After reading here on the list multiple times that the 16" Special wheel is a 'bolt-on' to the Standard ('all you need is the specials' wheel spacer'), well... it ain't true.
I found this out today when I trial-fitted my modified HD 4-piston caliper and I couldn't even get it in between the 16" wheel and the swingarm. Mind you, it fit fine with the stock 17" wheel. At first I thought the drive splines weren't going in all the way, but after eliminating that, I started measuring things. After an hour, I figured out that the difference is where the mounting face for the rotor is; on the Special wheel, it's .300" further out. WTF? I'm still trying to figure out just why they did that, but the interesting thing is if you reuse the stock rear brake, the steel caliper bracket ends up seriously misaligned. You have to discard the spacer that goes between the two stock 'standard' caliper brackets to make it fit in the swingarm, and that twists the steel bracket into a real bind. So it you do this swap, you'll have to bend/tweak that bracket until everything lines back up. For a bike that wasn't made that long or in that many models, there sure are a lot of inexplicable differences. I mean, good design in one place, then move to a 'WTH were they thinking?' spot...
I'm mostly just venting (I spent about three hours on this today) but I'm over it now. The Harley caliper will make another trip through the mill to get whittled on some more until it fits... and it will, I swear.
'78E original owner
I found this out today when I trial-fitted my modified HD 4-piston caliper and I couldn't even get it in between the 16" wheel and the swingarm. Mind you, it fit fine with the stock 17" wheel. At first I thought the drive splines weren't going in all the way, but after eliminating that, I started measuring things. After an hour, I figured out that the difference is where the mounting face for the rotor is; on the Special wheel, it's .300" further out. WTF? I'm still trying to figure out just why they did that, but the interesting thing is if you reuse the stock rear brake, the steel caliper bracket ends up seriously misaligned. You have to discard the spacer that goes between the two stock 'standard' caliper brackets to make it fit in the swingarm, and that twists the steel bracket into a real bind. So it you do this swap, you'll have to bend/tweak that bracket until everything lines back up. For a bike that wasn't made that long or in that many models, there sure are a lot of inexplicable differences. I mean, good design in one place, then move to a 'WTH were they thinking?' spot...
I'm mostly just venting (I spent about three hours on this today) but I'm over it now. The Harley caliper will make another trip through the mill to get whittled on some more until it fits... and it will, I swear.
'78E original owner
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