FJ1300RT Reverse Trike Concept

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Cool deal, yeah money is cutting into my shoptime. :angry2: I want to work on it so badly but there's almost nothing I can do right now without certain parts I need to buy... Oh well, I have some powder coating jobs coming so shouldn't be long...

 
Ok, yeah if you are routing air around with a scoop and the fan/radiator are in the same place then that makes sense.

Oh on another note, not sure if you thought about this or not but when I was test driving and taking hard corners the bike would die for a second and then kick back on. At first I thought I was running out of gas because I was almost empty but after filling up and it still happening I realized it's the tilt sensor. :p

The bike doesn't lean in corners anymore and it's throwing the sensor over to one side and killing the ignition. So you'll need to remove your sensor and bypass it. :D
What did you do to bypass the tipover switch, just leave it disconnected?

 
I actually havent taken much time to figure that out quite yet so I'm not sure. I was going to ask you if you knew a way... ;)

I tried disconnecting it but the bike won't even start so we'll have to bypass it somehow...

 
I actually havent taken much time to figure that out quite yet so I'm not sure. I was going to ask you if you knew a way... ;)

I tried disconnecting it but the bike won't even start so we'll have to bypass it somehow...
I did some searching on the internet, but found nothing specific on FJR. Some Yamaha, Suzuki, and Honda owners have somehow filled the switch with silicone to prevent the switch mechanism from moving. Others suggested measuring the signal to the ECU and putting in a resistor.

The FJR manual does not talk about the "lean angle cut-off switch", only shows it in diagrams.

 
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Gen I has the Lean Angle Sensor under the driver's seat. The Gen II has the LAS in the nose assembly. Unplug the LAS and jumper the Black/Blue wire to the Yellow/Green wire.

The ECU recognizes 0.4 to 1.4 volts as Upright and 3.8 to 4.2 volts as Overturned. There is an outside chance that when the ECU sees 0.0 volts on the Yellow/Green wire after being jumpered it will see that as an error condition. If this is the case it is time to glue the pendulum in place or I can calculate a pair of resistor values that will simulate the the LAS and fake out the ECU.

 
I believe that the info is from the Gen I manual in the Fuel Injection troubleshooting section. I can't remember my phone number, can't tell you the name of the street a 1/4 mile away and can't remember the name of the person I was just introduced to, but do remember useless bits of info like this :dribble: I'm on my way out to remove another foot or so of snow from my two driveways, I'll take a peak in the FSM when I'm done.

 
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I believe that the info is from the Gen I manual in the Fuel Injection troubleshooting section. I can't remember my phone number, can't tell you the name of the street a 1/4 mile away and can't remember the name of the person I was just introduced to, but do remember useless bits of info like this :dribble: I'm on my way out to remove another foot or so of snow from my two driveways, I'll take a peak in the FSM when I'm done.
Oddly enough I'm the exact same way... lol I forget your name by the time I let go of shaking your hand... :blink:

 
Puff, wheeze, gasp and minor heart stress later the snow is all relocated.

The LAS info is indeed in the FI section because it is read at diAG code 08 and described there. In my early release FSM it is described in some text detail in the General Information section, page 1-16. Later FSMs incorporated the ABS into one manual so the page numbering may be different.

 
fjr1.jpg


This is pretty close to the final design. I am currently leaning towards a dark blue with silver tubes. I picked up the body panels this week. It is smooth FRP (fiberglass reinforced plastic) that will be screwed on to the diagonal supports and to tabs welded to the inside edge of the tubes.

Got the brake and clutch lines run and bled. No leaks!
Need to finish the wiring and I can actually start it up.
Waiting on the coilovers, which have been on backorder since before Christmas.

I know, PICTURES!
sad.gif
I will get some.

 
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fjr18.jpg

Front Brake Line

fjr19.jpg

Brake Master Cylinder

fjr20.jpg

Clutch Master Cylinder

fjr21.jpg

Pedals and clutch pushrod

fjr22.jpg

Pedals and brake pushrod

fjr23.jpg

Throttle pedal and cable

fjr24.jpg

Wiring and Brake proportioning valve

fjr25.jpg

Rear brake line

fjr26.jpg

Clutch Slave cylinder

fjr27.jpg

Shifter - rear (I already fixed the too extreme angle of the cable in this shot)

fjr28.jpg

Shifter - front (Will be a little shorter, with a motorcycle handgrip.)

fjr29.jpg

Steering column

fjr30.jpg

Steering and left hand control pod

fjr31.jpg

Dash panels

fjr32.jpg

Lights and mirror

The 2-inch center tunnel carries the wiring extensions, the rear brake and clutch hard lines, the throttle cable and shifter cable.

 
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Nice man! I see you also went with the marine push/pull cable for the shifter. Man that works so good and soooooo much easier than I had worried about early on because before I thought of that idea I was thinking I would have to do a bunch of linkages and rods etc. <_<

 
Nice man! I see you also went with the marine push/pull cable for the shifter. Man that works so good and soooooo much easier than I had worried about early on because before I thought of that idea I was thinking I would have to do a bunch of linkages and rods etc. <_<
Thanks, Nitro. The cable I got was for an aftermarket auto trans shifter. Works great. Also got an extra long throttle cable and reused the (engine end) bits from the stock cable. A lot of time-consuming fussing with the controls for not much visual impact. Still have a lot of wiring to do...

 
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Ok, yeah if you are routing air around with a scoop and the fan/radiator are in the same place then that makes sense.

Oh on another note, not sure if you thought about this or not but when I was test driving and taking hard corners the bike would die for a second and then kick back on. At first I thought I was running out of gas because I was almost empty but after filling up and it still happening I realized it's the tilt sensor. :p

The bike doesn't lean in corners anymore and it's throwing the sensor over to one side and killing the ignition. So you'll need to remove your sensor and bypass it. :D
What did you do to bypass the tipover switch, just leave it disconnected?
 
Sorry guys - fat fingers and small buttons--- why do you need to disable lean sensor on a trike just mount it as standard and all ok i would think - Alan from Aust

 
Sorry again missed your reply on cut out on corners - in 3000kms of very hard testing on track and road never had a problem with cut out even on the track - better look at other problems maybe - Alan

 
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