Suzuki 800 Intruder Club & Forum
Welcome to suzuki800 Intruder forum

A UK Site Dedicated To The Suzuki C800, VL800, VX800, VZ800, VS800, C50, M50, Intruder / Boulevard / Marauder.

You will need to register before all the area's become visible, before doing so please enter & read the first thread in the Introductory area

It will only take a minute to register & it would be great to have you on board
This is a free to access and use site.
Suzuki 800 Intruder Club & Forum
Welcome to suzuki800 Intruder forum

A UK Site Dedicated To The Suzuki C800, VL800, VX800, VZ800, VS800, C50, M50, Intruder / Boulevard / Marauder.

You will need to register before all the area's become visible, before doing so please enter & read the first thread in the Introductory area

It will only take a minute to register & it would be great to have you on board
This is a free to access and use site.
Suzuki 800 Intruder Club & Forum
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Suzuki 800 Intruder Club & Forum

A UK Site Dedicated To The Suzuki C800, VL800, VX800, M800, VZ800, VS800, C50, M50 Model Intruder / Boulevard / Marauder
 
HomeLatest imagesRegisterLog in

 

 Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska

Go down 
4 posters
AuthorMessage
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSat Jan 06, 2024 5:13 pm

I bought my first VX 800 back in 1994, a used '91 that I enjoyed riding for several years.
I wanted one since I read the first tests in the various bike magazines and it sounded like just the bike for me, a nice size V-Twin that wasn't a sport bike or a cruiser, just a nice looking good ride. I couldn't afford a new one so when showed up that had been well cared for I was able to buy it.

I sold it after a few years when we were building our house and I had no time to ride and didn't like seeing it just sitting there.
I sold it to a nice young guy who rode it from Alaska to Michigan where he was starting his university years.

Fast forward many years and I have a few other bikes when I saw a listing on Craig's List (CL) for a 1990 VX 800 at a good price.
I took a look at the bike and it was filthy and rusty from being stored outside but it ran well so I bought it.

Here it is the day I brought it home:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-2K8q6sP-L

On the trailer in the background is a Suzuki V-Strom 650 I also bought that weekend.

I was planning to build each bike into something a bit different from stock because I was using our long, cold, and dark winters here in Anchorage, Alaska to play in the shed modifying my bikes to ride in the summers.

But, as happens sometimes, life interfered and the years passed and eventually we ended up moving closer into town.
The good news was I now had a two car garage for my motorbike projects!
But the poor VX sat neglected while it waited for its turn on the build table.

This winter was finally the time.
But instead of building it as a cafe' racer, street tracker, or as a scrambler, I decided to just do a resurrection and return to as near stock as I could afford to do. Mostly because I have too many bikes and I will be retiring this year, selling most of my bikes as well as all my tools and the house as we will be moving to Arizona where we can afford to live in a small retirement community. No work shed, no garage, and all that major downsizing requires.

So, on to the bike project in pictures...

In the shop and ready to begin:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-Fr3jJmb-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-Ndj3DPW-L

I'm going to post this and see if I am inserting the pictures correctly.
Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSat Jan 06, 2024 6:08 pm

Taking the bike apart for cleaning is the first step.
Why didn't I wash it first you may wonder?
Because it is well below freezing here and I don't have water or a drain in my shop/shed.
Why didn't I wash it during the summer? 
Because I didn't think of it.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-sKH8VJq-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-cwtcr2r-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-HjsLKqj-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-XNXvmjX-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-DrWnpV2-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-J8fMfb7-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-zvWdj7K-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-DxngZWX-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-28SbTm8-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-rZfVbbx-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-zjZxvmL-L

Cleaning the frame and various parts is making a nice improvement

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-KgbmwXk-L

I pulled the forks to replace the oil and shorten the springs to stiffen up the wimpy front end:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-SNDjH6W-L

With the forks out I found a bad ding in one tube so I filed it smooth then filled it with superglue:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-d7MgvfF-L

Once that hardened I filed and sanded it round with finer and finer grit until it disappeared:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-Hg46tBr-L

I should say that the ding is up at the top of the slider just under the bottom triple clamp so it won't hit the dust wiper or seals, it is just appearance. 
(The fork is fully collapsed in that picture)

The pipes are a bit rusty:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-jvjfbGv-L

After rubbing them down with crumpled aluminum foil as I had read about they came out great.
But I forgot to take a picture of the results. I was amazed at how well it worked.
I've also read about polishing rusted chrome with stainless steel wool using WD40 as a lubricant.

I modified the fork springs by cutting off about 3" of the tight coil end:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-cT5fhSN-L

The upper layout of parts shows the spring cut and a longer PVC pipe spacer.
The lower layout is the stock spring and spacer.

Cutting a spring does not change the spring rate, it changes the effective spring rate just like shortening anything makes it stiffer.
The spring is a simple torsion rod would into a coil.
I did not do the math to figure out the new effective rate, I just figured out that cutting that much off would not let the coils bind up solid at full suspension compression. They feel much stiffer on the bike and it doesn't sag half the travel just from the bike weight as it did before.

I replaced the fork springs with stiffer ones on my first VX800 just as all the magazine tests said needed to be done. 
It seems crazy to me that Suzi would sell a bike that the rider could bottom out the forks just by hard braking. 
But they did, and still do on other bikes. Both of my DR 650's needed stiffer springs too.

Fork assembly:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-dR7TkSH-L

A simple board with a couple holes made it much easier.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-9sswKN8-L


Flush with the top for now, I will adjust the spring preload if needed.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-xVpPht7-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-kZbMJFM-L


Reinstalled:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-sLBkVwq-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-QN68t7D-L

I didn't like the stock bars on my first VX so I knew I would change these out.
The bottom bars in the picture below are stock and the other bars are what I have on hand:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska I-9ZdgxhN-L


I decided on the bar in the middle after sitting on the bike and holding each bar in position.

More to come soon.

 Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska 1f60e

Billybop90 likes this post

Back to top Go down
Billybop90
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeMon Jan 29, 2024 8:59 pm

Absolutely fantastic job on the VX, its getting the love it deserves. The pics are fantastic and really do appreciate you letting us tag along on your resurrection journey. Totally understand the need to relocate to a warmer climate and have more availability to bikes shops and parts. I especially enjoy the motorcycle swap meets where you can get some really sweet deals on the rare VX parts. This coming spring I will probably service the carbs (kind of a PITA) and get them ready for the summer riding season. Like what you did on the springs, I purchased the progressive kit specifically for the VX and swapped them out and new oils and seals. Last thing I did on mine was rebuild the front and rear brakes, will purchase front and rear rotors really soon from a Euro distributer to at least have them on hand. 

Looking forward to read more about your bike.
-Bill

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeTue Jan 30, 2024 5:17 am

I've been working on it at my  usual limited time speed but I declared it completed Saturday evening when I fired it up and ran it for a few minutes. I got a new battery for it even though the 10 year old one still cranked the engine over when I tested it a few times.

Here's more progress pictures and a few comments:

Putting things back together
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5618-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5619-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5620-L

That's the front fender I am going to use, (or did use actually since I am behind in posting) but it is just sitting on the tire, not in the actual position.


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5623-L

That fender is narrower than the stock VX fender so the fork brace fender mount holes would be too wide to use. The choice was to drill new holes in the steel mount or make a new mount out of aluminum and drill new holes for the fender. More holes in the stock steel piece would be quick and easy. So of course I had to make a new one out of 1/4" aluminum...

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5626-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5628-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5631-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5634-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5639-L

That will work I decided, so on to the next step, carb cleaning!
Back to top Go down
Billybop90
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeTue Jan 30, 2024 8:22 am

Great work on your front fork brace, many years ago there was a gentleman on another VX800 board by the name of "Tinbasher" that made various parts for the VX800. One of them was a front fork brace milled out of a solid piece of aluminum. Its actually quite a neat looking piece and it was a group purchase by a bunch of VX owners. I believe he is in Australia. I just checked to see if the VX800 Forum.com was still available and unfortunately its no longer around. Such a shame too, tons of information was on there plus lots of tips/tricks.

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
Badger
Valued Member
Badger



Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeTue Jan 30, 2024 12:21 pm

Nice work mate.    Well done.

