Try to think in your mind to get a set of everything miniaturized. There is
a neat tool out there at most flea markets and hobby shops that have a ratchet. It has interchangeable bits with a knurled speed loader.
This amazing tool functions as a nut driver with any 1/8" socket, extentions, flat, philips, torx, and other useful bits. Metric Allen wrenches
are essential, so I got a neat little "L" metric set that is only 4" in length
and 1/2" in widths with the handly 6-10mm wrenches.
I have small jumper battery clips screwed onto my neg post of my battery and the pos to my starter solenoid so I can jump any bike or be jumped. I
carry a small thin pocket-size DVM for troubleshooting and a battery status checker with LED lights. It checks the condition of the battery at standstill at 12V or under. It checks the battery at its charging state at above 13.5-14VDC, and I have a very small hygrometer that is also pocket size. It is a droplet with small little beads in it. It check for specific gravity
in the sulfuric acid and costs no more than $2.
I bring with me a small adj Crescent wrench, 8,10, 12, and 14mm open-end wrenches, channel locks, needle nose pliers. I bring anything and everything in miniature scale including Suzuki spare parts in Ziplock baggies. Never ever go out the door on your bike without a spare clutch cable. If your cable snaps, your dead in the water. That is why I prefer
a hydraulic clutch with the same feel over time, and no cable to break whatsever. Cable will fray and wear out and snap after 1000s of engagements and disengagements over time.
Fuses, washers, tie wraps, cotter pins, O-Rings, E-Clips, CO2 patch kit, grommets, superglue, Permatex gasket sealer, solderless connectors, crimper, 18 and 20 gauge wire, tubes of heatshrink, metric cap screws
metric nuts, small container of 10-wt machine oil, small container of 10-
40 wt engine oil, small container of DOT 3/4 brake fluid, butane soldering iron, solder, GS1100 wiring diagram, spare plug, headlite bulbs, turn signal bulbs, instrumentation bulbs, first-aid kit, cell phone, hand-held CB radio, hand-held ham radio, calling card, GPS, etc.... and lots of water and
spare clothing.
All of the above takes very little room, yet will save your ass on a long
trip anywhere you have a breakdown. Like you, I don't want to bring
bulky tools that are unnecessary and worthless to me. I don't want the excess weight either.
Goodluck to you,
KT :-D\\

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