1989 Springer Softail Assembly
These turn signals bolt from the inside of the rails, so all this had to go on first. Unfortunately it will come around to bite me in the butt later. Notice the white connector, so it's possible to disassemble without cutting the wires like you had to with the original kit. Thanks, Bill for hooking me up with replacements @Architect
I was going to ask my cousin next door to hold the fender but I had an inspiration for a second set of hands that won't get tired or bored.
Here it is, all done except the tail light. I had to order a new assembly because it was all corroded and the bulb wouldn't come out. He had installed a blue dot, too, which I don't want.
The problem I have is I can only reach the upper sissy bar screws, the bottom ones are next to the fender. I can't remove the plates because they are bolted in with the turn signals. I'd have to do this job all over to get the fender out of the way, which would make the sissy bar non-removable for all intents and purposes. Someone added screw holes from the front to back, but they don't do anything to stop the rocking. I'm just going to have to live with it, its not going anywhere.
Next will be the forks. Hopefully the neck bearing kit will come in tomorrow.
Last edited by Joe12RK; Mar 12, 2026 at 01:30 PM.
The bottom race practically fell out when I put the tool on it.
Edit to Add:
Well that was easy! One of the few times the Service Manual doesn't start with 'Using HD Special Tool...' Just use the slots provided to pry off the dust shield and bearing with two screwdrivers.

Last edited by Joe12RK; Mar 12, 2026 at 02:19 PM.
But I did make a little progress. I needed my friend to drill a hole with his drill press so I could mount the round Live to Ride air filter trim on my S&S teardrop cover. The trim has a 5/16 center screw to mount on factory air filters. I bought a slightly longer screw and with the trim taped to the S&S cover, he drilled a tap hole. This hole wound up not being in the center of the depression, and went through the side of the pointy part inside.
No big deal, it's easier to tap a thru hole than a blind one, and the loctite will seal it. I also needed to replace two of the S&S oval head screws with flathead so the trim fits flat. The cover is pretty scratched up, so it needed this trim piece.
It came out looking really good I think. It's not something you'll see on any other bike either, unless you guys copy me

Last edited by Joe12RK; Mar 13, 2026 at 07:25 PM.
I know in my experimentation days with many many carbs and mods that there is always synergy of parts and there is no always best part in all circumstances. But with my 93 Shovel the comparisons for E vs E with Thunderjet vs G.. I tried velocity stacks and mathematically tuned lengths to achieve greatest performance. For my 93 the G was better than the E but with a small lose in bottom end grunt. The velocity stack vs the teardrop cover revealed the teardrop added back in some down low throttle response. So the bike was faster with the G and teardrop than E with tear or velocity stack.
Your small interruption of a nut/bolt in the pathway probably does interrupt that flow. Does it matter? Thats up to you.
Last edited by Rains2much; Mar 14, 2026 at 09:10 AM.
The front wheel is a later model that I had, but the special springer spacer is too wide, so there's no room for the speedometer drive. I might be able to cut it down and then drill a hole for the speedo drive tang. The wheels that were on the bike are pretty corroded, so my friend is pulling the tires off and I'll see what I'm doing when I get them back. I may disassemble everything and lace the late rims to the original hubs and get stainless spokes. More to come on that situation.
Tomorrow or maybe later I'll mount the front brake caliper and its special bracket.
Edit: I couldn't resist! But it needs something chrome in the center.
Last edited by Joe12RK; Mar 14, 2026 at 06:24 PM.
The Best of Harley-Davidson for Lifelong Riders
@Tailbreaker This is why I am building this bike, it was a dream the year my daughter was born.
















