acotrel said:This thread is about frame straightening. If you get it wrong it can kill you.
gripper said:Most people here seem to be bending the frame with it clamped to the floor by the bottom frame rails. I would consider sinking a tube (close to/same as the inside diameter of the steering head tube) into the concrete at about 27 degrees from the vertical, then dropping the frame onto it inverted. A couple of stops on the floor near the rear shock mounts would allow you to pull the frame rails to where you want. I would also consider cutting the cross tube between rails to allow more accurate bending of each side before re-welding. This is where you find out how thick your concrete is in your garage floor :lol:
splatt said:gjr said:Hi Steve,
I am heartened by your success with getting things more or less in line and having the bike ride well. I'm going for somewhere between anal perfection and the hobot mash it into submission.
concours,
I am fairly handy at fixing things. I put the motor in this bike together about 50,000 miles ago and have just put in 0.020" oversize pistons a few years ago. Our local bike shop handled the machine work. I have several Volvos ('67, '87, '04) that I maintain. The '04 is demanding better diagnostic tools to sort out the ABS light ( Volvo went their own way on DTC codes). I have been all through a '40 Farmall H (motor, transmission, hydraulics, etc.), various other tractors, combines, and assorted vegetable equipment. I can measure, cut, and fit to a few thousandths. I have a lathe, but have been using carbide tools since my tool grinding skills are still not 100%. My welding skills are so-so, but two neighbors are very good. I have calipers, mics, dial indicators, straightedges, a 12 T press, a decent set of hand tools, a 9000# lift in my garage...
Greg
No all totally inadequate, when you log in your name needs to come up in blue like all the other knowledgable Norton experts, most of there bikes run like a dream, because that's all they are
acotrel said:I'll measure it again sometime. When you do the calculation, do you subtract the yoke offset ? From memory I drop a vertical through the axle, and a line straight down the side of the forks. That gives the forward offset, then you subtract the yoke offset, so you get the difference of a line through the steering head form the vertical through the axle - that is the trail ? There is a slight error due to angularity doing it that way.
gjr said:It is going to be hard for me to remember all of this when I'm 1000 miles from home, on a worn rear tire, loaded up with 50 pounds of camping gear, and trying to get by a truck coming up Yolo Canyon. Add in the changing fuel load... Oh Dear!
Greg
olChris said:gjr said:It is going to be hard for me to remember all of this when I'm 1000 miles from home, on a worn rear tire, loaded up with 50 pounds of camping gear, and trying to get by a truck coming up Yolo Canyon. Add in the changing fuel load... Oh Dear!
Greg
JUst take the bus!![]()
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