Thanks guys! Hope everyone enjoyed a good Christmas surrounded by family/friends.
Some fabrications from last week, now that the cat can be let out of the bag. My daughter has my saddle bags from my Harley I owned 25 plus years ago to install on her Yamaha. So, while she was at work last week, her bike made its way into the shop for some fabrication work on bag brackets. We had ordered some stainless round stock for making the spacers, stainless rod for bending the hoops, and longer bolts for attachment to the fender struts. We had to contend with the rear turn signals being in the way as this bike is a bit shorter than the Softail Custom the bags were on before, so the spacers were made about two inches long to provide space for the lights.
The brackets for sandwiching the bag strap (these were originally an across the fender bag but never used in that fashion) used to be straight across straps on the Harley, but the Yamaha strut bolts drop down on the front set of bolts. So, we designed a drop-down tab that would still keep the bags parallel to the exhaust.
Mocked up with the bag:
In order to keep our bag brackets looking consistent, all four were clamped together and lightly touched against the disc sander for minimal heat in order to keep the disc from loading up too bad. Then finished up with 320 on the DA.
The brackets were dropped off at The Shop at Shorty's for some matte finish powder coat, and the hoops were polished up on the pedestal buffer, all ready for Christmas morning.
The other fabrication we did, the wife's beater vehicle had a rear hub bearing that was getting a bit sloppy so we purchased a replacement. I didn't have a puller for removing, and since everyone was now closed for the holidays, I resorted to modifying a top link bracket I had saved from a donor finish mower (item 3 in the picture)
A bit of heat applied and a large crescent wrench for rotational force, and this thing is taking shape.
Then a couple cuts on the band saw, three holes using the drill press, and we are in business. So, reminder/flashback, everything is a tool.
We didn't want to sacrifice another c-clamp so a simple 3/4-10 bolt and a nut held on the inside did the trick.. May have to upgrade later to acme thread if I can find a suitable donor, and then we can make this cobbled up mess a more permanent fixture in the tool box..