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeTue Jan 30, 2024 3:48 pm

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5662-L

Not bad, just some dried residue to clean up.
The real issue is the old o-ring is broken so I ordered a new one for the front carb and a new gasket for the rear carb.
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5670-L

This is the paint I use, SprayMax 2K (2 part). I'm going simple and just painting it black so two cans of black and two cans of clear gloss. The paint is not inexpensive, four cans came to $128 which is about the same as buying the paint and additives to use my gun, but it is easy and the spray nozzle is amazingly good. I wish the nozzle would fit regular spray cans. Both the color coat and clear coat is fuel proof catalyzed two part paint mixed in the can. It has a short life once the inner seal is broken and the two parts mixed so they are a single use spray can. Plan accordingly.

To paint the tank I made a block-off for the removed petcock (valve) out of a little scrap aluminum angle and a bit of gasket sheet so that I could clean the tank inside:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5707-L

And screwed it in place:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5709-L


I always find a way to make a mess and this time it was doing the white vinegar soak treatment:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5713-L

I put 4 gallons in and let it sit for several days then poured it back into the bottles through a filter in a funnel to see what it looked like:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5711-L

Unfortunately I overfilled the first bottle so my shop smelled like vinegar for a couple weeks.

There was a lot more rust than I expected so I repeated the soak several times until there was few particles in the filter, then I put a length of chain inside the tank with two gallons of the vinegar and slowly slid the chain back and forth inside while rotating the the tank to get every inch scrubbed several times, including the top.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5710-L

While the tank was getting cleaned inside I rebuilt the petcock.
With the rebuild kit on hand I was ready to open it up and see how it looked:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5718-L

Surprise!

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5721-L

It was fine inside. I have never rebuilt a vacuum controlled petcock before so it was very interesting to see how it works by taking it apart.

It has two sides, one is for the vacuum operation and the other is for the fuel flow selector.
With no experience and no instructions I figured out the rubber diaphragm has to be squeezed through the fixed plate center hole...

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5726-LIf you can see that?

With the vacuum side reassembled I took apart the fuel side:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5743-L
 
That looked more familiar and it was also just a little dirty and the rubber parts were showing age:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5743-L
While it probably would have worked as it was it was good to replace the old parts and give it new life.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5747-L

The rubber o-ring to seal it to the tank was the only bad piece and it did need replacing.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5749-L

With that done it was time to build the paint booth in the shop.
I use PVC pipe and corner connectors to make the inexpensive temporary shelter:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska IMG_20231225_155825565-L

I have less room in the shop since my last project (too many bikes now) so I could only make it half the usual size and that did make the results not as good because I got a lot more overspray on the parts...
I use a box fan to exhaust the fumes outside under the garage door. I put a regular furnace/ac filter in front of it to keep the paint off the fan. I use cardboard to block the bottom of the garage door opening when painting.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska IMG_20231225_155842501-L
LED light tubes help visibility and cheap plastic sheeting closes it in:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5776-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5777-L

I hung the parts from the lights.
I had to wait a week for the temperature to get warm enough that opening the garage door 21" for the fan (in the box with the filter) to slide out under the door didn't lower the inside temp too much. Once the outside temp was in the mid 20's F I was able to spray....

Time for me to go to work now, more later.

Billybop90 likes this post

Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeTue Jan 30, 2024 10:17 pm

I missed one picture I see, the paint can picture:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Gopr5610
Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeWed Jan 31, 2024 2:08 am

Time to take a seat.
And recover it....
I had returned the replacement I got on Ebay since it was just a flat piece of vinyl, the darts they had stitched in not only didn't match the shape of the seat, once the cover was pulled tight on the foam none of the darts even came near the foam or base.

But Robyn made one for me from the grey vinyl she bought locally.

The old and new:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5781-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5782-L

I started at the break and worked both sides back:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5784-L

Then forward:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5785-L

The finished look:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5786-L

On the bike:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5796-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5798-L

In that picture you can see the test tank for gas hanging on the left grip.
It's an inexpensive plastic minibike gas tank from Amazon.


Next up was to bleed the new ss brake line:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5801-L

Another inexpensive Amazon buy, the bleed bottle with check valve and magnet glued to the bottle to hang it.

