• You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will see less advertisements, have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

    If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Lightning xb9sx Northwest Edition - A belated introduction

Buellxb Forum

Help Support Buellxb Forum:

nwguy

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 31, 2010
Messages
97
Fellow Beullers, I'm Jim Gallant from just west of Seattle, WA (across Puget Sound). Brief intro: 53 yrs old, software guy, home inspector, motorcycle riding since 13 yrs old. Recent rides: 92' Kawasaki Concours, 2002 Honda ST1100, 2002 Aprilia Falco, 1991 Suzuki VX800. I ride only for fun these days, usually on mulit-day trips down to Eastern Oregon. Locally, it rains too much here and I live 2/10 of a mile down a gravel road that gets muddy too much of the year. When I recently bought my 2007 xb9sx I found that I got a spattering of mud up my back on on my flip-face helmet every time I left my house. Grit would grind in my helmet hinge when I lowered the front face part. I read a thread or two on this forum about (the lack of available) fenda extendas, and realized I need something more than the 4" tire hugger on the rear wheel, and abbreviated front wheel fender. I had replaced the airbox cover and flyscreen with carbon fiber replacements from ebay that so many on this forum like to dis for poor quality/fitment, but I actually think the quality of the carbon is pretty decent. I do a bit of fiberglass fabrication for boat building projects of mine, so I decided to make fender extenders (front and rear) out of carbon fiber. After way to much labor I ended up with what you see below. Also installed heated grips, a must for us northwesterners. If you live in a cool climate, the Symtec heated grip pads are cheap and really easy to install, and make a HUGE difference in comfort on a chilly day, morning or evening. Highly recommended (by me at least).
8668_20110127165046_L.jpg

My Lightning before the fender mods were added.

8668_20110127164743_L.jpg

After fender mods.

8668_20110127164814_L.jpg

After fender mods.

8668_20110127164852_L.jpg

Ebay carbon fiber airbox cover and flyscreen.

8668_20110127165114_L.jpg

The front fender extender I made.

8668_20110127165125_L.jpg

Front fender extender shown with front fender.

8668_20110127165138_L.jpg

Front fender extender bolted on to front fender with stainless steel bolts.

8668_20110127165148_L.jpg

And, on the bike.

8668_20110127165210_L.jpg

The rear hugger replacement. Someone in a forum post guessed that to be effective, such a hugger would need to be three feet long. This one's about 31 inches. I laid up three layers of fiberglass, then two to four layers of carbon over that.
8668_20110127165225_L.jpg

It was tricky to make the front part. I laid fiberglass over the stock hugger, and then carbon over that.

8668_20110127165233_L.jpg

Here's the painted underside of the fender extender.

8668_20110127165244_L.jpg

Rear super carbon hugger installed.

8668_20110127165253_L.jpg

And on the bike. My goal was for it to be invisible when viewed from the side. It conforms to the tire at the front, then gets flat. It was a complicate combination of curves to get the way I wanted and required a weird mix of wood form, bag filled with wet sand, thick rubber membrane stretched and laced across the wood form to get the shape I wanted. I actually like the look.

8668_20110127165304_L.jpg

And a view from the back.

8668_20110127173535_L.jpg

Back view.

8668_20110127173546_L.jpg

Another back view.

8668_20110127165318_L.jpg

Wire from the throttle side heated grip. When installing Symtec heated grip pads, you want to make sure your throttle operates smoothly. You don't want the wires to restrict throttle rotation.

8668_20110127165328_L.jpg

Where I installed the heated grip switch. You're given the option of a rocker or toggle switch. I've installed the nice-looking plastic rocker switches before on bikes with full/partial fairings, but the Lightning has no place for such a switch. The all-metal totggle switch option appealed to me given the nature of the Lightning, and given the need to operate the switch with gloves on. Works great so far.

8668_20110127165339_L.jpg

To run such appliances, you really want a relay installed so there's no chance of leaving the heated grips on when the ignition key is off. It's not hard to install, and the relay supplies power to the heated grips only when the ignition key is turned on. You can by these relays at any auto parts store for less than 10 bucks.

8668_20110127165351_L.jpg

The inline fuse )5 watts) downstream from the relay that protects the heated grips.

