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DrImodium
Guest
I bought some wire wheels off of Tkent a few months ago and finally got around to buying rubber for them last week. The bike they are going on is a GS1000, which comes with dual disks up front. The hubs on the wire wheel were pre-drilled and and I *think* tapped from the factory. I say I think because Im not 100% sure.
The wheels needed a good cleaning and polishing when I got them, but they would have gotten that anyway
. The bolt holes on the hubs weren't in the cleanest shape so I chased them with a tap to clean out the gunk. The LS was easier to chase than the RS was. On the right side, I would get 3-4.5 threads in and then hit some resistance. A little more force got past the issue and it continued to thread down to the bottom. This issues repeated itself on every hole on the right side of the hub.
I put the rotors on the leftside using new OEM hardware and washers and everything went fine. On the left side however, I ran into a snag:
Using new OEM hardware and washers too, the bolts bottom out before the head makes contact with the washer. The holes appear to be 2 threads too short for the bolts.
So, Do I cut the bolts down? Drill the holes further and re-tap? Or, what?
I have also been pondering replacing the factory bolts with studs and using chrome acorns to cap everything off but that is down the road.
Because we are talking about brakes, I dont want to just wing it and learn the hard way.
The wheels needed a good cleaning and polishing when I got them, but they would have gotten that anyway
I put the rotors on the leftside using new OEM hardware and washers and everything went fine. On the left side however, I ran into a snag:
Using new OEM hardware and washers too, the bolts bottom out before the head makes contact with the washer. The holes appear to be 2 threads too short for the bolts.
So, Do I cut the bolts down? Drill the holes further and re-tap? Or, what?
I have also been pondering replacing the factory bolts with studs and using chrome acorns to cap everything off but that is down the road.
Because we are talking about brakes, I dont want to just wing it and learn the hard way.