Next up is paint!
Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeWed Jan 31, 2024 2:20 am

It warmed up from zero F to the mid 20's so I got everything ready to spray, including myself:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5829-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5832-L


The garage door open 21" with the box fan stuck out under it and cardboard blocking the rest of the door. Unfortunately that leaves the opening above the door all the way across to let warm air out and cold air in. The shop heater (gas furnace ceiling mounted) stays on all the time. The temp paint booth has a filter for make-up air coming in. I also have a small electric heater inside going the whole time. Not ideal but we do what we can, eh?

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5835-L



No pictures while spraying so here is the end result:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5833-L

Multiple coats a few minutes apart as the instructions call for.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5839-L

I let it dry for a few days, Mostly because I can only play in the shop an hour or two on maybe two nights during the week and maybe 5 hours total on the weekend.

How did it turn out?

Stay tuned...
Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeWed Jan 31, 2024 3:31 pm

How it turned out...
Easily my worst paint job ever.
There was a lot of dry overspray, dust, and other trash in the paint.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5841-L

I should have sanded it with 1000 first but I stuck with the 2000 and sanded all the pieces

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5846-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5847-L

When it warmed up again I sprayed the clear coat:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5850-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5857-L

The clear turned out better but also had more trash on it then usual so when it was dry I pulled the plastic off and set up a buffing table to clean it up:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Gopr5911

After I was done and reading more online about my paint issues I realized I had made several mistakes.
1. I put the makeup air filter in the top plastic instead of at floor level where I had always placed it before. My reasoning was to not pick up floor dust. The reality was that with the intake above it created a swirling airflow in the booth. There was paint overspray on the light tubes! And my face mask. And everything inside.
2. The small size of the booth left not enough room to hang or place parts far enough away from the part I was painting.
3. After seeing the results in the black I should have figured out why and how the trash was getting on the paint instead of using the same setup for the clear.
4. I should have waited a few months for warmer temperatures but I wanted to do it now.

Fortunately the SprayMax is very good paint and it is easy to make look very good.
All it takes is progressive wet sanding then buffing and polishing:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5858-L

The pieces are just sitting loosely in place to see how it is going to look with the grey seat.

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5859-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5860-L

Those pictures are before sanding and polishing the clearcoat so when I say it was a poor job it wasn't terrible. 

Sanding the imperfections:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5877-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5878-L

The sequence in one area:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5880-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5882-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5883-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5884-L

What I used:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5887-L

So, what's next?

Stay tuned.

Billybop90 likes this post

Back to top Go down
Billybop90
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeWed Jan 31, 2024 10:12 pm

WOW!!
You've been very busy. I can definitely relate to not wanting to wait for the weather to get better when you have a project going, made that mistake respraying the hood of a 67 Mustang coupe and paid for it. When I redid the VX in the Green color I never bothered to put any of the stickers back on. People have often asked if its a V-Twin BMW. Did you order some new stickers for your bike or will it be "Au Natural". Whom did you order you SS brake lines thru?

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeFri Feb 02, 2024 5:14 am

I got the decals (I call them stickers but the gent who makes them calls them decals) from the island of Malta.

The white backing gets carefully peeled off and it requires some care to keep the lettering attached to the clear facing to apply them to the surface:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5932-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5933-L

After rubbing it on firmly the plastic facing peels off:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5934-L

And that's how it looks:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5935-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5936-L

And the VX800 goes on:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5899-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5901-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5938-L


Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5941-L

And finally I rolled it off the lift:

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5944-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5945-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5949-L

Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska GOPR5952-L

I'm happy with how it has turned out and I want to get it outside for some better pictures and to start it up and let it get warmed up.

Unfortunately the temperature was -11 F this morning and only warmed up to -4 F in the heat (?) of the day. Monday we got another 14" of snow and I need to clear a path from the shop out to the garage. But that's on hold because the gas heater in the shop died sometime Tuesday so when I went out to the shop after work on Wednesday it was only 24 F inside. I have a lot of cans of spray paint as well as cans of latex and oil paints as well as dozens of bottles of various liquids that should not be frozen. Argh! I worked on the heater with no success and after 3 hours I called the pro's and got an appointment asap which turned out to be tonight. Far too cold for me to work out there and the tech wasn't able to figure out what the problem is and will return tomorrow. Supposed to be -15 F tonight.

