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Not had an aftermarket one until this VFR. My FJR1300 has it stock. Will say that after riding the VFR with the gear indicator, I'll be adding to any bike that doesn't have one. Handy device for sure to keep me checking for 7th gear.
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Folks, I just finished checking the valve lash on my 98 with 52,000 miles. I didn't have to swap out any shim, but here are my lessons learned for the check itself. 1. Don't do it. My valves were all in spec after 52,000 miles. Hard miles. Felony speeding miles. Multiple excursions to the redline at full throttle every ride, for years on end. If you have a dedicated track bike you may need to do valve checks. Short of that, I'd skip it. 2. If you simply cannot do that, check only the rear cylinders. They are much easier to reach. You can leave the airbox in place. In fact you can leave the gas tank connectors attached and just move the tank out of the way. If the rear valves are in spec, skip the fronts and reassemble the bike. 3. If you simply can't do that, the fronts require some more digging. First, the bottom of the air box must come off. It has eleven (11!) hose connections and three electrical connections. Figure out a way to keep track of all of them. The radiators, oil cooler, and oil cooler bracket must be moved out of the way. It was pretty easy to drain the coolant and disconnect the radiators, so just get on with it. The oil cooler and bracket come off easily. The valves themselves are actually easy to reach (easier than the rears) once all the stuff is out of the way. 4. When reassembling, install the airbox bottom BEFORE you install the roil cooler and radiators. It's damn near impossible to get the hoses at the front of the box connected with those things in the way. That's all I had. It wasn't too bad. Feel free to ask questions.
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Gen 6 LED turn signal conversion hyper flash
fixit58 replied to bmatic007's question in Modification Questions
The 2 flasher units you mentioned in the links are HYPERFLASH ones. You might need particular flasher units for LED's if you want to go led bulbs that is and you would be best to cxhange them all to do that. what is wrong with the OE bulbs/flasher unit? Remember if you are in an MOT required country. the flashers have to flash at a certain speed to pass. -
Thanks for the reply, I'm actually now wondering if I should just ride the bike and get used to it without one, just back into biking after 20 odd years thought it might make things easier but never had one on any other bike.
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Novice looking for maintenance/restoration guidance
RickD replied to arnie3020's topic in Fifth Generation VFR's
Have to say I'd love to restore something like that, but that's probably to do with the fact I've never tackled anything like that before and the thought of making a silk purse out of a sows ear is more like the nightmare more experienced people have described as apposed to the dream I imagine. However I'd love to see your progress should you endeavour to go ahead with your project. 👍👍 - Today
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Malte joined the community
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sakuyaK joined the community
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Lampreia joined the community
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I think it's going to be more than a thousand. The color of the clutch cover is like a little tease and now I'm hooked on watching to see where this goes. Look forward to following along.
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Novice looking for maintenance/restoration guidance
vfrcapn replied to arnie3020's topic in Fifth Generation VFR's
I picked one up in that shape (probably worse) last year ($300) and made a runner out of it, sold it for 5x as much. But I had a garage full of extra parts laying around. If you're going to do it look for a not-too-mangled wrecked parts bike to replace all that rusted out stuff. Buying individually is going to break your bank. Like SM said, check the motor first. -
habep48060 joined the community
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I hate to say it, but $11,500 for a new bike really isn't bad at all. Not when a new I'm not saying it isn't a lot of money, but comparatively, $11K is reasonable for a nice brand new bike, especially Italian, and laden with features.
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Hello everyone. I know this question has been answered before but the solutions provided are not working for me. I recently purchased a 2007 VFR800 and the previous owner put LED turn signals in the front, which caused the signals to hyper flash. I didn't like that so I went back to stock halogen bulbs and that worked fine, no hyper flashing or anything, as expected. I went back to halogen bulbs until I got to take the upper cowl off so I can change out the turn signal relay as suggested on this site. I also purchased an additional two turn signals for the rear to replace the halogen bulbs. I got the upper cowl off and purchased a couple of relays to try (below) however I can't get the hyper flashing to stop. Are the relays I purchased not suitable for this or do I need a different kind of relay? https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073J82PNF https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CJJ4SNJR Thank you in advance for your help.
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robinras joined the community
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Healtech has great products and I use their speedohealer and quickshifter. However, the price premium on the gear indicator isn't justified when compared to ebay or AliExpress gear indicstors which are dirt cheap. I have a generic chinese one with "Honda" written on it. It was installed by the previous owner and it works just fine.
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Anton6009 joined the community
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the journey of a thousand steps begins with a single mile, or something
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🤣 Boy if that isnt wishful thinking I dont know what is lmaoo ooh I can make this part a lil nicer.... think happy thoughts... think happy thoughts....
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Chrisso joined the community
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next was to check the new engine over. did valves, replaced the thermostat and choke wax motor, added pair delete plates, and degreased. thought about swapping over the manual choke from the old engine, but decided it was probably too far gone to be used and didn't feel like changing over all the little coolant necks as well. all buttoned up, ready for its new home. more to come soon, going to take a break for now so as to avoid blowing up the forums.
