Relay arm movement
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Relay arm movement
I have a 95 FZR 600. I have the swingarm off and I noticed that the relay arm has about 1 mm of side to side movement where it attaches to the frame. Is that normal?
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Re: Relay arm movement
rehed wrote:I have a 95 FZR 600. I have the swingarm off and I noticed that the relay arm has about 1 mm of side to side movement where it attaches to the frame. Is that normal?
R,
"relay" arm ???? do you mean the rear caliper stay bar ?
Some thing is lost in translation a picture perhaps might prove useful?
Re: Relay arm movement
The Haynes manual calls it the relay arm. It's the part which the shock & dog bones (tie rods according to Haynes) attaches to.
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Re: Relay arm movement
This is indeed the correct term for the part. The factory manual might have specs for runout on the rear suspension linkage. My guess is that since the load is on the vertical plane, 1mm of lateral runout may be acceptable.rehed wrote:It's the part which the shock & dog bones (tie rods according to Haynes) attaches to.
If anyone knows better, please chime in.

92 FZR600 - 3EN2 400 swingarm, Micron, DynoJet, Factory Pro, K&N, R6 shock, RT springs/emulators, R6 MC, Galfer, YZF calipers, Vortex, RK, YZF/R6 VR/R, Vortex, Zero Gravity
90 FZR400 - Sharkskinz, D&D, Sudco, DynoJet, Factory Pro, Ohlins, RT springs/emulators, JEM Machine, Woodcraft, NRC, Galfer, Vortex, RK, YZF/R6 VR/R, Vortex, Lockhart Phillips
89 FZR600 - Vance & Hines, DynoJet, Zero Gravity - sold in '91
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Re: Relay arm movement
Well after 50+ years of biking & wrenching I have learned something new in the way of terminologyfzrbrandon wrote:This is indeed the correct term for the part. The factory manual might have specs for runout on the rear suspension linkage. My guess is that since the load is on the vertical plane, 1mm of lateral runout may be acceptable.rehed wrote:It's the part which the shock & dog bones (tie rods according to Haynes) attaches to.
If anyone knows better, please chime in.
Thanks