I just realized it has been a long time since I posted on this one, so here we go. The remainder of this season was fraught with testing and tuning, not only of the engine, but the chassis. With some much needed help I was able to test a few different sets of shock setup with different springs and preload settings, but nothing really stuck. Tally was a month before Barber and while I was able to get out on track and keep the oil inside the engine, it just didn't handle right. Race Tech shocks were on order and promised right before Barber in early October so at least I had that going for me.
Fast forward to Barber weekend, no shocks. Race Tech makes a great product but it's very frustrating when they say one thing and do another. At this point I had the same shocks from Tally, with stiffer springs and with this being the last race of the year I had to send it! Friday practice as filled with the standard wallowing feeling in the rear end. I started conversations with many people that day and one thing started to surface, the tires. I was running the Metzeler RaceTech RR and people had more than once said, unprompted that they felt a very loose, wallowing sensation on those tires. Well sh*t, there you have it. Lucky for me, a Continental dealer was there and had fresh set of Conti 3CR tires ready to, of course I wanted another backup set for my Sportsman bike, so $880 later I was on the move. I had the wheels off the bike and dropped off at a vendor who does tires for races at all the rounds and was hopeful that this would be the right move. Even if it wasn't, I'd have another set for my S750 bike. Since there is no practice on Sat/Sun at Barber I had the time to get the bike put back together, but no time for practice, so I set up the pressures on those tires just like I did on my S750 bike and lined up on the grid.
Im happy to report that that uneasy feeling had subsided and I was able to finally ride the bike without that looming. Times weren't great but I finally got a feeling for the bike. The new Race Tech shocks are now on the bike and the offseason preparations are well under way.
The tweaks to the bike are few this time around which is nice. I will pull the engine and split the cases so I can replace the rivets in the primary tensioner both top and bottom, as I broke a number of them on my other bike and want to make sure that doesn't happen here.
I am gathering parts for a new engine build right now. Cases, auto crank and Carillo rods are off to Kenny at Cycle X for all the works. Upper case boring, crank bore line lapping and bearing fitment, crank lightening/balancing, and rod installation with fresh bearings. The Pro Cut trans is sitting in the basement and with that, the bottom end is nearly wrapped up.
Sorry for the lack of pictures on this one, but there should be plenty of eye candy coming soon, as I prep for the first race of the year, as AHRMA returns to the high banks of Daytona on January 7-9. If you have any way possible to make this weekend and catch some ARHMA racing, this is the one. It will be a full Classic Moto Fest with multiple disciplines of racing and tons of stuff going on all weekend. This is also the kickoff of Vintage Superbike Heavyweight as the Vintage Cup class, making the first round at Daytona even more special in so many ways.
44 days until I'm Daytona bound!