- Location
- Grand Junction, CO
I love my DR650, but it's needing some serious attention... and Winter is the perfect time to tear it down. I have 2 major projects and a few minor changes.
Big Project #1- Better front suspension. The factory DR650 forks are a non-adjustable damper rod design, very old tech that isn't easy to make them work any better. My bike has been upgraded with the heaviest front springs available for the DR, plus an aftermarket fork brace, to help tighten things up. The suspension is OK on the pavement and it works (not well) on mild dirt roads. If you push the bike hard at speed or ride some rough terrain, it's easy to bottom out the forks, and they usually hit HARD. I hate that feeling, it's not a good one.
My plan is to swap on a set of 47mm Showa forks from a 2006 Suzuki RMZ450. These are true motorcross forks with adjustable compression and rebound. This swap has been done before and it's a huge improvement over the factory DR650 forks. Here's one guys writeup-
http://hawkeye.ualr.edu/~ltjones/showa-install/rmzforkinstall.html
I picked up a set of RMZ forks and RMZ triple clamps from Ebay, as well and the other needed parts. I'll document the upgrade with all the needed parts later.
This should make a huge difference in how capable the DR is, especially at speed and in nasty terrain. I'm really excited for the improvement, once the front is taken care of, we will see how bad the rear shock works. At this point, the factory front suspension is so bad, it's hard to tell how poorly the rear shocks works.
Since the controls will be apart for the fork swap, I'm thinking hard about upgrading to the Highway Dirt Bikes handguards. I've had a few problems with my current hand guards coming loose mid-ride and the HDB guards will take care of that issue, as well as make a huge strength increase and offer some neat upgrades as well.
Big Project #2- Engine rebuild / MORE POWER! It's time to upgrade! I wanted to do this down the road, but soon sounds better! a 725cc big bore kit from ProCycle! Combined with one of their custom grind camshafts, the big bore will crank up the horsepower from a measly 36 HP stock, to close to 50 HP! Not bad for a super simple, air cooled Suzuki!
The other small projects include...
Swapping out the aftermarket gear shifter for a stock one, purchased off Ebay. The aftermarket shifter is a good deal shorter than the stocker, making it hard to shift with riding boots on.
I'm going to chop and re-weld the stock foot pegs to lower them 1 3/4" to open up the cockpit. The DR650 is pretty compact and has a low seat height, great for shorter riders but I'm 6' 4". I've dealt with it, but since the bike will be down, I might as well re-work the ergonomics.
I need to rework the rear blinkers and tail light. I moved the stock blinkers so they mounted to the plastic brake light housing, but several thousand miles later, the brake light housing is breaking and the signal's have taken a beating after vibrating on the rear rack.
So that's what I have on my plate this winter... the fork swap is the first project and hopefully I will post up some parts pics soon.
Big Project #1- Better front suspension. The factory DR650 forks are a non-adjustable damper rod design, very old tech that isn't easy to make them work any better. My bike has been upgraded with the heaviest front springs available for the DR, plus an aftermarket fork brace, to help tighten things up. The suspension is OK on the pavement and it works (not well) on mild dirt roads. If you push the bike hard at speed or ride some rough terrain, it's easy to bottom out the forks, and they usually hit HARD. I hate that feeling, it's not a good one.
My plan is to swap on a set of 47mm Showa forks from a 2006 Suzuki RMZ450. These are true motorcross forks with adjustable compression and rebound. This swap has been done before and it's a huge improvement over the factory DR650 forks. Here's one guys writeup-
http://hawkeye.ualr.edu/~ltjones/showa-install/rmzforkinstall.html
I picked up a set of RMZ forks and RMZ triple clamps from Ebay, as well and the other needed parts. I'll document the upgrade with all the needed parts later.
This should make a huge difference in how capable the DR is, especially at speed and in nasty terrain. I'm really excited for the improvement, once the front is taken care of, we will see how bad the rear shock works. At this point, the factory front suspension is so bad, it's hard to tell how poorly the rear shocks works.
Since the controls will be apart for the fork swap, I'm thinking hard about upgrading to the Highway Dirt Bikes handguards. I've had a few problems with my current hand guards coming loose mid-ride and the HDB guards will take care of that issue, as well as make a huge strength increase and offer some neat upgrades as well.
Big Project #2- Engine rebuild / MORE POWER! It's time to upgrade! I wanted to do this down the road, but soon sounds better! a 725cc big bore kit from ProCycle! Combined with one of their custom grind camshafts, the big bore will crank up the horsepower from a measly 36 HP stock, to close to 50 HP! Not bad for a super simple, air cooled Suzuki!
The other small projects include...
Swapping out the aftermarket gear shifter for a stock one, purchased off Ebay. The aftermarket shifter is a good deal shorter than the stocker, making it hard to shift with riding boots on.
I'm going to chop and re-weld the stock foot pegs to lower them 1 3/4" to open up the cockpit. The DR650 is pretty compact and has a low seat height, great for shorter riders but I'm 6' 4". I've dealt with it, but since the bike will be down, I might as well re-work the ergonomics.
I need to rework the rear blinkers and tail light. I moved the stock blinkers so they mounted to the plastic brake light housing, but several thousand miles later, the brake light housing is breaking and the signal's have taken a beating after vibrating on the rear rack.
So that's what I have on my plate this winter... the fork swap is the first project and hopefully I will post up some parts pics soon.