A week or so back, curiosity finally got the better of me.
This coupled with finding a mint standard can on ebay, ment my current slightly battered can was going under the knife (or hacksaw).
After a bit of elbow grease i split the can next to the weld on the large end of the inlet cone.
I then set to work cutting the cat out:
Once removed, the cat weighs in at around 0.5kg's, but the real reason i wanted to try the bike without it, was to try and reduce the heat.
A few issues ensued with getting the correct welding rods. The ebay seller sent me tig rods. Ideal for the job if you have a tig welder, which i don't, just an ancient inverter arc.
Proper rods sourced (1.6mm stainless), i taped the can back together with gaffer tape, just enough to weld a few tags on it. once happy i stripped the tape off and carried on all the way around.
Heres the result:
Looks like it should hold together, but i think next time i need to crank the amps up a little more.
All i need is the new radiator to turn up so i can try it.
This coupled with finding a mint standard can on ebay, ment my current slightly battered can was going under the knife (or hacksaw).
After a bit of elbow grease i split the can next to the weld on the large end of the inlet cone.
I then set to work cutting the cat out:
Once removed, the cat weighs in at around 0.5kg's, but the real reason i wanted to try the bike without it, was to try and reduce the heat.
A few issues ensued with getting the correct welding rods. The ebay seller sent me tig rods. Ideal for the job if you have a tig welder, which i don't, just an ancient inverter arc.
Proper rods sourced (1.6mm stainless), i taped the can back together with gaffer tape, just enough to weld a few tags on it. once happy i stripped the tape off and carried on all the way around.
Heres the result:
Looks like it should hold together, but i think next time i need to crank the amps up a little more.
All i need is the new radiator to turn up so i can try it.