I set up two electric space heaters in the shop Wednesday and they are able to keep the temperature a little above freezing. 
The joys of living in Alaska are many but the cold isn't one of them.

I am hopeful the heater will get fixed tomorrow.  thumup

Billybop90 and Graywulf like this post

Back to top Go down
John Silver
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSun Feb 04, 2024 6:42 pm

Bravissimo, grande e ottimo lavoro e a temperature che non aiutano.


thumup

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
John Silver
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSun Feb 04, 2024 6:50 pm

my bike suzuki VX800 93' with sidecar EML CT 2000Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Suzuki11
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Suzuki10Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Suzuki11
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Suzuki10

JagLite, Billybop90 and Graywulf like this post

Back to top Go down
JagLite
Member




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSun Feb 04, 2024 6:59 pm

Your combination is fantastic! I'm sure the leading link forks give you a much better steering feel since the bike doesn't lean. They give it a proper castor angle instead of the excessive rake of the tele forks? A very unique bike and a joy to ride. Thanks for posting the pictures!
Back to top Go down
John Silver
Prospect




Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeSun Feb 04, 2024 7:05 pm

Hi, yes the earless type fork is good for sidecar, as it does not sink in braking and is much lighter to maneuver. the sidecar is from a company that makes them in Holland, it is made of fiberglass and suitable for carrying two people.
The coupling to the suzuki VX800 is very well done, I am thrilled.

I congratulate you again on your fine work and great patience.

JagLite likes this post

Back to top Go down
Sponsored content





Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Empty
PostSubject: Re: Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska   Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitime

Back to top Go down
 
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska
Back to top 
Page 1 of 1
 Similar topics
-
» Anchorage Alaska Saying hello
» VX800 Symptons and Cause
» From an XV250 to a VX800
» Screen for a VX800
» vx800 mix adjustment

Permissions in this forum:You cannot reply to topics in this forum
Suzuki 800 Intruder Club & Forum :: The Garage :: General Aftermarkets & Modifications-
Jump to:  
Slide Show
A random selection of suzuki800.com member bikes.
Latest topics
» 12inch apes
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Mbroom21 Tue Apr 16, 2024 12:54 pm

» Aye what's happenin'?
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby 717RedRumBob Fri Apr 12, 2024 6:50 am

» Handle bars rotation for comfort
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Badger Thu Apr 11, 2024 1:20 pm

» Hello!
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby GregWidger Mon Apr 01, 2024 9:16 pm

» Hey to all
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby alongfortheride Tue Mar 26, 2024 9:41 pm

» Just saying hello as asked... plus a question.
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby SAM11206 Wed Mar 20, 2024 6:34 pm

» Hello!
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Onigatudor Wed Mar 20, 2024 2:39 pm

» Choke plunger
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby flying1 Wed Mar 13, 2024 4:43 pm

» Hello intruder people
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby nano Tue Mar 05, 2024 2:19 pm

» Hi from North east England
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Brianhuck Sat Mar 02, 2024 7:30 pm

» VX800 - Wiring issue colours & diagram?
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Billybop90 Fri Mar 01, 2024 12:44 am

» Looking for a set of Leg wind deflectors for a C50 Boulivard.
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Aikido789 Sat Feb 24, 2024 10:11 am

» Saying hello from Cheshire
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby bernard chaddock Wed Feb 21, 2024 4:58 pm

» ola de portugal
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby fabio almeida Tue Feb 20, 2024 9:28 am

» Hello from Texas
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby icoolwecool99@gmail.com Mon Feb 19, 2024 9:47 pm

» VX800 vacuum hose(s) 1996
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Billybop90 Fri Feb 16, 2024 7:16 pm

» Chrome Fender Tips - Volusia VL800, Boulevard C50T
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby SWEET Fri Feb 16, 2024 6:25 pm

» New to the site
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby VAI777 Tue Feb 13, 2024 3:32 pm

» oldies but goldies
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby redevil Tue Feb 13, 2024 10:59 am

» My new M800
Waking up a Sleeping VX800 in Alaska Icon_minitimeby Urko Sun Feb 11, 2024 11:12 am

Log in
Username:
Password:
Log in automatically: 
:: I forgot my password