teerex51
The Italian Scallion
Last August I brought back from the USA a set of Holeshot headers. Finding a bag they could fit in was a labor of love and the TSA folks were pretty excited when they saw those metal pipes on their monitors at the airport.... Today a friend and I put them on my 2005 FJR1300.
Wow! B) Here you see the Holeshots next to the stock headers with cat. Pretty puppies, ain't they?
Replacing the headers can be accomplished by removing both lower fairings and freeing the radiator from its lower attach point. The rad can then pivot forward a few degrees and allow the removal of all bolts without major effort. In all, you're looking at 3 hours' work and a few cold brews.
Above you can see the headers for cylinders 3 & 4 already in place. Below, the four headers have been installed and the fairing can be put back on the bike.
The combination of Holeshot headers and LeoVince cans is pretty damn good. At low revs, there's hardly any incremental noise vs. the stock headers. As soon as you blip the throttle, though, the bike starts growling like a V-Max and this effect becomes pretty apparent when you open her up in - say - third gear and leave all traffic behind you. Since I've been running a PC-III with a custom map, I'll now see if that map needs tweaking to accommodate the new headers.
In the meantime, enjoy this baaaad FJR.... :lol: :lol: CLICKY
Stef
Wow! B) Here you see the Holeshots next to the stock headers with cat. Pretty puppies, ain't they?
Replacing the headers can be accomplished by removing both lower fairings and freeing the radiator from its lower attach point. The rad can then pivot forward a few degrees and allow the removal of all bolts without major effort. In all, you're looking at 3 hours' work and a few cold brews.
Above you can see the headers for cylinders 3 & 4 already in place. Below, the four headers have been installed and the fairing can be put back on the bike.
The combination of Holeshot headers and LeoVince cans is pretty damn good. At low revs, there's hardly any incremental noise vs. the stock headers. As soon as you blip the throttle, though, the bike starts growling like a V-Max and this effect becomes pretty apparent when you open her up in - say - third gear and leave all traffic behind you. Since I've been running a PC-III with a custom map, I'll now see if that map needs tweaking to accommodate the new headers.
In the meantime, enjoy this baaaad FJR.... :lol: :lol: CLICKY
Stef