HaulinAshe
Well-known member
After studying the 06 pics and carefully looking over my 05, I decided to fabricate a heat shield from some firewall insulation. My last ride was in about 85F weather and the tank was too hot to touch through jeans at 80mph! Something had to change.
Here are some pics. Not sure if anyone needs this info, but I am trying to contribute for once rather than always being a blood sucking forum consumer newbie!
My 2005 FJR in bondage. Ropes are tied over my garage door tracks. Works pretty good!
My theory is that the heat from the upper part of the radiator, combined with heat from the exhaust headers, gets pushed through this area and heats the crap out of the underside of the tank. So my goal was to form a makeshift heat shield similar to what the 06s have.
Rough fitted shield with basic cutouts for fuel hoses and connections. This is adhesive backed insulation, but I left the backing on to prevent the shield from sticking to everything. Didn't want the adhesive exposed and one big dirt magnet to deal with. So far, no problems with the backing paper etc.
After a little more mashing and fitting. The goal is to form-fit the material as much as possible. A lot of pushing and pressing is required and it takes time.
Right side rubber panel goes in place first, over top of heat shield. Screw for rubber panel helps hold down shield at top.
Left side rubber panel goes in next. Take time to fit everything well. Cut out for cable retainer on frame side. I used a piece of scrap material to bond the cut edges together and help close off the rear, left edge.
Testing so far indicates a huge improvement. I feel this is a better solution than insulating the tank itself because it channels the heat downward and away from both the rider and the tank.
Comments welcomed. This is very much an experiment.
SECOND FOLLOW-UP:
Test ride #2 - Medium length trip, 1.5 hours each way, mixture of open highway and stop/go city traffic, 85F and sunny.
Temp gauge read two bars on highway. Bumped to three in light traffic. Just touched on four bars sitting in heavily congested, walking pace, heavy city traffic.
Radiator fan kicked in/out several times. You could feel the hot air blowing from under the bike when the fan was running, but nothing unusual radiated from around the tank. Tank was a little warm to the touch, pretty much what you would expect with intense sun. As soon as traffic opened up to 45 mph, the tank immediately cooled down.
City driving was at 1/3 tank of gas.
Here are some pics. Not sure if anyone needs this info, but I am trying to contribute for once rather than always being a blood sucking forum consumer newbie!
My 2005 FJR in bondage. Ropes are tied over my garage door tracks. Works pretty good!
My theory is that the heat from the upper part of the radiator, combined with heat from the exhaust headers, gets pushed through this area and heats the crap out of the underside of the tank. So my goal was to form a makeshift heat shield similar to what the 06s have.
Rough fitted shield with basic cutouts for fuel hoses and connections. This is adhesive backed insulation, but I left the backing on to prevent the shield from sticking to everything. Didn't want the adhesive exposed and one big dirt magnet to deal with. So far, no problems with the backing paper etc.
After a little more mashing and fitting. The goal is to form-fit the material as much as possible. A lot of pushing and pressing is required and it takes time.
Right side rubber panel goes in place first, over top of heat shield. Screw for rubber panel helps hold down shield at top.
Left side rubber panel goes in next. Take time to fit everything well. Cut out for cable retainer on frame side. I used a piece of scrap material to bond the cut edges together and help close off the rear, left edge.
Testing so far indicates a huge improvement. I feel this is a better solution than insulating the tank itself because it channels the heat downward and away from both the rider and the tank.
Comments welcomed. This is very much an experiment.
SECOND FOLLOW-UP:
Test ride #2 - Medium length trip, 1.5 hours each way, mixture of open highway and stop/go city traffic, 85F and sunny.
Temp gauge read two bars on highway. Bumped to three in light traffic. Just touched on four bars sitting in heavily congested, walking pace, heavy city traffic.
Radiator fan kicked in/out several times. You could feel the hot air blowing from under the bike when the fan was running, but nothing unusual radiated from around the tank. Tank was a little warm to the touch, pretty much what you would expect with intense sun. As soon as traffic opened up to 45 mph, the tank immediately cooled down.
City driving was at 1/3 tank of gas.
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