after thinking about how i was going to do the trailing arm caliper mount for my disc brakes, and doing some research, i came across some cr80 forks on ebay for 88 bucks shipped. pretty cheap. they have a caliper mount already on it, and they are wayyyyy beefier. awesome.
anyway i snapped a pic with the wheels mocked up and the old forks while i waited for the new ones to show up in the mail:

a few days later my forks showed up. THEY WERE MASSIVE. i would have to have the fork tubes stick up about 7 inches above the triple trees to get the wheel close to where it was stock. so after ripping the forks apart and doing some research on shortening forks i actually found out that you have to insert a piece into the forks to shorten them. sounds weird i know, but heres details on how it actually works.


basically i can put a spacer between 7 and 13 which will raise the bottom of the fork by however long the spacer is. i bought some metal tubing from ace and cut it to 6 inches for each tube. this will however put more initial pressure on 3 (the main spring) so i had to cut this down so i could get the cap assembly (14) on the top of the tube. i preloaded the spring a bit, because the forks are pretty damned springy, and preloading the main spring will keep tension up and help the fork from bottoming out and the wheel from hitting the bottom of the triple tree during hard braking and extreme bumps. travel will be limited with this setup, but i think i’ll be alright, i’m not doing jumps like the dirtbike these forks were made for.
installing these was a total bitch. i mocked up the steering tube and the triple trees and realized that the head tube on the frame was too long.

so i had to cut down the headtube to make everything fit. the problem with this is that the cups for the bearings sit on a “shelf” inside of the tube

so if i cut the tube down the end of the cups would still only be able to go in as far as that shelf, so i had to cut the cups down by the same amount as i took off the head tube so they would seat all the way.
now with the head tube shortened i mocked everything up. problem number 2: the top race for the bearing sits on top of the ball bearings, which sit in the cup. so when properly tightened down, the forces on the top race (from the ball bearings) even out so the race will not move back and forth. if the race is tight around the steering tube this is what keeps your steering tube stabilized. however the race for tomos bikes is slightly (probably about 1mm) LARGER than the steering tube, so the steering tube can move back and forth inside the race, making the forks wobble. to solve this problem i welded the top race to the threaded nut that goes on the bottom set of threads on the steering tube. this will anchor the top race to the steering tube so there is no play between the race and the steering tube, and therefore no wobble in the forks.

so that nut/race combo gets tightened down, then the top triple tree goes on top of that, and the top nut secures all of this together.
I cleaned up, respoked, and converted the 16″ garelli spoked rear wheel to sealed bearings. also disassembled and reassembled the cr80 wheels just to clean everything up and make it shine. bling bling. The sealed conversion was a breeze on the garelli wheel. knock out the cups, put it some 32×12x10 sealed bearings (fits perfectly, no boring required), cut up some spacers from 3/8″ electrical conduit, and done. super duper easy.

so i finally got it all put together and mocked up with the wheels and new forks on after some crazy work to get everything to fit and work properly.


my old handlebars will not fit with the fork tubes sticking up, so i bought some clip ons.
also i recieved by brake/tail lights in the mail and installed them. i got 2 of these off ebay for 8 bucks shipped.

installed

the top set are the running lights, bottom set is brake lights. sweet.
i also got some battery mounts to secure the battery to the top tube.

and i cut a hole in the frame behind he battery so the wires run directly into the frame hidden behind the battery. much cleaner looking that that picture.
also an update on the clutch. i decided to lighten my shoes so the clutch engages at higher rpms. this may prove to destroy the clutch extremely quickly, but i’ve gotta try. new clutches are fairly cheap anyway.

oh i installed boyesen dual stage reeds on the reedblock too. i dont know if i mentioned that in an earlier post or not.
so heres what i still need to do:
-true my spoked wheels
-buy and install tires and tubes
-figure out steering stop situation for the forks
-fab a caliper mount for the brakes
-install and bend my pipe up a hair (when i welded the exhaust bracket on my bike, it was at a bit higher of an angle. plus that pipe is a bit low anyway, so i’m going to bend it up to look better/have better clearance)
its getting really close.