When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
I want to use one of those lowering kits to lower my 07. However in the J&P catalog there is the notice that you need to disassemble the shocks to install them. Then i see the one kit that says it soesn't require disassembly but it's part number is in the notice.
Is there a kit that doesn't require disassembly. If not is there a way i can take them apart without using a shock tool.
Interesting. Anyone using this kit and have some basic install instructions? If you're using it, do you like it, dislike it, got an opinion on the ride with it installed? Never seen it before, would love to hear some reviews on it..........
hmm..
One guy had to do a little customization with his belt primary rubbing issue.
Other than that it sounds way too easy.
Might have a good thing to add to the winter project list.
Would it be a sin to just lower the rear end on a fatboy?
I honestly think this had something to do with why I could corner better on my old 90 heritage.. It had been lowered in the rear only before I bought it. When I got the new stock 04 fatboy, I had a helluva time getting used to it.. Just didn't handle as well stock compared to the lowered old Evo bike, to me.
Ok, so I was the guinea pig that decided to try these. Ordered them from J&P cycles, did not want to pay 20. for 2 or 3 day shipping or whatever it was, and got them in 3 days anyway. Took a little over an hour to install and adjust.
I had set them at about there lowest setting, and that was way too low, was afraid I was going to hit the harness under the fender, so I adjusted them up a ways and found a spot I thought looked good. Took it for a ride and it rode well over bumpy roads as well as cornering.
Cool..
So I've been trying to learn something about all these kits and it looks like this burnout cycles kit is the ONLY one that doesn't require a press to dissassemble the shocks. I'm thinking maybe just an inch or so would be nice.. as I'm going with a little bit higher seat soon (mustang wide vintage solo). Shocks are something I've never messed with at all.. Shocks and forks are probably the only places outside the engine I haven't seen or worked on.
I'd love to read over the instructions on this burnout cycles kit. Is there a .pdf anywhere?
7 Surprising Harley-Davidson Products that Are Not Motorcycles
Slideshow: The bar-and-shield logo shows up on far more than motorcycles, some of the company's most unexpected products have nothing to do with riding.
Slideshow: From the troubled AMF years to modern misfires, these bikes earned reputations for reliability issues, questionable engineering, or disappointing performance.
Crazy Bunderbike Build Looks Amazing, But Is It Impossible to Ride?
Slideshow: The Swiss custom shop has taken a Harley Softail and stretched it into something so long and low that it looks closer to a rolling sculpture than a conventional motorcycle.
Engraved Rebellion: Inside Bundnerbike's Glam Rock II
Slideshow: A standard cruiser becomes an intricate metal canvas in the hands of a Swiss custom house known for pushing Harley-Davidson platforms far beyond their factory brief.
Slideshow: Harley-Davidson's challenges aren't abstract; they show up in dropping shipments, shrinking dealer traffic, and strategic decisions that aren't yet translating into growth.