I found a solution for retaining those little nuts in the battery terminals.
Might help someone.
I cut a piece of clear plastic hose, flatten it, and place it under the nuts.
The piece of hose acts as a spring to hold the nut in place.
When the terminal is installed, the bolt screws down against it or thru it.
Works out great.
A piece of cardboard cut the right size works, too. Even tends to stay in place. Just an option for somebody with cardboard but no rubber hoseGreat, now I won't have dump the lead shot out of the rubber hose.
... but I can tell you the DB killer is a HP killer for sure, basically it dumbs the engine down to stock muffler flow / power. HTH, SteveTBR claims it doesn't drop HP, but guess they wouldn't sell many if they said,"You just spent $600 for our exhaust, to gain HP, now spend $30 more to make it acceptably quiet and give up that HP gain.". Bad marketing idea.
TBR claims it doesn't drop HP, but guess they wouldn't sell many if they said,"You just spent $600 for our exhaust, to gain HP,
One who spends ANY money on a replacement muffler thinking he is going to gain any noticeable horsepower has already fallen into a marketing trapTotally agree, but I didn't pay for it. It came on the bike, when I bought it. I have a BMW R1150RT, with a Remus system, and have been told that it totally kills all low mid range power, and I believe it. Sounds pretty cool though, and that's all the PO wanted. I have the stock muffler, but changing it out is a pain in the azz... Oh well. tp
Steve, from all I've gathered, your flash works with the TBR and db killer, since it now flows, as you stated, the same as stock, and you designed the flash for a stock engine. So I'm asking if that is the case, no tweaking of the flash would be necessary to work for myC14, right???
I didn't mind the 08 being a little tame down low, as it made congested riding easier, but this 11 simply feels sluggish, not tame. I can live with it, but rather not. tomp
Yes, it works with stock and slip ons. I have run the a/f ratios with both and there just really isn't a difference to justify any meaningful changes.
Thanks, all. It's going to hit 70+ today and tomorrow here in VA. I was going to send in the ECU to Steve for his re-flash but when I saw the weather, I couldn't resist riding.
TBR claims it doesn't drop HPI have the TBR black series, and that quote depends on WHICH dB killer you're talking about . I have both, and the P1X (the quieter of the 2) definitely chokes the engine on this big motor with just one can. TBR sent me the P1 free of charge, and the difference was noticeable. The P1X inner circumference (inside the can) is noticeably smaller than stock. The can uncorked probably gains a few HP on top, but suffers down low and mid rpm. The motor feels the best with the P1, which is only marginally larger than stock, so retains the low to mid rpm torque without being restrictive up top. And the noise level is absolutely perfect for my taste: deep and healthy, and just as loud as the engine itself, so perfect for my taste. But as most of us already know, any power gain (if any) is minimal. I just wanted the stock abomination out, without losing power over stock... which is exactly what happened with the P1X. Now all is well with the P1, at stock power levels low and mid, and maybe a hair more on top, but with a much nicer looking can and 9 lbs less.
No sense in risking my warranty for a little bit more performance when I like everything else
I don't believe there is any risk at all to the warranty with ECU reflashingThat's a fact, not opinion. And it could be outside the hands of a dealer if Kawi asks to download the ECU before authorizing any engine warranty claims. Once you' violate' the electronic seal of the ECU, there's no going back, even if you reflash back to stock. And if you have any knowledge of electronics (which you do), you know a programming error can cause an engine to fail. Simple common sense. I'm not saying 'x' tune will do any damage to the bike, but it could. And that's the argument factories make. I saw this first hand with a friend's GTR. Local dealer used to allow claims due to ECU modifications, but Nissan started asking dealers to download the ECUs before authorizing any engine warranty claims, and he was denied warranty. He was smart enough not to try to sue Nissan because he knew he'd lose that argument, so learned that lesson the hard way, and just built up his engine with better internals this time. Bottom line is dealers don't have the ability to detect ECU tampering, but manufacturers do. And ultimately might not be up to dealers to authorize a warranty repair, even if it is now. That's what I meant. It's okay to take that risk if you want, but just be aware of the possible consequences .