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03-27-2013, 11:32 AM
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#1 |
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n00b
Joined: Mar 2013
Location: Near motorcycle heaven!
Oddometer: 7
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07 Bandit 1250 Reverse trike design?
So I bought this crazy single seat reverse trike project that is supposed to use a Yamaha R1 motor and lots of custom stuff for the fuel system, cooling, etc... and I just am not up to the task of figuring it all out. To that end I bought a 2007 Suzuki Bandit 1250 that I am hoping to graft into the back of the reverse trike frame. My question is what are the best attachment points / methods to get the power from the back tire transmitted to the forward trike frame? A picture of the trike project is attached. My plan is to ditch the fat drag tire and the fabricated rear swingarm and in its place put the back half of the Bandit 1250. the Bandit 1250 would lose the front tire and forks, and get the forward controls and instruments extended to the new seating location in the custom frame shown.
Should I have some bent 1/8" plate steel made up to bolt to the Bandit frame near the forward part of the engine? How about some way to connect the neck to a rigid frame? I can figure out the throttle cable, clutch stuff, and brake work, I just am having a hard time wrapping my head around how to join the two frames in a strong way without hacking up the Bandit frame. To be clear, I am not worried about where on the custom frame to attach but rather what are the good places to attach on the Bandit 1250 frame. Thanks in advance for any tips or suggestions! ![]() :) BT |
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03-27-2013, 11:49 AM
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#2 |
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Adventurer
Joined: Aug 2010
Location: NC
Oddometer: 48
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I am far from an expert on this kind of thing. I did see this a while back, and it might give you some ideas. The guy says that he has 0 modifications to the Honda ST frame that he is using.
http://inet-rendezvous.com/motoguzzi/trike2.htm Who made your kit? Good luck with the build. Devin |
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03-27-2013, 12:00 PM
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#3 |
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n00b
Joined: Mar 2013
Location: Near motorcycle heaven!
Oddometer: 7
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Thanks for the link! That page shows a nice detail of how to attach the neck of the bike frame to the front custom frame.
My trike was built by a guy in Richmond Kentucky. He has made all sorts of custom vehicles, but they rarely get completed. He doesn't have time to finish it, so I am going to find the easiest route to getting it on the road. If it proves to be too much to figure out I might just sell the kit as-is and get a DS or something fun to ride the trails near me (I'm in north Georgia). I am pretty sure the motorcycle frame can handle the stress it would be under when tied into the trike frame, but just not sure if I should only use certain attachment points on the Bandit frame. Thanks again! |
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03-27-2013, 12:27 PM
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#4 | |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2009
Oddometer: 120
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Quote:
Can you take a picture from the back? Might be easier to help you figure it out that way. I think that the frame from the Bandit shouldn't have any troulbe with the stresses. If you did worry about that, you could make a "simple" cradle to mount the engine and capture the front pivot of the Bandit's swing arm. camaroz1985 screwed with this post 03-27-2013 at 12:33 PM |
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03-27-2013, 01:53 PM
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#5 |
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Two Wheeled Addict
Joined: Apr 2008
Location: Sunnyvale, California
Oddometer: 5,240
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Seconds. As is. I would mount the bandit motor. Or even just go with the R1 stuff. Its gotta be less work than chopping and modifying for the Suzook Mill.
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Speed bumps never seem to make me go any faster |
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03-27-2013, 01:57 PM
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#6 |
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whosaberg?
Joined: Apr 2009
Location: Durham, NC
Oddometer: 566
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Looks like it would be a shame to chop it up and mount a bike in the rear. It would ruin the look, and I doubt it would make it any easier.
How much would you sell it for? |
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03-27-2013, 02:38 PM
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#7 |
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Adventurer
Joined: Nov 2011
Location: bellevue IDAHO
Oddometer: 97
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this may or may not be a longshot, but the first person i would contact is Claude.. he builds some FINE hacks and used to be a sprint car builder/driver.. not to mention a great guy and very informative
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03-27-2013, 02:47 PM
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#8 |
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Two Wheeled Addict
Joined: Apr 2008
Location: Sunnyvale, California
Oddometer: 5,240
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Build it up from the R1. And post vids when you get it goin.
