussy helpers like ABS, wheely control, traction control and whatever else there is if anyvody has driven a Kawa 500 mach III beyond 180 KM/h knows what I am talking about cheeers uli Quote
Dezza Posted July 11, 2022 Posted July 11, 2022 What he said Putting a 16 inch front wheel on an old bike that originally came with an 18 or even a 19 inch wheel as stock seems like asking for trouble, even if you change the yokes to compensate for steering geometry changes. And 16 inch tyres are a bit limited too. The wheels are cheap though (for a reason). Quote
Chay Posted July 11, 2022 Author Posted July 11, 2022 Im not asking about the 16 in wheel though Im only asking if the 3"wheel from and is a straight fit on to an et rear axle using the et spacers Should have worded my original post better Quote
Tony Nitrous Posted July 11, 2022 Posted July 11, 2022 (edited) On 7/10/2022 at 7:48 PM, Chay said: Must have been a common upgrade back in the day I’m not sure it ever was. I remember folk going to wire wheels / spoked rims as it gave you the option for any choice of 16, 17, 18” rims in a wide range of widths. Even the Kats with their futuristic styling were upgraded with wire wheels. After that there was swapping to GSXR stuff, early 6 spokes or then 3 spokes. Im not sure EF into ET’s was ever really common. Sure you’d get a 17” but it’s still pretty slim and wasn’t much of an upgrade even back in the day. Edited July 11, 2022 by Tony Nitrous Quote
RGSX Posted July 13, 2022 Posted July 13, 2022 I no longer approach speeds of 180kph + so my 16' works perfectly fine. If I were to switch it would be to a later 17" to shave some weight and better selection of tires. 1 Quote
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