The fork brace is exactly as it appears on his website. It's two symmetrical halves, joined by four screws. He has excellent installation instructions on the website, so I'm not going to repeat them here. Suffice it to say that if you can't operate a 5mm hex driver (aka Allen wrench), then you can get this installed. The fit and finish was very nice, although mine had a couple of nicks in the powerdercoating, but nothing I consider to be major.
Tools Used:
- 5mm hex driver
- Blue Loctite
I chose to install it with the bolts entering from the front rather than the back. My reasoning was that the brace sites at an angle with the front higher than the rear since it's bolted to the forks, so the bolts aren't as likely to back out since they'd have to work against gravity. I also went ahead and used Blue Loctite for good measure. I didn't have to remove any existing parts. The brace halves slid right into place with minimal maneuvering around the brake hoses.
Be sure to follow the instructions and tighten in longer inside bolts first. These bolts seem primarily to hold the two halve together. They pretty much tightened right on down with little to no "snugging" necessary; they simply stopped tightening. The shorter outside bolts are really the ones doing the clamping, as there is a small gap between the brace halves to allow this action. I tightened them until they were good and snug, and that was that.
Next up were the mirror extenders. I decided to go ahead and get the extenders with threaded holes on each side so that I can install a 1" RAM mount ball to potentially mount accessories. I don't currently have any plans to mount anything here yet, but the price was only $5/hole more than the base $33 extenders. I figured it was a small price to pay for having some flexibility in the accessory department.
Tools Used:
- Adjustable wrenches (2)
- 8mm hex driver
- 30" metal ruler
- Blue Locktite
Again, Rick has some very good installation instructions on his website, since there's more to it that two metal halves and 4 bolts, I thought I'd add some pictures of my installation.
The first step is to remove the mirrors. You need to pull the rubber boot off of the base and slide it up the mirror stalk so you have access to the nuts. The bottom nut attaches the mirror to the mounting bracket. The top nut is the cinch nut which holds the mirror stalk in place and prevents it from swiveling around. The cinch nut is also reverse or left-hand threaded, meaning "Righty tighty, Left loosey" does not apply. The cinch nut loosens by turning it clockwise (right) and tightens by turning it counterclockwise (left). I found that you don't need to loosen the cinch nut in order to remove the mirror. I just took my adjustable wrench, tightened it to the bottom nut, and after a bit of a struggle, the mirror was turning freely, and I was able to unscrew it from the mount. For the left mirror, you need to turn the handlebars all the way to the left and vice-versa for the right mirror. Once you've removed the mirrors, be sure to place them somewhere safe and out of harm's way. If you still have any chrome bits on the handlebar, you removed the cinch nut, so you'll need to remove the base nut from the handlebar mount and re-attach it to the mirror.
Left mirror partially removed |
The next step is to attach the extenders. There are two things of note here. 1) The longer 20mm spacer goes on the left, and the shorter 10mm spacer goes on the right. 2) The long side of the extender goes to the outside for the mirror, and the short side goes inside for the 1" RAM Mount ball. I applied a Blue Loctite to the threads and tightened the bolts using an 8mm hex driver. I was only able to finger tighten them so far and had to use my ratchet for the majority of work. The threads were pretty snug, but never did I feel like I was damaging them.
Long spacer on Left Extender (L) and Short spacer on Right Extender (R) Correctly oriented with long arms out/short arms in |
Using the metal ruler to position the extenders |
After that, it was a simple matter of fine adjusting the mirrors themselves. I found that with the extenders, I can now see things directly behind me with a little overlap in coverage between the two mirrors.
View from the tail rack showing the width of the mirrors, note the 1" RAM Mount balls (Looks like the left mirror is a bit rotated up...) |
Left handguard contacts MRA X-creen at full right lock |
No contact on the right side at full left lock |
So far, I like the expanded view while stopped that results from the addition of the extenders. The proof in the pudding will be how images appear at speed. I'm hoping there is no introduced vibration or anything, since that was not a problem at all in the stock position. I'm also hoping that the airflow is somewhat improved, as it felt like the mirrors were directing some air right at me at highway speeds. Hopefully I can sneak out for a quick ride tomorrow.
UPDATE: Read about my first impressions of the fork brace and mirror extenders here.
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