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What Wheels and Why?
#1
So phase 1 of my improvements to my 2004 FZS1000 should be complete on Sunday when it gets Ivanised.


Maybe in a year or so I will consider the R1 forks upgrade but I have just had my forks rebuilt and brakes serviced so I want to get some use from them first.



Time to start thinking of the cosmetic improvements starting with wheels. I dont hate the standard wheels and dont imagine there would be much, if any weight saved with aftermarket aluminium wheels or standard wheels from later bikes? I have carbon Dymags on my Superduke but doubt I will go to the expense on the Fazer.


I am not really bothered about a 6inch rear rim so  not R1 wheels.


Does anyone know if the later FZ1 wheels fit? Or are they 6 inch rears too?


Would the FZ8  or FZ6 wheels fit if I just wanted 5 spokes?


If either does fit, would this entail swapping to FZ1 / FZ8 / FZ6 discs also or would the FZS discs suffice.


Any other suggestions?


The other thing I havent noticed anyone talking about is gearing.  Every Jap bike I have ever owned I have gone down 1 tooth on the front or up 2-3 on the rear. Not sure If I will bother with the Fazer as I suspect it will be have plenty of acceleration once Mike has done his magic on it.


What sprockets do you all run?
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#2
I'm in the opposite camp - every Honda/Kwakiutl/Suzuki AND Yamaha road bike that I've had, has needed a larger front sprocket (usually 1 extra tooth) and on most I've also ended up with a smaller rear sprocket - mainly because they could all comfortably pull it.


My KH 250 back in 1978 was the best example - it would scream to the redline in top gear everywhere, even uphill, and it always ran out of revs before drag stooped it from going faster - I went up 1 tooth on the front and down 3 teeth on the back with that bike and got a decent jump in top speed - enough to shock a Honda 400/4 that couldn't catch me  Smile


My Aprilia is the opposite, for road use in the UK I use a 1 tooth smaller front sprocket (gives a slightly more useable speed range for 6th gear and I can trickle along a bit better in first using the clutch a bit less at really low speed) - but for track use, the standard front sprocket is better suited IMHO.
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#3
I agree about a smaller front sprocket on apes. Regarding changing to fz1 wheels.... Why bother? If you are going to do it get the lightest wheels you can Wink
If it's broken, it's not fixed.
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#4
(15-05-14, 12:31 AM)nickodemon link Wrote: I agree about a smaller front sprocket on apes. Regarding changing to fz1 wheels.... Why bother? If you are going to do it get the lightest wheels you can Wink


I doubt there is much weight to be saved with any of the aluminium wheels. I had forged alu Marchesini's on my fireblade and they werent noticeably lighter than the Honda wheels they replaced.  A new set of aftermarket blingy wheels is about 1400 quid and I doubt I would spend half the value of the bike just to have nicer looking wheels.


The carbon wheels on my Superduke are much lighter than the originals but I feel the benefits would be more noticeable on a sportsbike tbh. Once you have the extra leverage of a set of handlebars you dont really need lighter steering. I know they also claim improved acceleration and reduced tyre wear and everything else but there is also a benefit in leaving the 3 grand in the bank.


Hard to tell exactly but when I was trackdaying I could run the same (ish) laptimes with either wheels fitted. I certainly wasnt getting the claimed 3 sec per lap improvement with carbon around Brands Indy (wish I was).


So if the original 3 spoke and the FZ1/8/6 5 spoke are of similar weight. The only benefit would be cosmetic improvement. I just thought that if they fit, a used set of these would be cheaper and  more readily available than waiting for a used set of PVM's or Galespeeds.
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