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Switching instrument clusters on a 550R Seca

Discussion in 'XJ Modifications' started by Shannon72, Oct 3, 2012.

  1. Shannon72

    Shannon72 Member

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    Okay, so I've been fiddling with my bike a LOT this summer, mostly because I guilted my wife into letting me by purchasing her a new Zuma scooter. So far, I've redone the fuses (PO had torn out the airbox and fuse box and put in a bunch of in-liners that kept shorting out; I mounted a blade box under the seat and wired that up, NO blown fuses or shorts since), stripped the paint off most of the plastics, got a new rear cowling piece, put on new(er) shocks, and had my seat professionally recovered. I also swapped out the stock handlebars and added a pair of clip-ons, as well as completely redid the headlight/turn signal mount on the front of the bike (speaking of, anyone need a set of stock handlebars or headlight mounts? Cheap!)

    So, my next and final step (other than the repainting) is to replace the Seca instrument cluster with a smaller can speedo. I've been riding the bike long enough that the tach isn't really needed, and the speedo I've bought wires in to everything else. My questions are:

    1) Since this speedo runs off a magnetic reader, and not the stock speedometer cable, do I need something to cap off the spot on the front fork where the speedo cable connects, or can I leave that open? If I need to cap it, does someone make an aftermarket cap, or do I just cobble something together using the base of the old cable?

    2) Ditto the tachometer, except I know that has to be blocked off. Does anyone know of an aftermarket cap, or do I make one out of the old cable?

    And one other (probably dumb) question: the brake line for this bike runs from the MC into a connector on the fork, and then another line runs from the fork to the connector. Is there something in-between those two junctures that's critical to the brake operation, or would I be able to run a stainless hose that bypasses it, directly between the MC and the brakes?

    Any and all info and advice is appreciated!
     
  2. maverickbr77

    maverickbr77 Member

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    1) you want to cap it so your grease doesn't come out and water doesn't go in. I don't know of a cap for it. I cut the end off my cable, ground it down a bit, and welded the end shut.
    2) no idea if there is a cap out there

    It is just a junction block. I heard they were put in place to help with line swell on the rubber brake lines. Shouldn't be any issue running 1 SS line the whole way.
     
  3. Shannon72

    Shannon72 Member

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    Thanks for the info, Maverick. Now all I have to do is Dremel the mount for the speedo's sensor into shape - they included a mount for an 8mm axle bolt and a 10mm axle bolt, but the 550 is apparently 12mm or so. >.<

    I was especially concerned about the brake line; part of the problem with going to fork-mounted clip-ons is that it compresses the existing brake line, to the point that if I take the handlebars hard right (which I'm usually only doing at slow speed) the brakes begin to enage and drag. If I can get a stainless line that runs straight to the fork, then that'll go away.

    Thanks again!
     
  4. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    1: the drive unit at the wheel is a separate piece; no need to cap it off. You can remove it altogether, but you will need to make up its "installed thickness" (NOT its entire thickness) with an appropriate spacer/washer. Take it off and look at it closely and how it relates to the axle/fork; you'll see what I mean.

    2: chacal does offer a cap or blocking plug for the tach drive. Or you can use a coin and a glob of RTV, and the ferrule from a cable. Although how you can get the optimum performance out of a 550 Seca without a tach is a mystery to me; the engine makes peak HP right AT redline, 10K. If you ride it by "the seat of your pants" you'll never see redline.

    The junction block was simply a concession to manufacturing flexibility, with Yamaha producing so many different bikes using the same or similar parts. It can be eliminated with no adverse effect. (Or you could just order a shorter, custom SS upper line from XJ4Ever.)

    What'd you do with your CLUTCH CABLE? Re-routing doesn't work all that well. If you still need a solution, the 750 Seca clutch cable, while significantly shorter, offers the same sheath:cable ratio and is what I used on my 550 Seca with Euro bars.
     
  5. maverickbr77

    maverickbr77 Member

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    Hey Fitz in reference to the speedo drive hub, is that true on all the xj's or a 550 thing. I was told it was part of the grease seal for the wheel on my 750. If all I need is to pull it and put in a spacer I would like to.
     
  6. bigfitz52

    bigfitz52 Well-Known Member Premium Member

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    They're all pretty much the same. In the stock configuration, if it is acting as a grease seal, simply installing sealed bearings would solve that. I think the only grease it's sealing is for its own drive flange. I'll have to look more closely the next time I pull a front wheel.

    Sorry I can't provide a more definitive answer, it's been a while since I've had a front wheel off.
     

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