by Bill Jurgenson » Fri Nov 24, 2006 12:40 am
Hi,
since wonky mentioned wheel upgrades; the most common one over here is to fit the SZR (or TZR4DL front) wheels. They are the same size which is necessary in Germany for registration, but considerably lighter. Where there is no problem with vehicle inspection or for track use (and leaving mag wheels aside), the very best mod is probably the set from the Yamaha TZ250R 3MA which had either a 4.5" or 5" rear rim - if you can get them at all. Perhaps it is easier in England? The 4.5" is the ideal size for the 150/60 rear tire. Or the 5" for a 160 rear tire, which does however need a wider front.
For the front, if one is looking for a 3.5"rim to run 120/70 front, the FZR wheel can be fit, but the width at the braker rotors has to be milled down a wee bit.
Then the last Suzuki RGV wheels (3" and 4.5") are easy to adapt as well and lighter.
With all of these, the speedo drive no longer fits and virtually everyone has fitted either a bicycle or other electronic pickup after market speedo. Even those with entirely stock MZ do this due to the "quality" of the original instruments.
Beyond these wheels which I have fitted - I have certianly not been thru all possiblities! - you have of course Gilles, PVM, Marchesini, Dymag, LightCon but that is getting into real money. I have fitted PVM, Marvic, Brembo.
Personally, I have the 3" and 3,5" Brembo wheels from the TZR 4DL fitted to my Tour just as the prototype did with Bridgestone BT45 110/60 front and 130/70 back. For general riding about town, this is a good combination and has almost the quick handling of a bicycle. I do NOT recommend this beyond such use.
What I do reccomend is running the BT090 140/70 rear on the 4" rim instead of the 150/60. This improves handling and roadholding. THe 4" rim is too narrow, according to the tire manufacturers, for the 150/60 tire. Pirelli for instance gives 4.25" as the reference rim and the Pirelli 150 tire is narrow at 143mm as compared to the 152mm of the Bridgestone for which a 4.5" rim is ideal.