__________________
Speed bumps never seem to make me go any faster |
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03-27-2013, 08:52 PM
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#9 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2008
Oddometer: 153
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Personally I think it'd be a tragedy to chop up that cool chassis to literally half-ass cobble a whole motorcycle on the back half. I've seen several of those setups before, mostly in England, and every one I saw looked just as goofy as can be. They're a half-baked afterthought with no class or style or lines at all. You'd also ruin the handling and suspension of that rig as well as messing up the wheelbase to track dimensions. With a motorcycle tire in back it would fishtail all over the road just before it spins out in a brisk turn
If you're going to use it don't dork it all up, just stick an engine/trans in there, hook up cables for clutch and shifter, use an electric fuel pump with pressure regulator and end up with a very cool and unique ride. You would have to hook all that up anyways plus much more to stick a bike on back. . |
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03-27-2013, 09:15 PM
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#10 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2008
Oddometer: 153
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Pardon me for being so harsh but I really feel strongly on the subject. I studied deep and long on the 2F/1R reverse layout and was going to build one. My own design ended up very, very similar to what you show in the pic, so similar I'd claim it was stolen directly from my drawing boards if I didn't know better. Honestly that's one of the nicest chassis setups and layouts I've ever seen, extremely well thought out and accomplished. Somebody really knew what they were doing!
Building ultra-light I was looking at just under 200 top end, neck-snapping acceleration, insane handling, but sipping 75+ mpg with room for groceries and misc. when taking it easy, with a 2L in it. You could have one wild machine there I guarantee it, nothing on the planet will handle like it and sky's the limit on motive power. You could be eating Ferrari's, Cobras and Vipers for a light snack. Just build it, man! . |
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03-28-2013, 05:41 AM
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#11 |
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The AntiHarley
Joined: Mar 2009
Location: Bristol Hills in the Fingerlakes region of NY
Oddometer: 2,190
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I have to agree. Please don't chop up that beautiful chassis.
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Our ride across the USA on a Ural Gear Up- http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=781149 |
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03-28-2013, 05:52 AM
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#12 | |
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beat up ex flat tracker
Joined: Dec 2006
Location: chico,just below rag dump(nor-cal)
Oddometer: 6,769
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Quote:
Sell it to an engineer or someone who knows what needs to be done,if its set up for an R1 engine,seems like that would be a good start. It would be a blast to rip around in with 130 hp or so.
__________________
2003 DR 650.(1976 Montesa 250 Enduro-nice!) - - 1990 MASI TEAM-3V.- 1976 Motobecane, Super-Mirage.- Kona, HumuHumuNukuNukuApua'a. Single Speed ThRaShEr BiKe. 1968 360 Greeves challenger MXer. 1999 Triumph Trophy 1200. 2011 KTM530 EXC. 2012 KONA Hei Hei Deluxe (ongoing bike issues) -2009 KTM 200XC-W. |
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03-28-2013, 06:08 AM
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#13 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Aug 2012
Location: Orlando Fl
Oddometer: 305
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My vote is for an all aluminum small block chevy ( or a huge turbo stuck on the side on a K series honda)
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03-28-2013, 07:59 AM
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#14 |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Sep 2008
Oddometer: 610
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I would keep what you have, It looks well done. Go as far as you can with what was started, Then pay some one to finish the parts you do not know how to do. It will more then likley still end up costing you less then changing every thing. Also this way there is a greater chance that you will be the person who finishes this rather then one person in a long line of people who have owned this project.
And yes, we could finish this for you but as we are very busy it would take a while before we finished it. We have built similar stuff for other people and I use to build pro rally cars as well as vintage race cars and use to be an ASE certified master mechanic for both cars and medium and heavy duty trucks. Claude should be able also do it as could Brock of side-effects. Jay G DMC sidecars www.dmcsidecars.com 866-638-1793 |
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03-28-2013, 12:46 PM
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#15 |
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n00b
Joined: Mar 2013
Location: Near motorcycle heaven!
Oddometer: 7
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Well, I would love to finish it as planned, but I know I am not really up to the task. I bought the project three years ago for $13,000 if I remember correctly. It includes a 2008 Yamaha R1 engine / trans and harness / instrument cluster. There is an adapter plate for fitting that monster drag radial to the rear swingarm. The list of parts needed to finish it as I understand it are:
Here is a few close ups of the front suspension / sway design... It uses Mustang II spindles and Wilwood brakes... ![]()
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