So, in short, this Lightning is now equipped to deal with chilly, wet, muddy roads too often found here in the Northwest. But make no mistake, there are rides in Washington and Oregon that are world class. Anyone who plans to be up in this corner of the US, feel free to contact me about where to go for curvy, twisty roads.
 
NICE WORK! Nice write up and very functional. Not a fan of the way it looks, but I don't live in a climate like yours so I can see function being a priority to be able to ride,
[up]

~Mike......
 
I don't know if you did the tail chop or if you purchased the bike that way, but the stock cheese grater serves the same function, though DIY always means more. A Ulysses front guard would have worked too. But again, custom one off composite work is cooler.

~Mike.....
 
BuellerPilot,

I peruse pictures on this forum of people's bikes, poised on their asphalt driveways in their suburban homes and imagine what it would be like not to have to drive down 2/10 of a mile of mud every time I want to ride. Wish it weren't so, but it's my reality. I don't like the look of the stock cheese grater.
 
I don't like the look of the stock cheese grater.

I don't either lol, mines chopped. Just wasn't sure if you purchased your bike with an already chopped grater and you weren't aware that the stock bike had the rear mud protection.

You came up with a awesome solution and for the amount of mud/grit/wet protection you have, it couldn't look any better then what you have done. [up] I appreciate it even more so having some composite experience.

I live in a city here in Virginia but I just purchased 17.5 acres in a rural area and plan on building another house and getting the heck out of my current one. My house will be 1/4 mile off a paved road so I'm not looking foreword to dealing with that driveway. I wish I could afford to pave it, but I don't see that happening. I will however use crushed concrete once the large stone and crusher run sets /settles / locks in. Its finely crushed to powder and over time with water becomes pretty damn hard and asphalt like for a fraction of the cost.

~Mike.....
 
BuellerPilot, where in Virginia? I grew up outside of D.C. in Fairfax/Herndon/Falls Church, but went to college in Williamsburg. I miss VA a lot and think about coming "home" sometimes.
 
I grew up in Yorktown, currently live in Newport News, work in Hampton (NASA Langley), and just bought property and plan on moving to Gloucester. Williamsburg is like 5 minutes from my current house. DC/Fairfax/Falls Church is a couple hours north of me. I avoid DC like the plague!

~Mike....
 
Though I'd probably not put that kind of fender extensions to my own bike (I like to keep those lines clean & simple looks-wise), I definitely get the point. As they say, here in Finland the summer is short but less snowy than the winter :D

Thumbs up for fabrication and sharing the pics!

P.S. My own experience is that the cheese grater does not help much, since it is quite much tapered (and perforated).
 
the thing is that on my sTT with stock "cheesegrater" (but being stock without holes) & side number plates it is almost impossible to get any mud from rear tire. I'm thinking to upgrade sTT with Ulysses front fender to keep front end cleaner. here in Russia it is dirty sometimes in spring & autumn, even the summer is a bit longer than in Finland :D

2 j4nn3 - cheers to my northen neighbour [up]
 
NWGUY I feel you on the WA rain, I ride all year though. I was thinking of trying to rig up some kind of tire hugger, even with my stock cheese grater I still get tons of kick up. Does your set up eliminate all kick up or just minimize it? I was personally thinking of getting a half tin and mounting it an 1/8 - 1/4" off the tire, basically as low profile as possible to be less noticable. I just don't want it to take away from the look of the bike. Any ideas, other than what NWGUY has done?
 
beefy99, I don't know how well it works yet. Just installed yesterday and haven't ridden yet.
 
The fenders look fantastic! I used to ride whether it was raining or snowing on my last bike. I definitely make a point to keep track of the weather ever since I got my xb. I've only been out in the rain on the buell once and it was a huge mess. My bookbag is still mud splattered a month later, not only did the stock rear fender/hugger not keep the back end clean at all, but even both sides of the fender were covered in mud. My light bulb inside of my tail light had mud on it. It was completely ridiculous. I've thought about making a cheap flat fender that I could quickly attach to those holes under my tail light that the turn signal wires used to come out of. I'm just gonna take it easy this spring and buy a supermoto by summer. After that I can just keep the XB clean.
 
cool rear fender, looks like someone doesn't like mud and water on the back of there neck. I'm not sure what hand warmers you have but they have a switch that goes in the throttle control with 3 different settings. you just have to remove the blank cover. If you even care.

8854_20110128095937_L.jpg
 
Back
Top