Well, here we go again, don't we.
My street H2 had H2R porting, special heads, 39mm offset bored carbs, nice pipes, different ignition boxes, H2R "D" spec gearbox with 10mm shortened input shaft (the length the R series dry clutch input shaft is different than the wet clutch street bike input shaft), and, other modifications. It WAS basically, an H2R Talladega/Ontario spec engine, with H2R gearbox modified to use a wet clutch, and, a special made kickstart gear so it could use a stock position kick starter with the H2R gear set..
That's the way it was, and, I wish the bike didn't get stolen back in 1994 out of my shop in Merced, California. I spent a lot of time and effort on that bike, and I liked it immensely.
Anyone see H2F-26538 H2E-26657 Calif license 3F1982, I'd sure like it back.
It had 18 inch Morris Mags on both ends, modified Z1 dampers on the front forks, Koni shocks in the rear, on a Z1 swing arm, Suzuki T125 steel oil tank between the frame rails, under slung pipes, special black ignition boxes, low bars, Under slung rear caliper with Lockheed rear master, Z1 calipers on both ends, duel disks in the front, the very first set of drilled brake discs (they were the original pattern for the 72 hole drilled disks Steve and I did for Yvon's bikes), shift and brake linkage was rods with Heim joints.
Now, Rick, if you don't like it, learn to live with it. Get off my case. By the way, Rick, I rode that bike all over the place in So. Cal., for over 12 years, without a failure, so much for "reliability". n the Kawasaki R&D dyno, the engine made 149 horsepower, at the crankshaft. NOPE, I never took pictures of it, so, flame me even more for not "recording" everything for decades, I was too busy riding my bike, not making pictures to show everyone in creation.
John, I don't care ban me again for defending myself, that seems to be the way it is done around here.
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