01-02-2001, 09:35am
As some of you may or may not know, late last year I had a minor altercation with the ground... As the damage was not too extensive, (and on the track, making insurance claim questionable anyway), I effected repairs off my own bat.
Due to the short sales history of Hayabusas, many parts were only available genuine (e.g. mirrors) but some parts are very interchangeable with other bikes - both brake and clutch levers were available at 25%-30% of Suzuki retail price, non genuine. They were in bags labelled ZX-9 but were identical (except they had 5 settings for the clutch reach instead of 4).
Bargain! The quality was obviously down a bit (a couple metal burs needed filing off before I could slip in the hinge pin, and the adjustment wheel was hard to move) but having saved myself around $120 for the two, I was quite pleased.
Some time later, holding the clutch in while rocking the bike back onto the centre stand, the clutch lever snapped in my hand. I have now forked out the extra, and replaced it with a genuine lever at almost $100, and am thinking of replacing the brake lever.
So, some parts can be replaced non-genuine, but my advice is to consider how important is that part before making a price only decision.
Other tip - I replaced the cracked mirror with flat glass for only $15, as the amount of curvature on the original mirror did not appear to be too great. Likewise, this was a mistake, and I soon bought a genuine mirror, as the difference between the two was only really noticeable once riding.
Cheers, everyone, and safe riding
Richard
Due to the short sales history of Hayabusas, many parts were only available genuine (e.g. mirrors) but some parts are very interchangeable with other bikes - both brake and clutch levers were available at 25%-30% of Suzuki retail price, non genuine. They were in bags labelled ZX-9 but were identical (except they had 5 settings for the clutch reach instead of 4).
Bargain! The quality was obviously down a bit (a couple metal burs needed filing off before I could slip in the hinge pin, and the adjustment wheel was hard to move) but having saved myself around $120 for the two, I was quite pleased.
Some time later, holding the clutch in while rocking the bike back onto the centre stand, the clutch lever snapped in my hand. I have now forked out the extra, and replaced it with a genuine lever at almost $100, and am thinking of replacing the brake lever.
So, some parts can be replaced non-genuine, but my advice is to consider how important is that part before making a price only decision.
Other tip - I replaced the cracked mirror with flat glass for only $15, as the amount of curvature on the original mirror did not appear to be too great. Likewise, this was a mistake, and I soon bought a genuine mirror, as the difference between the two was only really noticeable once riding.
Cheers, everyone, and safe riding
Richard