Not too bad at all, I'd say probably 4-5 out of 10, with most of the effort in making sure that the swingarm and dogbone pivots are ground down evenly and to proper clearance. I chose to use the stock FZR suspension knuckle, so I had to shave off about 2mm from each side of the dogbone pivot tube. The good part here is that the dogbone pivot tube bearings (the one on the bottom that connects the dogbones) do not have a lip on the inside of the tube, so you can use a proper size socket to drive them in the required 2-3mm, and then shave off the pivot tube, if you decide to use the stock FZR knuckle. This will save some $ since these bearings are not cheap. I would recommend using the FZR knuckle since if you use the YZF knuckle, it will alter the suspension ratio even more, requiring a new lighter spring. (The stock YZF spring is around 480lb/in, which is a substantial difference). My swingarm pivots were already shaved down, but just needed an adjustment, so not too much effort there, but again, if you take your time, it's not difficult either. I used an angle grinder and then finished with a file to make it square.95FZR600 wrote: So, what would you say on a scale of 1-10? 10 being difficult - 1 being easy
How much did it cost you mark? Total.
Everything else is pretty much bolt on, sprockets etc. some washers to space out the rearsets, 5lb sledge to finesse the heal guards. I do have a chain tool so that may add cost if you don't. I spent $270 for swingarm/wheel and various bolts etc., $70 for new DID 520 VM X-Ring (http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/_Motorcy ... 06.c0.m245) which is a steal, since it's around $120 retail, $50 total for front and rear sprockets. So in total, after all said and done and shipping etc, I put in about $400 total, well worth it IMO.