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anyone know what these parts do? uh, yeah, that's really bad.... anyway. first order of business was just some minor painting. grabbed the clutch cover from the old engine since the new one has a hole in it:
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undaunted, i kept going. once the motor was out, i moved everything into my...er..."shop", and finished the teardown. on the bench is a junkyard fresh '01 motor; the original is quite likely unsalvageable as you will see shortly. also was able to source a tank and seat (buried behind the pile of fairings).
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originally i started this process on vfrworld, so some of you may have already seen this. at any rate.... hey everyone. i'm bringing this barn-find '99 back to life and thought it would be cool to document the process. bit of background: i started as a car guy many moons ago but the cost of parts just got to be too much to handle. i still wanted something fun with an engine that wouldn't make my bank account warm up for the safe word whenever i wanted to tinker with it, so a few years ago i picked up my first bike, a 2005 SV650. and it's been a revelation. not just a revelation that riding is so much more fun than driving, but that working on bikes is about a million times more enjoyable than cars. anyway, now that i've had the suzuki for a bit, i decided it was time to look for an upgrade. it's a fantastic bike for around town, but my biggest gripe is that it's just not great for long trips. i've tried doing a handful, and every time i would find myself having to hop off and take a break every 45 minutes just because of how buzzy it is, especially at highway speed. a VFR seemed like the natural choice--bigger, comfier, awesome engine, nice but not insane bump in power, honda build quality, and not a complete dad bike, plus it's always sort of been on my bucket list ever since i saw that sixth gen in my youth. so when a friend of mine passed along a craigslist ad for a very neglected but very straight and low-mileage fifth gen (with a clean title) for peanuts, i immediately hit the guy up. he told me he picked it up from someone he thought he trusted who told him it just needed tires and a chain, but it turned out the motor was seized up solid from water leaking through the flapper valve. the tank was also full of water from the keyless cap not being installed properly. understandably, he just wanted it gone. undaunted and even somewhat excited by the prospect of a little project, and also feeling kinda bad for him, i left there 900 bucks poorer with this guy in tow. then the teardown began...hoo boy.
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Burger changed their profile photo
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Ha ha! Thanks for the insight. I ran GPR-300s on the CB-1 once. They were...fine. Definitely numb compared to the more premium RoadSmarts. I'll probably just stick to the RoadSmart IIIs with the $40 rebate going on here.
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Looks like you're about midway between Point Reyes and Tomales. The Aprilia is definitely a far prettier bike than a KTM. Honda has the most sensible break-in guidelines, 'During this [first 300 mi] avoid full-throttle starts and rapid acceleration.'
- Yesterday
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I gave my VFR8X linear 0.95 kgfm springs and 15w oil, bike is nothing short of transformed. Ended up having to cut my own spacers, as the new springs were shorter than stock, but no problem tbh, epic change!
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I have a set of Roadsport2's on the 99 now. Installed them June/24; about 4-5000 km on them now. I had told myself that I'd never get Dunlops tires again, but the price was too good to pass up and I'm poor. The word that came to mind as I rode on them all last year, even when they were new, was "frumpy"....don't ask me why but that is the feeling I got from them. Not that the tires were doing anything wrong but it didn't feel like I knew what was happening with them; they numb out the feeling of the road. Would I push/trust the tires at this mileage? No, because of the front tire wear. Having said that, I wear front tires way before the rears. Thats on 3 different bikes that have had the same thing going and on 3 different tire brands; I must ride funny or different that most. (the sides wear and/or cup) Conclusion Would I buy them again? No. Have I ever bought ANY tire again? No. I'm always trying something different. Previous rubber on the same bike was a set of Metzler M7 and before that, PilotPower with the dual compound. The report that I had gotten from a few people at the time was that they liked the GPR's(I think they were using them as a cheap option to ride the track with), far as I know the Roadsports are basically the same thing. So there ya go Bmart, a review from someone that really doesn't know what the fuck is going on at the tire level in any technical fashion anyhow, so get others opinion too.
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I can't seem to not wheelie my VFRs! They just...do.
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Novice looking for maintenance/restoration guidance
Captain 80s replied to arnie3020's topic in Fifth Generation VFR's
@squirrelman@Terry -
Novice looking for maintenance/restoration guidance
Terry replied to arnie3020's topic in Fifth Generation VFR's
Good suggestion SM -
Novice looking for maintenance/restoration guidance
squirrelman replied to arnie3020's topic in Fifth Generation VFR's
first determine whether the engine is good by checking compression. if its not good, u can forget about any clean up of the rusty bits cuz its a parts bike. -
Evening all, anyone have a link for a good quality gear indicator kit for 2000 vfr800, thinking healtech but any advice is much appreciated. I'm in the uk, so probably better uk site. Thanks in advance.
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For owners of the Honda Interceptor and related Honda V4 motorcycles, for the purpose of mutual help concerning safe riding, maintenance, and performance of their motorcycles.
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By vfrpilot28 · Posted
I enjoyed reading this and seeing your story. For the love of motorcycling! -
By interceptor69 · Posted
Oops. I do believe I know how to post YT videos or they wouldn't be on YT. However I may have screwed up copying the link to the playlist. Thanks for the helpful comment. -
I think that you might not know how to post videos. You're in your YT studio in these links. You need the link to the actual video.
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