Forum CEO HispanicSlammer Posted April 20, 2011 Forum CEO Share Posted April 20, 2011 I have about 9000 miles on the veefalo now and I am always getting ready for the next big ride, this season I needed to inspect the airfilter and I just went ahead and bought a K&N online - they are about $50 bucks for a vfr1200 average. I took both pictures and video for this project http://www.vfrdiscussion.com/uploads/videos/491/fairing.mp4 There is no hd segment so turn off HD, then I took pictures along the way too, and I half arsed installed a few pieces of a tank slapper kit on the most worn parts of the body work of the bike. Install the rest later when time allows. Tank Slapper kit vfr1200 I have only installed one of the front covers and the tank pieces where my jacket rubs against the tank Location of the large plastic fastener Removing the large snap in plastic fastner this fastens the fairing to the tank cover Removing a small plastic fastner left side fairing inside the wheel well hard to reach behind the forks push in the cap and remove the fastener To reinstall the small plastic fastner pull out the rod or cap this will allow the fastener to be able to fit back into the hole removing the last plastic fastener from the left side fairing lower push in the cap and pull out the fastener Removing lower right side fairing 5mm bolt bolts to the radiator skirt removing trim piece fastener from the left side tank cover push in the cap and remove the fastner removing the rear 5mm bolt on the left side tank cover removing right tank cover front fastner push in the cap and pull out the fastner Pulling out the left fairing from the left tank cover the snap in connector was removed first and a built in plastic dowel guides into a hole in the tank cover to line up in one smooth shape Removing 5mm bolt from rear of the left side fairing Removing upper 5mm bolt there is also a phillips head screw below that you do not need to remove removing trim piece fastener from the left side tank cover push in the cap and remove the fastner removing the rear 5mm bolt on the left side tank cover removing right tank cover front fastner push in the cap and pull out the fastner Pulling out the left fairing from the left tank cover the snap in connector was removed first and a built in plastic dowel guides into a hole in the tank cover to line up in one smooth shape Right side fairing removed Fairing fasteners 4 small push in plastic fastners 3 5mm bolts and one larger snap in fastner with a pull out handle I used the small hex tool to push in the caps to get out the smaller plastic fasteners removeing the 5mm bolt from the front of the tank cover Fuel pump new style fuel feed connections level sensor and fuel pump power connectors no longer has a fuel return hose just a vent hose and an over fill drain hose for 3 hoses instead of four like on older models 5mm bolt hole to the right bottom Pulling off the tank cover removed the four fastners pulled out the plugs and now snapping off the heavy duty velcro style fasteners Inside a tank cover uses heavy duty velcro snap on fastener two guided plug into grommets two 5mm bolts and two small plastic snap in fasteners 9000 mile oem unit not too bad but full of dead bugs OEM filter compared next to KandN the OEM has a screen and a grate behind that vfr1200 kn filter pleated protusion fits faceing upward Airbox Temperature Sensor same unit used on my old 98 Coil on plugs newer coil technology no loss of voltage with coil on plug Tank Slapper Lower Tank Piece the 3m film needed to be cut to clear the vfrd graphics, they will not seal around other stickers so close to the edge. Tank Slapper Front Tank Piece Dry fitting and cutting to clear vfrd graphics EDIT adding snaps of the service manual taken by my phone (scanner not working at the moment) 2011 05 08 18 54 02 889 2011 05 08 18 53 52 992 2011 05 08 18 53 28 663 2011 05 08 18 53 19 918 2011 05 08 18 53 08 936 2011 05 08 18 52 32 746 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dutchgixxer Posted April 20, 2011 Share Posted April 20, 2011 Thanks for the How To ! Step 1 is remove the lover fairing. Then proceed as in the How To Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phoenix Posted April 20, 2011 Share Posted April 20, 2011 OMG. What is it with Honda and their fairings, lately? Waaaay too complex. BTW, I'm not a fan of the K & N air filters. I have one on my Yamaha, (--needed as part of the jetting mods I had done), and it needed some work with a dremel tool to fit in. I would never dream of using K & N's on my Honda with its ram-air set-up. My buddy, who is a bike mechanic, does not like them at all. