If anyone has fiddled with this and has some more ideas, jump right in. I hate pitfalls.....
I've been continuing the work on the front end of the bike and have acquired springs from Race Tech and their Gold Valve emulators to take the place of the stock damping rod system. I had to do a bit of machining on the old damping rods--the emulators take the place of the original compression holes, so you have to chamfer the old holes and drill appropriate new ones. Rebound holes stay the same.
To set the preload with the emulators, you have to machine spacers (aluminum tubes with steel washers on the ends) between the top of the spring and the top cap to match the weight of rider and bike. Of course this is an art rather than a science since some riders like quicker turn-in or softer bottoming, etc., and I'm new to this. I decided to make adjustable spacers utilizing aluminum, but with a stainless steel socket head cap screw (M12 x 1.75) for adjustability. This picture is of it loosely assembled--the bolt head end gets tightened into the top half with Loctite 271 red threadlocker.
Since the pictures were taken, I have decided the set screws were not enough, so I am using a thin jam nut in between the two halves and machined wrench flats on the bottom half to help seat it against the jam nut. Of course now using the set screw will be like wearing a belt AND suspenders on your pants!
The M12 x 1.75 bolts were quite heavy, so I machined them down and saved 16.2 grams per bolt. Note the drilled out center the entire length. The bolts are in compression and not shear, so strength should not diminished. Eh?
With all the new parts I am saving approximately 1/4 pound per fork tube over the stock springs as well as having a modern cartridge-style damping system. Hey, it's half a pound less for the engine to propel.
It is not on-the-fly adjustable, but with the GL1000 forks it shouldn't be too bad. If I want to change the length of the spacer, it's "just" a matter of taking off the top caps, removing the spacer and changing it's length with a couple of wrenches and putting it back in. It can be done without having to take the fork tubes out or anything so it is relatively quick. Of course I haven't had to do that yet, so it may be a P.I.T.A. and more involved than I think. Anyone familiar with this process?