85 to 88 Suzuki LT230S Quadsport help.
Are you sure more layers is better? Every time I've caked on layers like that, it ends up coming off in one big chunk and the over-spray areas stay on for life unless I clean it with brake cleaner (tolulene). I've recently become a fan of one thin coat on the theory that a scratch won't cause a large-scale delamination.
Not a fan of engine paint either. It doesn't help cooling. I don't think paint transfers heat as well as AL. I'd just wire brush any oxidation off and make the AL shine. It took me forever to get the paint off my eninge. I was trying all sorts of acids and paint removers to get the factory crud off there. Forgot what finally worked, but I don't want to go there again. I do remember that much lol
Not a fan of engine paint either. It doesn't help cooling. I don't think paint transfers heat as well as AL. I'd just wire brush any oxidation off and make the AL shine. It took me forever to get the paint off my eninge. I was trying all sorts of acids and paint removers to get the factory crud off there. Forgot what finally worked, but I don't want to go there again. I do remember that much lol
Here's the 22 inch version on my 250ex. I managed to get 4lbs of lugs off those. You can see the quadsport's tires in the background. I'm going to do those the same way, then add bolts to the lugs I leave.
Here's the mower tire:
I'm a big fan of bolts now. Not for street use though lol
How exactly did you go about shaving off the lugs? I've thought about it but I've never been worried enough about a few lbs to get serious about it. The 20's work great for what we do which is mostly just trails at moderate speeds (with the occasional bursts of speed through the corners) and virtually no jumping.
Pliers and a razor blade. Rubber cuts really easy when you pull on it. So get a cut started and then pull on it with the pliers, then the razor cuts pretty easy. It makes a crappy cut because its lift n pull like the beard shavers. The part you lifted n cut, will go back down, leaving the surface bumpy.
Saving weight is only good for acceleration. If you're just tooling around, it won't matter. But the way I figure, a 20 inch tire has the lugs 10 inches from center. That's almost a foot. If you shave off a pound, that's a ft-lb of torque NOT needed to accelerate the tire.
Actually, I did it to improve traction (weight savings a side effect). I got the tires, then I made the swingarm 4 inches longer. After that, I regretted these tires because they don't bite well enough. They work well on a stock swinger, but I need more now that I'm extended. So I cut that center lug out hoping to bite in more. Its not enough, so I'm going with the bolt idea and cutting off some more lugs to offset the weight of the bolts. I'm confident that will work. After all the experiments I've done, I think +2 swinger and no more than +4 on the front is about right. I went overboard with +4 in back and +5 (each side) in front. Now, because of the long swinger, I'm searching for ways to increase traction which wouldn't be necessary if my swinger was shorter. And being so wide just makes clipping a tree more likely. But its ok. Bolts in the back are cool too
Saving weight is only good for acceleration. If you're just tooling around, it won't matter. But the way I figure, a 20 inch tire has the lugs 10 inches from center. That's almost a foot. If you shave off a pound, that's a ft-lb of torque NOT needed to accelerate the tire.
Actually, I did it to improve traction (weight savings a side effect). I got the tires, then I made the swingarm 4 inches longer. After that, I regretted these tires because they don't bite well enough. They work well on a stock swinger, but I need more now that I'm extended. So I cut that center lug out hoping to bite in more. Its not enough, so I'm going with the bolt idea and cutting off some more lugs to offset the weight of the bolts. I'm confident that will work. After all the experiments I've done, I think +2 swinger and no more than +4 on the front is about right. I went overboard with +4 in back and +5 (each side) in front. Now, because of the long swinger, I'm searching for ways to increase traction which wouldn't be necessary if my swinger was shorter. And being so wide just makes clipping a tree more likely. But its ok. Bolts in the back are cool too