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  • XS11 to thunderbolt trail affects

    I am in the process of swapping my forks for a cartridge style off of a Buell thunderbolt.

    They are about 2 inches shorter and a 1 inch smaller rim. Based on a trail calculator I should be going from the stock 5.66 in trail to about 5.1. Rear will be getting a matching 17 rim.

    That should be stable enough at speed right? Seems to be within safe tolerances and should possible even improve steering a bit.
    72 Cb900 C
    72 Cb350 Track Bike
    86 Rebel 450
    79 XS11 Standard

  • #2
    I am no expert in this, but even raising your fork tubes in the triple tree clamps can make a marked difference. I know this isn't the same thing that you are talking about, but small changes in the geometry can make a difference and you are talkin big differences I think.
    Skids (Sid Hansen)

    Down to one 1978 E. Stock air box with K&N filter, 81H pipes and carbs, 8500 feet elevation.

    Comment


    • #3
      Hey Joep7,

      You will still have quite a bit of trail there, and these things are heavy steering to begin with. I'm running about 2" of trail due to my bent frame/neck that I wasn't aware of for 10 years after a bad front ender. It's quite stable at speeds, and is VERY easy to turn! It almost likes to OVERSTEER but I've gotten used to it. SO...with ~5" of trail, you should be more than stable, and might get a little less required effort in steering as well.

      T.C.
      T. C. Gresham
      81SH "Godzilla" . . .1179cc super-rat.
      79SF "The Teacher" . . .basket case!
      History shows again and again,
      How nature points out the folly of men!

      Comment


      • #4
        Joep, before you do anything permanent to the front of your bike, try dropping your original forks 2 inches up through the triple clamps (maybe 1/2" more to emulate the smaller wheel) and check your clearance.
        It'd be pointless swapping front ends to improve the ride and handling if you can't lean it into the turns.
        79 SF Special W/ Stock all original motor @ 384,000klms
        Stock exhaust, stock airbox, XJ sump, 78E carbs, Xs1100RH seat, Bosch superhorns, 5/8ths front M/c, braided lines, sintered SBS pads, drilled discs, progressive springs, 8" 50w HID headlight 4300K, 2 x 50w HID spiral driving lights, KONI shocks, Spade fuse box
        *Touring mode - Plexistar 2 screen, Gearsack rack & bag & saddlebags, homebuilt towbar
        *"The Keg"- UC torana hubs, XS11 discs, Tokico 4 spot calipers

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by TopCatGr58 View Post
          Hey Joep7,

          You will still have quite a bit of trail there, and these things are heavy steering to begin with. I'm running about 2" of trail due to my bent frame/neck that I wasn't aware of for 10 years after a bad front ender. It's quite stable at speeds, and is VERY easy to turn! It almost likes to OVERSTEER but I've gotten used to it. SO...with ~5" of trail, you should be more than stable, and might get a little less required effort in steering as well.

          T.C.
          Well I am machining new triple clamps anyway so maybe by changing the offset I can get it down to like a trail of 4. How far is too far?
          72 Cb900 C
          72 Cb350 Track Bike
          86 Rebel 450
          79 XS11 Standard

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Eveready1100 View Post
            Joep, before you do anything permanent to the front of your bike, try dropping your original forks 2 inches up through the triple clamps (maybe 1/2" more to emulate the smaller wheel) and check your clearance.
            It'd be pointless swapping front ends to improve the ride and handling if you can't lean it into the turns.
            Not possible unfortunately due to the fact that this was the bike that had a bad 2nd gear fix which caused the motor to seize between 1st and 2nd gear. Everything is torn apart on it. :/
            72 Cb900 C
            72 Cb350 Track Bike
            86 Rebel 450
            79 XS11 Standard

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by joep7 View Post
              Well I am machining new triple clamps anyway so maybe by changing the offset I can get it down to like a trail of 4. How far is too far?
              Hey there,

              I'm no engineer. I will say that 2" seems a bit too far as I stated because of the oversteer, and even though it's fairly stable up to about 90 mph, it does seem a little wiggly above that, but part of that is also the aerodynamics due to my square edged saddlebags.

