Why are you having them made instead of just buying them online for $5-7 a piece? I can't imagine it'll be much cheaper if you make a couple of dozen of them.I'm actually having some made so when people buy the system from me,I'll include it
The yoshi box only came with the small band adapter for the M18. Im ordering a plug off amazon and that should take care of it. Thanks for the help yall!Usually Yoshimura is pretty good about including plugs with their exhausts. Did yours not come with one? If not you can buy one (M18) from ebay or amazon. Once your ECU is flashed the O2 sensor is disabled so you can just unplug the connector and remove it completely.
I left it in the stock header, and installed an M18 plug into the Yosh.What did you do with the oxygen sensor? I installed mine yesterday and Im not entirely sure what to do with the port since Im getting the ECU flashed from TST.
That's a bad idea. There's a reason nobody puts aluminum plugs in exhausts! Ideally it should match the material the pipe is made of...so steel if it's a steel exhaust, or titanium if it's a titanium exhaust. Aluminum has a larger coefficient of thermal expansion and when it gets up to over 500 degrees which is very common for exhaust pipes it could put a lot of pressure on those thin-walled bungs and potentially crack it. Then you mess up a $1500 exhaust because you're trying to save 15 grams of weight. Also depending on the location of the bung hole, and if you're reving the hell out of the bike (think GSXR squids at a bike night), you could be flirting with temperatures near the melting point of aluminum and then you have bigger problems. Not as likely to happen, but it's a possibility. Another reason is aluminum is soft and those bungs tend to get pretty jammed in there after a while so you'll have a higher chance of rounding off the plug with the wrench when you're trying to take it off.@sbk1198 i bought some but they were heavy SS, so I'm having some aluminum ones made next door. both systems come with a bung, but not a closed off one.
Pics would be helpful. 😁😎Jeez sure seems like no one at Yosh tried to install this bracket before sending these out the door because that top bolt is impossible.
And it's really impossible to get a torque wrench on the nuts, so second the approach of using a smaller bolt and loctite here. Really annoying considering they're the ones who decided to mount it to the footpeg bolts, ones I'd really rather have torque'd to spec....
Never mind, I realize I was being thick - I installed the bracket on while trying to keep the footpegs on the bike (i.e one bolt at a time) but obviously you could just take the assembly off the bike to install the bracket...did this at the tail end of working all July 4th weekend and clearly my mental faculties were spent!Yeah I got it after I stepped back and found the thinner wrenches, it's totally doable just was a pain for me and no way to use a torque wrench on the hex nuts as they're right behind the swingarm which is why I was moaning (I got some pics and will post). Also I got big gorilla fingers which doesn't help 👀.
But yeah shouldn't dissuade anyone because the end result is literally my fave exhaust ever on any bike
@SCracing did you install it with the OEM pegs on?
No prob. I agree, there probably isn’t a ton of difference and I’m just hoping the new one makes it a tad easier for oil changes. I did see @SCracing ‘s video though showing it was possible so that was awesome and helpful!A couple of hp at the top end for me won't be a big deal as I'm not racing nor being competitive with this bike. 😉
I will however enjoy the symphony of the exhaust fitted to my 4RR even though it's intended for the 25R.
Thanks for the great comments @mcclsha.
That really got me excited for having it. 🥰👍
No problems here, but I used a shorter bolt than provided by Yoshimura.@kaanivore @sbk1198 and i installed it in like 10 minutes strapped to the dyno !! @Pmack I don't think had a issues? and everyone else who got one didn't say anythingit's deff not easy, but we did no prob!! and to add, i put new rearsets on the bike and had to remove and reinstall them same fasteners ! having the right tools helps as well !
It sounds awesome, especially on up shifts high in the rev range.Never mind, I realize I was being thick - I installed the bracket on while trying to keep the footpegs on the bike (i.e one bolt at a time) but obviously you could just take the assembly off the bike to install the bracket...did this at the tail end of working all July 4th weekend and clearly my mental faculties were spent!
I took the bike out for a test drive and can't stress enough how much I love this exhaust. It spits a long flame out on overrev, and generally has this great neutral tone that's not as boomy as the Graves exhaust (which isn't my style). But once you get it up in the rev range it will start to get raw and metallic, kind of like a Jag or Ferrari, and the upshifts sound downright demonic. I swear it's slightly quieter than the Graves slip-on as well, somehow, which I like as I'm mostly using this to commute at the moment (I've obviously got the DB-killer still in there). Thank you to @SCracing for supplying me with this!
Going to get this dyno tuned in a few weekends, and can't wait!