Sunday 20 October 2013

Engine out

Today a major milestone was achieved, with the help of Tim, the engine is out of the bike!

The bike in the background is actually
quicker than the Hayabusa right now
This weekend was mainly spent doing that, with the last few bolts being a bit of a pain. Luckily I'd read ahead in the workshop manual and saw that a special Suzuki tool was needed to get some of the engine mounts out. Looking online and these go for about £90 which seemed a bit steep to me, so I looked on a few forums and a bunch of people make their own out of a long socket and an Dremel (note, it pains me to call it a Dremel, that's like calling a vacuum cleaner a Hoover, but still, everyone knows what I mean if I say Dremel). However, I don't have a Moto-Tool Dremel and it looked difficult, so eBay helped me buy a Chinese knock off version of the Suzuki tool for a fraction of the price, God bless the Chinese and their lack of acknowledgement of international copyright.

"I'm gonna make you great again"
To be fair, the tool worked well and all but one of the engine mounts came off quite easily, there was one however which took some leverage and I was pooing myself a bit that it was going to snap off as I was using a 2 foot scaffold to help turn it. It was all good though, it came out eventually so then it was a case of lowering the engine out and popping it on the side for a clean, oh and that damn exhaust manifold bolt needs extracting.

Steve at work lent me his engine hoist, so Tim and I set that up. Tim thought that we'd better test it first so he hoisted me up using it. It's good to try these things :) However, we're missing the chain to connect the hoist to the engine, so there's no trying it for size just yet.


My new cafe racer




Wednesday 16 October 2013

More Busa Work

I've spent the last couple of weeks continuing to strip the bike engine.

I managed to get hold of a good workshop manual that has a step-by-step guide on removing the engine which I'm following religiously. On top of that, I'm labeling everything, although I'm labeling it with what I think it is, so as long as I still think it's that when I'm connecting it back up again, I'll be ok.

Obviously there have been a few incidents along the way, luckily there have been no more smashing lights however. In getting the fuel tank off, I had to clamp some pipes to stop the fuel spilling. It turns out that cable ties aren't adequate for clamping pipes so there was a minor fuel spillage on my garage floor. Never mind, it probably needed a wash anyway.

Next, the radiators had to go, yes, I spilt the coolant too. My garage floor is now spotless. But off came the rad and a bunch of other bits too.

I drained the oil, I'm learning, I didn't spill that, in fact I left it draining for a few hours while I carried on and then put the oil screw back in finger tight and locked up one night. Next morning there was oil all over the floor, apparently finger tight isn't good enough and there was still some oil in the system. Now you thought my floor was clean before? It could now double as a set in a Mr. Muscle advert.
Proper engine bits here!

Anyway, back to pulling bits off the bike. It's quite an enjoyable task, and it really makes you appreciate the work that goes into designing the things. It's a 14 year old design but it's also still a 200mph bike and there are sensors just about everywhere. I take my hat off to Suzuki. 


Ooops
Along the way there was one mishap with one of the manifold bolts, it kind of broke which is going to be a real pain to get out, I'll wait until the engine is out I think as it's at an awkward angle to work at.

The workshop manual has 12 pages on how to remove the engine, although some of the bullet points refer you to another section which is another 4 pages long. However, I've broken the back of it now, and I think I'm probably only about an hour away of getting the lump out.

So why stop I hear you ask?
Well, because of torque. You see, although I now boast a moderate toolkit, I don't have any BIG tools, like 32mm and 36mm sockets needed for the front sprocket and rear axle. I tried and tried and still couldn't blow the house down (sorry, wrong story) couldn't get them to budge, so I called in Tim to assist. The front sprocket is a 2 man job anyway as someone needs to stand on the rear brake which you apply brute force, but with my wiener socket wrench, we couldn't get it to move. It was the same story with the rear axle.

Luckily Paul at work has some decent wrenches and a nut cracker, and Mike has a 36mm socket which I borrowed. With these, the rear axle nut (72ft/lb) came off quite easily, but I haven't managed to get the front sprocket nut off yet (105fl/lb), but then I have been trying to press the brake myself while also using the wrench (all those years of Twister haven't paid off). So I'll call in help again probably this weekend.

So although there has been progress, it's been pretty slow, but it has been educational.

Here's a picture from a few nights ago, further bits have come off since this was taken but only little bits.



And to think I never liked naked bikes

Ninja edit: The front sprocket nut is now off too, hurrah!

Wednesday 2 October 2013

Stripping

I needed to strip, in fact I spent most of the night stripping. Haha, I'm so funny, I meant stripping the bike, oh how we all laughed.


Before I got to work on it.
I needed several parts from the Hayabusa, things like the dashboard, radiator, wiring loom, mirrors, switching gear, oh and that little bit called the engine.

The rest of the bits have a date on eBay, but that's a little way off yet.

I'd delayed pulling the bike apart as I was having fun using it for my daily commute, with my KTM still being repaired from it's incident with a Land Rover  (stupid woman!), I'd only had my DRZ-400 all summer. So it was quite nice to have something with a bit more umph. Now I only live 3-4 miles from work, but it's odd how occasionally it would take me 15 miles to get home :)


A pile of plastic
Anyway, the time had come, I had to start work on it, and it was coming to the end of the month, so I needed to get it SORNed before I lost another month's tax.

The fairings came off quite easily, taking bikes apart is much easier when you don't have to remember or think about how to put them back together again afterwards. So after a couple of hours, I had a pile of plastic. The nose was a little trickier, but it soon relinquished, and it was just after taking this off when I thought that the bike was still in fully running order...

I wasn't about to blast off with a new naked version of a 'busa, but I did need to take some pics and videos. So that I knew what the startup sequence looked like, I filmed that to compare with when I had rewired it all for the car.

I then had the bright idea of firing up the engine, to record the sound of the cans so that when I sold them, I could demonstrate how good they sounded.
This is what happened:


Yes, after blipping the throttle, the bike was such a monster that the ceiling lights fell down and smashed. I think that's enough stripping for tonight!

Here's where I'm up to: