ALL PHOTOGRAPHY COPYRIGHT ©2011-2013 R.MURPHY and WHERETHEHELLISMURPH.COM. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




Showing posts with label Sidecar Conversion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sidecar Conversion. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2012

MURPH'S MOBEC DUO-DRIVE BMW 2WD SIDECAR CONVERSION................Part 3

  
This post is sponsored by Phototech, for all your Camera and Lens Repair needs.






Hello and welcome to Part III of my Mobec Duo-Drive sidecar conversion on my 2004 BMW R 1150 GS Adventure.
To see Part I, click here, for Part II, click here.

This build report is about the conversion of my 2004 BMW R1150 GS Adventure motorcycle into a 2 Wheel Drive Overland sidecar. I initially dreamt up this project while snowed in up in Steamboat Colorado in January of 2010 and honestly never thought I would see it materialize. But many life experiences along the way has taught me that you have one shot at this, may as well do it now, so what started out as a budget build sidecar has now turned into a full on Mobec Duo-Drive, Suzuki Vitara Sidecar Locking Wheel Hub outfit.
In this installment we are putting together the separate components of the drivetrain, most of which are sourced from other vehicles, replacing the OEM BMW parts.


To recap, this is how my 2004 68,000 mile BMW R1150GS Adventure looked before we started on June 1st,


......and this is how it looks now on July 7th.


The biggest difference is the front end, now leading link steering and not the stock twin tube forks.
Visible also is the sidecar sub-frame, used to attach the sidecar to the motorcycle, or more commonly known as the tug.


The other obvious difference here are the tires, 195 65-16, now light truck tires and not motorcycle tires.


There are 2 main ways to build a sidecar, non-dedicated and dedicated.
The first way, non-dedicated, is to leave the motorcycle pretty much stock with the stock front forks and the stock motorcycle tires, this will be easier, cheaper and allow you to detach the sidecar should you feel like riding solo in 'Motorcycle Mode', usually only 6 or 8 bolts to detach the chair.
The only thing you have to change is the rake of the front forks to make the steering lighter, thats about it. And you really don't have to do that if you don't mind heavy steering.
The second way is to build whats called a 'Dedicated' outfit, where you know that you will never want to detach the sidecar and ride solo. This way you can build it stronger, safer, it will ride and perform much better than a non-decitated outfit and you can use car tires to replace motorcycle tires which benefit you in 3 main ways.
First, car tires are cheaper than motorcycle tires and they give you almost twice the mileage than the softer compound in a motorcycle tire. Second, a sidecar outfit will handle and perform much better with car tires on it. The sidewall on a car tire is larger and stronger than on a motorcycle tire, so they have a stronger and bigger load capacity.
 And third, for winter riding in snow and ice,like the snow and ice I got stuck in Steamboat in January of 2011, you can get studded car tires but not studded motorcycle tires, those you have to make yourself.


A motorcycle tire (top tire)has a curved profile for 'leaning' into turns and curves, you don't 'steer' a motorcycle around a curve, you 'counter steer' or 'push-turn', as you lean into the curve you turn or push the bars in the opposite direction of the turn in the bend. Seems weird, but it works.
On a Sidecar outfit, you don't 'lean' or 'counter steer' into turns anymore, you steer around them like a car, you turn the bars in the same direction as the turn in the bend, so you don't need a motorcycle profile tire on a sidecar, it's a complete waste of a tire. 


Ok, so back to my build.
These last two weeks we accomplished a lot, we got the sidecar attached to the subframe of the motorcycle, the duo-drive attached to the frame of the sidecar and one half of the drive axle attached from the motorcycle final drive to the duo-drive.


And the wheels arrived too, all the way from Japan. 


 I decided not to use the stock BMW rear caliper and rotor and instead use a Brembo caliper and an aftermarket rotor for a Harley Davidson V-Rod. the V-Rod rotor is larger for better braking, looks much better than the stock BMW rotor and the pads in the Brembo caliper have a larger braking contact area than the BMW pads, which is better for the added weight that comes along with attaching a sidecar.



But in order to make the V-Rod caliper fit on the stock BMW final drive housing we had to spend a little time on the milling machine and make an adapter.









The Brembo caliper, origin unknown.





The finished product, we managed to space out the V-Rod caliper so as we could mount the Brembo caliper in the original BMW caliper mounting tabs on the final drive housing, thus utilizing the OEM T45 Torx bolts.






And staying in the adapter mode, we also had to make an adapter in order to mate a 5 bolt Suzuki Vitara wheel pattern to a 4 bolt BMW Rear Wheel bolt pattern. It started out life as a chunk of aluminum......




















And ended up a smaller chunk of Aluminum.





4 bolt OEM BMW bolt pattern on the inside and 5 bolt Suzuki Vitara on the outer ring.
Voila.

The front wheel needed an adapter too, to adapt the Suziki Vitara 5 bolt hub and front wheel disc, but it was easier than the rear wheel to do.





We used the front rotor from the Suzuki Vitara front wheel instead of trying to use the stock BMW rotor, again because it's a bigger rotor and I decided to use a set Brembo calipers from a late model Ducati instead of the BMW calipers. Better brake pads, better braking and I like the look of these calipers better.










Ad Donkers did a really nice job on the sidecar swing arm, incorporating the machined down Suzuki Vitara hub.

On the left is a Suzuki Vitara hub as it came off the car, on the right our machined down version.

Ok, so the next installment will be getting closer to seeing the outfit together, we're working on haveing it nearly all together before disassembly for paint and powder coat.

Just a sneak peek at a mock up we did, not too revealing.
The front view will be in the next installment.

Thanks,






Murph.








Sunday, July 1, 2012

MURPH'S MOBEC DUO-DRIVE BMW 2WD SIDECAR CONVERSION................Part 2




Welcome to Pt II of my Mobec Duo-Drive Sidecar Conversion on my 2004 BMW 1150 GS Adventure.
If you would like to find out more of the backstory on how I arrived at this point, you can read it in Pt 1 here.


The base motorcycle that I'm using for this 2WD Sidecar Conversion is my 2004 BMW 1150 GS Adventure that I've been riding on the road on my trip full-time for the last 2 1/2 years, and its all stock internally. 
Some of the external modifications I have made to it include a Touratech 41 liter Nylon tank, it's one that I came across used that came with the fuel pump, fuel plate and it was already painted silver. I drilled out the filler neck to make it a 44 liter capacity tank, and at the end of the day it was less than half the price of buying the tank new. 
I prefer the look of this larger tank much better, I think it fills out a lot of space between the tank and the top of the cylinder heads, but it is a huge tank. When you put one of these big tanks on, you have pretty much removed the 'Dual' in this "Dual Sport" motorcycle, as it becomes just too top heavy to really take it up the side of a mountain and try to keep it upright. To be honest, the 1150 or the 1200cc motorcycles I don't really consider 'Dual Sport' anyway, even though they call them that. In reality they're an enduro styled road bike with some off road capabilities. Many will disagree, but I rode it in the 2011 NORRA Mexican 1000 and even removed the panniers and rode the 400 miles on one of the stages, 175 miles of brutal washboards, the rest pavement, so I can tell you from first hand experience that it's NOT a dual sport bike, even with a stock tank. An ideal 'Dual Sport' bike should be around 600cc, no more. Even an 800cc is really too big.


Another modifaction I made was to build a set of extension drawers underneath my Touratech Zega panniers (which I also bought used too). 
I got tired of having to remove everything in the pannier to get to the tools in the bottom, and my clothes inevitably ended up smelling of fuel or oil, so the drawers keep tools and other items away from food and clothes, and make the tools so much easier to access. There is room for tools in one side drawer and parts or camping items in the other. I estimate they're approximately 14 liter drawers, which is a 33% increase in space over the 44 liter panniers.
The pannier build can be seen on my blog here if you feel like having a go at it yourself. Email me with any questions you may have, I'll be glad to help.


I also replaced the OEM shocks after I blew the rear out at 45,000 miles with a set of Wilbers, and then the Wilbers blew the rear seal at 7,000 miles, so I sent them back and got the seal replaced under warranty. After 5,000 miles the newly replaced rear seal blew again, so thats where they are right now, blown and off the bike. I've heard other stories on the forums like this about the Wilbers shocks, so I may just go to another shock all together for the sidecar.


Ok, back to the sidecar build.


This is how you get a Stern Rox from the factory, minus the tire.


The sidecar I've chosen to use for my 2WD Sidecar Conversion is a Stern Roxster or Rox, a 1 1/2 person chair, more of a road going performance sidecar than an Overland chair, but in talking with Ad Donkers of LBS Sidecars  where I'm building the outfit, we both decided from the outset to do something different rather than follow in others footsteps. 
Again, you can refer to the backstory for the selection criterion I used in choosing this particular sidecar.


From the start I had a pretty clear picture in my mind how I wanted the outfit to look when it was completed, but since I got here to Holland and we started to dismantle the bike and fabricate the framework, the original design I had in my mind has now changed, but changed for the better. 
Some of the features we decided to incorporate into this 2WD outfit will be very unique aside from the Mobec Duo-Drive, one of them being a locking hub on the sidecar wheel scavenged from the front end of a Suzuki Vitara 4X4
I wanted to put in a locking hub on the sidecar wheel for a couple of reasons, first because it would be a neat piece of engineering to fabricate, and second because it will allow me to turn on and off full-time 2WD which will cut down on tire wear and also gas consumption, and for on-highway use, 1WD will be better for handling than 2WD. 


 So after a trip to a salvage yard we started out with this....


....and with steady hands of a surgeon "carefully and delicately" removed some of the excess metal with an angle grinder..... 




....trimmed it up a bit....


...put in the milling machine, and after a couple of hours this is how it looks finished and painted.


A Suzuki Vitara 4X4 right side front hub with the half shaft......
                                  
........and the locking hub.....


...which will be attached to one end of the Mobec Duo-Drive unit on the right.

















Here I'm removing the ABS unit. I always turn off the ABS when I ride anyway, I just don't like ABS, I prefer riding by feel and experience, and it will free up enough space under the tank to use either 2 Oddessy Motorcycle Batteries or 1 full size car battery, we haven't decided yet. It also shaves about 12lbs of weight off too, which by the time we're finished will be added back tenfold I'm sure.



A symbolic moment for me in this transformation or conversion from motorcycle to sidecar.
I had already removed the centre stand back in the US before I shipped the bike over to Rotterdam, so removing the side stand was the final part that when removed, you know you no longer have a 2 wheel motorcycle anymore, now it's official that something is changing.

Stuff I won't need from my former 'Motorcycle', soon to be sidecar. ABS unit, a Touratech Rear Rack extension, side stand, assorted lines and the crash bars from the engine.

We are currently finishing up the sub-frame for the motorcycle and the front end leading link. The wheels I have already chosen and all 4 just arrived this week here in the shop, 3 for the outfit and 1 spare wheel and tire.
By next week we should be working on the sidecar frame and fitting the Duo-Drive underneath the sidecar.




The build or finish time has not yet been determined, the only time constraint that we have put on it is that it should be ready ready for this years EGT, 
European  Gespann (sidecar)  Treffen(rally).
Then as soon as the EGT is over, I pack up, leave Holland and I head up to Nordkapp in Norway to test out the 2WD system and also to officially start my expedition.

 I hope you all enjoyed this installment of my Mobec 2WD Sidecar build.

Comments and questions are welcome.


Have the day of your choice.......


Murph.