I was missing your point all right. I missed the layout you were using up front. Remember the earlier Morgan 3-wheelers that had a V-Twin up front? That’s what I had in mind.
I have a parts bike with a little frame damage and I plan to use the entire rear section on my 3-wheeler. I’m not sure what I’m going to use for the front suspension but I’ll figure it out. I saw one 3-wheeler done with a Guzzi 850 and the guy managed to mount old Honda 750 front wheels to a VW beetle front end. I may have pix somewhere but it would be a stretch after all these years. If you do a search on Morgan 3-Wheeler you will see a few of the kind that I’m planning to make but I haven’t seen one done with an XS11 power plant.
Back to your project, shaft drive bikes with the crankshaft setting for and aft in the frame (Goldwing, Guzzi, BMW…) will have the shaft on the right. Bike with a transverse engine like the XS11 almost always have it on the left.
An early Goldwing rear drive may solve your drive problem. If you go with spokes rather than a mag wheel, consider sending the wheel to Buchanan’s frame and wheel shop for some sidecar duty spokes.
Geezer
I have a parts bike with a little frame damage and I plan to use the entire rear section on my 3-wheeler. I’m not sure what I’m going to use for the front suspension but I’ll figure it out. I saw one 3-wheeler done with a Guzzi 850 and the guy managed to mount old Honda 750 front wheels to a VW beetle front end. I may have pix somewhere but it would be a stretch after all these years. If you do a search on Morgan 3-Wheeler you will see a few of the kind that I’m planning to make but I haven’t seen one done with an XS11 power plant.
Back to your project, shaft drive bikes with the crankshaft setting for and aft in the frame (Goldwing, Guzzi, BMW…) will have the shaft on the right. Bike with a transverse engine like the XS11 almost always have it on the left.
An early Goldwing rear drive may solve your drive problem. If you go with spokes rather than a mag wheel, consider sending the wheel to Buchanan’s frame and wheel shop for some sidecar duty spokes.
Geezer
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