              I don't know what the value/trail is when folks swap the special TT onto a Standard frame/forks....the offset is closer to the steering neck on the Special TT's vs. the Standards. Fred might know the value, he's talked and promoted this type of mod for lightening the steering for folks with sidecar hacks.

              If you're really good at math, then it might be simply extrapolated by knowing/measuring the amount of offset of the Specials TT's vs. the Standard TT's and then just calculate the resultant different location of the standard front wheel, forks, and axle, and figure out the trail amount then.

              Folks have stated that the OEM value is ~6". And these bikes were built/designed for SPEED, and I would think for stabilty and safety at that speed, and so I would think Yamaha would have set it at that for a reason, but we also know how they OVERENGINEERED a lot of what went into the XS11, and so perhaps they also overhedged the trail amount to be on the safer/more stable side vs. manueravability??

              I know sport bikes have much smaller trail values, but they also have dampening rods attached to the steering components!

              T.C.
              T. C. Gresham
              81SH "Godzilla" . . .1179cc super-rat.
              79SF "The Teacher" . . .basket case!
              History shows again and again,
              How nature points out the folly of men!

              Comment


              • #8
                Hey, where is that free-body diagram for engineering? Just kidding. There is a lot of engineering involved just to get into the ballpark before the trial-and error tests. But...you will soon know if you nailed it. Good luck man!
                Skids (Sid Hansen)

                Down to one 1978 E. Stock air box with K&N filter, 81H pipes and carbs, 8500 feet elevation.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by TopCatGr58 View Post
                  Hey there,

                  I'm no engineer. I will say that 2" seems a bit too far as I stated because of the oversteer, and even though it's fairly stable up to about 90 mph, it does seem a little wiggly above that, but part of that is also the aerodynamics due to my square edged saddlebags.

                  I don't know what the value/trail is when folks swap the special TT onto a Standard frame/forks....the offset is closer to the steering neck on the Special TT's vs. the Standards. Fred might know the value, he's talked and promoted this type of mod for lightening the steering for folks with sidecar hacks.

                  If you're really good at math, then it might be simply extrapolated by knowing/measuring the amount of offset of the Specials TT's vs. the Standard TT's and then just calculate the resultant different location of the standard front wheel, forks, and axle, and figure out the trail amount then.

                  Folks have stated that the OEM value is ~6". And these bikes were built/designed for SPEED, and I would think for stabilty and safety at that speed, and so I would think Yamaha would have set it at that for a reason, but we also know how they OVERENGINEERED a lot of what went into the XS11, and so perhaps they also overhedged the trail amount to be on the safer/more stable side vs. manueravability??

                  I know sport bikes have much smaller trail values, but they also have dampening rods attached to the steering components!

                  T.C.
                  Good info thanks.

                  I moved it from the 1.25ish offset stock to 1.5. Hopefully thats not to much. Moves my trail to about 4.85.
                  72 Cb900 C
                  72 Cb350 Track Bike
                  86 Rebel 450
                  79 XS11 Standard

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Here are some drawings I did. Offset of 40mm.







                    Will have my boss look at them tomorrow to see what he thinks as far as machinability.
                    72 Cb900 C
                    72 Cb350 Track Bike
                    86 Rebel 450
                    79 XS11 Standard

