Midlifefjr
Well-known member
I think we have all been there (well at least I have). Since my drop I have been attending "Stupid Drop Anonymous" meetings (a twelve step program) and have been drop free for 10 months.
Yes, it even started an argument worthy of NEPRT status.May I suggest you file a bit off the stop so your kickstand will rotate slightly farther forward before it hits the stop. :huh: It couldn't hurt. :blink: It's been done before by many others, starting in ....oh....2003.
This seems like a worthwhile mod. The 2" you speak of is 2" further forward at the end of the sidestand lever, I presume.I had the same thing happen twice before I got smart and took my Drmel tool to the stand stop. Only need to take off enoguh to change the angle about 5 degrees to make her stand over better. I didn't measyure the amount of material removed. Just marked where the stand stopped oringally and removed enough to make about 2" difference.
Have fun.
Because if you leave it too long, this can happen:Why does noone ever take my advice about foliage?
This seems like a worthwhile mod. The 2" you speak of is 2" further forward at the end of the sidestand lever, I presume.I had the same thing happen twice before I got smart and took my Drmel tool to the stand stop. Only need to take off enoguh to change the angle about 5 degrees to make her stand over better. I didn't measyure the amount of material removed. Just marked where the stand stopped oringally and removed enough to make about 2" difference.
Have fun.
How much more to the left does the bike lean now? The reason I ask is I think this could also be handy for parking on less than perfectly level surfaces. My old R1100RS used to lean way over to the left.
Yes, it's forward which is what you want. I would say the bike leans about 5 degrees further to the left. I may take off a little more when and if I can ever get thedamnthing up on the center stand again.
RECALL! RECALL! Where's a good lawyer when you need one. We need a class-action suit against Yamaha. Nevermind that thousands of other riders have no problem or some have modified theirs because of their habits/skills/technique.DESIGN FLAW!DESIGN FLAW!
Alert the media!
:yahoo:You get the point. I believe it was another Fred (not me) that came up with the grinding scheme though I don't recall any pictures or detailed instructions.[edit] here's the thread you want to read through (if you have a lotta spare time)
I seem to remember the original owners who did this taking a fraction of an inch off the "stop". We're probably talking 1/16"-1/8" that would allow a measurable amount of travel at the end of the kickstand. IOW, start "small", one could always remove more material easier than having to weld to build up the pad because you cut too much.I had the same thing happen twice before I got smart and took my Drmel tool to the stand stop. Only need to take off enoguh to change the angle about 5 degrees to make her stand over better. I didn't measyure the amount of material removed. Just marked where the stand stopped oringally and removed enough to make about 2" difference.
Only $250 for a mirror and side panel? I thought it would be more than that.
Yeah, since this is your 2nd time around with this situation, next time consider throwing your leg under it, as it's going down. Bones eventually heal. Although getting out from underneath it might turn out to be a tad embarrassing.
"Excuse me sir... yes, you. Uh, I'm stuck. Could I trouble you to lift my bike off me please."
In academics we call that process assessment. Makes it seem intelligent.But, but, all that assumes we READ the owners manual. As a guy, the owners manual is classified as "instructions." As instructions, we never read those untill after we break something.
Well....the post above is probably going to send this to:I've owned many different motorcycles over the course of ~40 years and my FJR is the first one that I have needed to perform a little ritual every time I get off to prevent my TOGs from returning value. I have seen a few other bikes that my friends have owned that didn't always stay upright when the side stand was deployed. Most of my friend’s tipsy bikes had observable short comings with the side stand, such as being visibly too upright or appearing not to go far enough forward.
There, the lit flare is in the gas can :lol: I tried but couldn't wait for Friday to post this
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