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Forum CEO HispanicSlammer Posted April 20, 2011 Author Forum CEO Share Posted April 20, 2011 OMG. What is it with Honda and their fairings, lately? Waaaay too complex. BTW, I'm not a fan of the K & N air filters. I have one on my Yamaha, (--needed as part of the jetting mods I had done), and it needed some work with a dremel tool to fit in. I would never dream of using K & N's on my Honda with its ram-air set-up. My buddy, who is a bike mechanic, does not like them at all. I ran one on the old girl for 80,000 miles, they clog up faster then an oem but a wash and a fresh spray of K&N oil and they are good as new, garuanteed to fit or they will give you a new one. I broke one and they sent me another one free of charge - I trust the K&N from personal experience, they require maintence but then again so does the OEM or rather replacement or blowing it out. @duchgixxer - step one is not required if you undo the snap in as shown. Of course if your changing the oil then by all means go for it, add 5 minutes Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phoenix Posted April 21, 2011 Share Posted April 21, 2011 OMG. What is it with Honda and their fairings, lately? Waaaay too complex. BTW, I'm not a fan of the K & N air filters. I have one on my Yamaha, (--needed as part of the jetting mods I had done), and it needed some work with a dremel tool to fit in. I would never dream of using K & N's on my Honda with its ram-air set-up. My buddy, who is a bike mechanic, does not like them at all. I ran one on the old girl for 80,000 miles, they clog up faster then an oem but a wash and a fresh spray of K&N oil and they are good as new, garuanteed to fit or they will give you a new one. I broke one and they sent me another one free of charge - I trust the K&N from personal experience, they require maintence but then again so does the OEM or rather replacement or blowing it out. @duchgixxer - step one is not required if you undo the snap in as shown. Of course if your changing the oil then by all means go for it, add 5 minutes My buddy said that K & N is okay in a "passive system," (like my FZ's where the filter is behind the motor), but he didn't like them in ram-air applications or on cruisers where the air-filter is fed by a big scoop. He says they flow more air because their gauze-like media has bigger "holes." This lets more dirt into the motor... Not the most technical explanation, for sure--but that's perfect for me, (-I can barely change my bike's oil!!). I change the K & N on my FZ at the beginning of every season...I've never washed it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ZenMoto Posted April 21, 2011 Share Posted April 21, 2011 OMG. What is it with Honda and their fairings, lately? Waaaay too complex. Actually, once you've done it once or twice, the new fairings are quite easy to take apart, and I love that there are no obvious fasteners. I'm amazed at the creativity of the engineers that put this thing together. It actually seems easier to work on than the 4th and 5th gens I had. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Member Contributer CHUCK2 Posted April 21, 2011 Member Contributer Share Posted April 21, 2011 Hopefully this isn't another one of my dumb questions, but why does HS refer to his bike as "veefalo"? A combination of VFR & Colorado? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
stinkyfinger Posted April 30, 2011 Share Posted April 30, 2011 Hopefully this isn't another one of my dumb questions, but why does HS refer to his bike as "veefalo"? A combination of VFR & Colorado? When the bike came out, a couple of euro magazines like Motociclismo of Spain/Italy said it looked like a pissed off buffalo and referred to the bike as La búfala (spanish feminine word for Buffalo). Vee (for V4)+ falo (shortened buffalo)=veefalo. Just search for the word buffalo on this site for more details. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest GSIG Posted May 7, 2011 Share Posted May 7, 2011 Can I remove the side tank cover panels without removing the actual side fairing panels first? Can you confirm how many fixing points there are and where they are located. I think your post mentions 5 but I can only find 4. Thanks for your help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Forum CEO HispanicSlammer Posted May 9, 2011 Author Forum CEO Share Posted May 9, 2011 (edited) Hopefully this isn't another one of my dumb questions, but why does HS refer to his bike as "veefalo"? A combination of VFR & Colorado? When the bike came out, a couple of euro magazines like Motociclismo of Spain/Italy said it looked like a pissed off buffalo and referred to the bike as La búfala (spanish feminine word for Buffalo). Vee (for V4)+ falo (shortened buffalo)=veefalo. Just search for the word buffalo on this site for more details. Yea a Buffalo some say is what the vfr1200 looks like, came out of some magazines and it does look a bit like a buffalo but I did not name it veefalo that came from my buddy dutchinterceptor Can I remove the side tank cover panels without removing the actual side fairing panels first? Can you confirm how many fixing points there are and where they are located. I think your post mentions 5 but I can only find 4. Thanks for your help. No you cannot the tank cover is bolted in underneith the side fairings so you have to remove them first - I suppose you can remove the back fasteners and just pull it out of the way but that might crack the plastic? Fixing points on the fairing or the tank covers? Edit added some service manual pics to the original post Edited May 9, 2011 by HispanicSlammer Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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