So that part was over and on to the swingarm.
The gussets I bought from barefoot3zk5 fit nicely. I did a bit of smoothing them up first and then clamped them on the bottom rear of the axle slot. I had previously ground off some the paint, powder coating maybe, from the area to get a better start on the welding. I then got out my very old air die grinder with the straight carbide 3/4" dia cutter. Lots of grinding later I had two .200" longer extended slots. All went good and after just a little small pad cleanup grinding, I hit with the rattle can paint.
As a little reminder, the shoulder for the shock mount on the top rear should also be trimmed up a bit. With the axle now back further, the two axle cams can hit the boss for the shock. I used a thin cut off wheel disc and cut back about .100" and that seemed to be enough on trial fitting.
After all of that I got it all back together. By the way, the rear wheel/tire may look light enough, but when you have the table lift rear wheel tray out and you're trying to drop the rear tire and pull that axle all alone, that thing is way heavier than it should be. Finally a 1"x2" across the tray opening and using the center jack to lower the bike just right, it got the axle out/in, but it was a hassle.
So I get the bike back up and running and do a 5 mile test. I do the GPS and find that my speedo is about 8 mph fast at 70. I knew I would be getting into the TTS to do the VSS calibration.
I thought I had it all figured out, but I couldn't communicate with the ECM. I finally took my wife's 17" HP laptop out in the garage, as it's the original PC I used with the original TTS software and the Fullsac map Steve sent me back in June '09. Even with that I couldn't get the ECM to download or communicate. I loaned a friend my cable set and I think he gave me back a wrong cable. I finally found a cable setup at work that would plug into the module and my PC, a RS232 to USB. I had to load a driver for the cable and finally I could get the ECM map to download to the PC. I then did the calculations and did the ACR save and then the new ratio save. The Bootloader would get to 25% and then I would get a 280 error and the programming would lock up.
Back on line again and I found as Steve from TTS told me, there are many cable sets out there that and they're not all created equal. I finally found a cable at OfficeMax that they said I could bring back if it didn't work. I bought it and loaded the drivers and tried it all again. This time I got the Bootloader and held my breathe. It hit 20% and then jumped to 42% and I knew all was good. The bike now is just 1 mph fast at 60, so I guess it's close enough. One could keep tweaking the number by a couple points and trying it over and over, but I'm good with that.
Now to the performance review.
All I can say is WOW!!! When I took off up the freeway entrance ramp I pounded second gear and it "felt" like I would pull the front wheel of the road. Now I'm sure that didn't happen, but the feeling was there. Overall the bike runs great and seems to be better in all gears. Knowing that my speedo may be 1 or 2 mph fast, at 80 mph yesterday I was at 3200 rpms. I normally do not ride this fast, but the rain was coming and I didn't want to get caught in a downpour. The first gear parking lot improvements are very nice too. I can now take off with less slipping of the clutch and my clutch out in first gear speed is slower than before.
I think that this is the most bang for the buck upgrade I've done. Just doing this even to a bone stock Ultra would be a great improvement.
If you're on the edge about making this change, bite the bullet and do it. I'm sure that a shop with experience with doing sprockets would not have had all the issues I did. Getting the swingarm modified my be a bit more difficult though. I'm sure any competent independent that can weld could do the whole job for you.
I give this
Sorry for the rambling on and on and on and on and on and on, damn fingers won't stop typing...