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      'treeswapping

                      Originally posted by TopCatGr58 View Post
                      I don't know what the value/trail is when folks swap the special TT onto a Standard frame/forks....the offset is closer to the steering neck on the Special TT's vs. the Standards. Fred might know the value, he's talked and promoted this type of mod for lightening the steering for folks with sidecar hacks.
                      Hi TC,
                      The different look of Standards and Specials is mainly cosmetic, both bikes have exactly the same rake and trail.
                      My Clymers ain't handy right now but my memory sez rake is 29ยบ and trail is 5.3" on both bikes.
                      What happens when you put the longer reach Standard 'trees on a Special is that the fork tubes get moved forward which reduces the Special's trail by ~2"
                      Which lightens the steering which is a good thing on a sidecar rig.
                      What happens when you go t'other way and put the Special's shorter reach 'trees on a Standard is that the fork tubes get moved back which increases the Standard's trail by ~2".
                      Which will develop your shoulders like Atlas if you ride it like that.
                      Fred Hill, S'toon
                      XS11SG with Spirit of America sidecar
                      "The Flying Pumpkin"

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Joep,
                        I just went into the garage and measured my bike to give you some point of reference to what I was talking about. With it sitting level on the ground, I have roughly 8 inches of clearance to the lowest point under the motor, and I'm running 14" shocks on the rear that lifts the bike a fair bit as well. Simulated dropping the front and ended up with that lowest point dropping to just over 6 inches.
                        Now comes the interesting bit........
                        Got a sheet of plywood and rested the bottom edge against the outer edge of the tyres and leant the sheet up against the bike which resulted in a lean angle of only about 20 degrees from vertical before hitting hard points.
                        So are you looking at putting a sidecar on it??
                        79 SF Special W/ Stock all original motor @ 384,000klms
                        Stock exhaust, stock airbox, XJ sump, 78E carbs, Xs1100RH seat, Bosch superhorns, 5/8ths front M/c, braided lines, sintered SBS pads, drilled discs, progressive springs, 8" 50w HID headlight 4300K, 2 x 50w HID spiral driving lights, KONI shocks, Spade fuse box
                        *Touring mode - Plexistar 2 screen, Gearsack rack & bag & saddlebags, homebuilt towbar
                        *"The Keg"- UC torana hubs, XS11 discs, Tokico 4 spot calipers

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Eveready1100 View Post
                          Joep,
                          I just went into the garage and measured my bike to give you some point of reference to what I was talking about. With it sitting level on the ground, I have roughly 8 inches of clearance to the lowest point under the motor, and I'm running 14" shocks on the rear that lifts the bike a fair bit as well. Simulated dropping the front and ended up with that lowest point dropping to just over 6 inches.
                          Now comes the interesting bit........
                          Got a sheet of plywood and rested the bottom edge against the outer edge of the tyres and leant the sheet up against the bike which resulted in a lean angle of only about 20 degrees from vertical before hitting hard points.
                          So are you looking at putting a sidecar on it??
                          That bad huh? What does it start hitting at a 20 degree lean?
                          72 Cb900 C
                          72 Cb350 Track Bike
                          86 Rebel 450
                          79 XS11 Standard

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by joep7 View Post
                            That bad huh? What does it start hitting at a 20 degree lean?
                            Pegs are first to touch down but they fold back so no worry there. Next is the lever arm on the left side of the center stand followed by the center stands foot on the right side. Beyond that I am unsure. I guess if I took off my center stand I could find out but wont happen until next year.
                            Last edited by WMarshy; 10-23-2013, 11:08 AM.
                            '79 XS11 F
                            Stock except K&N

                            '79 XS11 SF
                            Stock, no title.

                            '84 Chevy K-10 "Big Blue"
                            GM 350, Muncie SM465, NP208, GM 10 Bolt with 3.42gears turnin 31x10.5 Baja Claws

                            "What they do have is an implacable, unrelenting presence and movement that bespeaks massive power lurking behind paint and chrome. They don't wail like a screeching ninja, the don't rumble like a harley. They just growl like a spactic, stressed out badger waiting to rip your face off and eat your soul." Trainzz~RIP~

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              ok good to know. I think I am going to try to raise the rear a bit. If I need to I may make fork extenders like xschop did. Tho I dont think he ever ended up needing them.
                              72 Cb900 C
                              72 Cb350 Track Bike
                              86 Rebel 450
                              79 XS11 Standard

                              Comment

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