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Winter Project & How TO 2012 Ninja 650 (ER-6N) 636 Front End swap.

43K views 67 replies 15 participants last post by  Bradmeister  
#1 ·
Started life as a wrecked 2012 Kawasaki Ninja 650 with 457 miles on it. Once the plastic was stripped off and a replacement headlight sourced from one of my other bikes, it was rideable, that is, with a pair of vicegrips in place of the missing right side footpeg.

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I should make note here that this is my 3rd of the Kawasaki 650 parallel twins. I love these little engines (bikes). First was a 2007 Versys, one of the first in the state, then a 2009 ER-6N, and now a 2012 Ninja. I ride Naked's and Supermoto's for the most part, and prefer the look of that type of bike. Then when I found a 2012 with the new double tube frame and swingarn that I really love the look of, I jumped on it. A nice bonus was the super low miles and the Kawi candy green paint, my new favorite color.
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I also knew that even though The forks, triple clamps, and even the handlebars were fine, I wanted to upgrade the forks and brakes, as my current Naked is a Triumph Street Triple R, which has very good suspension, and the best front brakes of any bike I've ever ridden, with very strong initial bite, and great feel. After riding the Ninja turned ER-6 for a couple hundred miles after my mods, I've decided the Street Trip is no longer needed and will go up for sale in a few months, as the ER-6 turned out so well.

I still have some cosmetic work to do, and possibly next year some engine work. Possibly cams and head work, bored throttle bodies, pistons and such. I'd like to get 80 plus hp at the wheel with corresponding gains of torque everywhere in the rev range, keeping the reliability.

I've been asked why would you want to put all that time, effort, and money into a bike that doesn't have the performance of your Street Triple. Well, I love the street trip R, this is my second one. But for the past 12-15 years I've had nothing but singles and twins in the garage (aside from the street trip's) , and I guess they just really do it for me, although the street trip, has one of the best engines in all of motorcycling, sounds great too. These little parallel twins are great as well, albeit down on hp, but not torque, to the street trip. They are quick, love to rev, and torquey, and you can ride the **** out of them, if the ER-6 can't keep up in the twisties, it's the rider, not the bike. and how much power can you actually use on the street, I have much more fun wringing a bike out. I would say the front end is now comparable to the Street Trip, as are the brakes. There is also the satisfaction of building something that is unique, and almost every time I get fuel, someone wants to know... what is that bike?

So, here is what was done to the bike. Removed the fairings, headlights, forks, triple clamps, front wheel, front fender, brakes, brake lines, bars, levers, perches, coolant reservoir, misc. brackets. With the rear of the bike on a swingarm stand, the front was hung from the garage rafters with winch cable looped around the steering head, so the entire front end could be stripped off, and it could hang for months, without worrying it would fall. It took around 3 months for me to source all the parts and get it back together. First came forks and triple clamps form a 2004 ZX6R, and if I had wanted to use clip ons, that part would have been done. I like superbike style bars, and riding position, so I needed a Z1000 top triple. First I tried a used (ebay) 2003-2004 Z1 top triple (2 pinch bolts per side). That would have worked, from what I could tell, but it was tweaked. I could get one side in, but the other side was at least a quarter inch off from being able to slide over the fork ( I knew the forks and ZX6 triples were straight as they slid right on with no binding as the forks were rotated in them). So I sent that back and got a brand new triple from my local dealer. First ordering an '04 Z1 triple, then hearing that would take much longer to get, ordered an '07-'08 Z1 (1 pinch bolt per side) top triple. Both Z1 top triples also required me to make a 5mm or so, collar to fit over the steering stem and fill the gap between the O.D. of the stem and the I.D. of the top triple, where they meet under the steering stem nut. With that sorted, and the triples and forks bolted to the front end, I sourced a 2005 ZX6R front wheel. The stock wheel could have been used, but the hub would have needed to been machined out from, if I remember correctly, 42mm to 47mm to accept the larger bearings needed for the ZX6R's front axle. And the machine work would have cost at least as much as it did for me to buy a used "straight" wheel, online. Then the stock Ninja 650 300mm rotors were put on the ZX6R wheel.
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With the bike now on the ground, I got an '04 ZX6R front fender and wrapped it with 3M DiNoc carbon fiber vinyl film, as well as the headlight shrouds, and the trim piece above the taillight (none of them matched the Kawi candy green). The calipers were spaced out to accommodate the 20mm larger rotors, and custom Galfer stainless brake line were added.

On to the controls. A Renthal aluminum 7/8 bar was installed (I would have put on a fatbar, but I knew the instrument cluster would sit on top, covering it), with the bars installed, I had very little steering lock. To resolve this I cut down the vibration isolators in the top triple clamp to move the nut up higher that attaches the bars to the triple clamp, and also ground the top frame tube down a few mm to give me adequate steering lock, not as much as stock, but more than my Street Trip. So now the stud and nut that attach the bars to the triple clamp act as my steering stop, odd, but it works. Pazzo shorty levers for the ZX6R perches were next, so I could use the radial master cylinder (instead of the stock Ninja 650 unit, which I have heard will work), with a universal reservoir mounted to the brake lever perch. Then aluminum bar end mirrors. Also the coolant reservoir was relocated under the seat in a 10oz. liquor flask, for a clean right side view.

What to do for a headlight? I had been using the stock headlight from my '07 BMW G650XMOTO (Supermoto) zip-tied on, so I could ride it around before the teardown. I thought it matched the look of the bike pretty well, so I fabbed up some mounts and on it went. The stock instrument cluster was attached to the headlight bracket, angled toward the rider and set on top of the bar mount, for a functional and clean look. A pair of BMW turn signals were bolted to the triple clamp via a Suzuki DR-650 front turn signal bracket that I had laying around. Also the horn was relocated to the lower triple clamp.To go with the greatly improved front end, a Penske 8900E shock is being built for me as I write this, and should be a huge improvement over stock.

On the engine side of things, a Leo Vince full system, with a Power Commander V. While the tank was off I removed the secondary throttle butterflies, de-snorkeled the air-box and capped the P A I R valve. No tuning as yet, because it runs well, and is stronger than stock, and in the winter I might decide to do some engine work.

Was it worth all the time and money (my running total is still much less than a new Ninja 650)? I think so, it's a fun little ripper, and after riding it back to back with the Street Trip, I'm confident I wont miss it (though my son thinks I'm crazy). I'm more of a twins and singles lover.

I hope this helps someone do the same front end mod on the new Ninja or ER-6N, or inspires someone to transform a bike they already have into something different, or a wreck into something new.
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Discussion starter · #7 ·
SO hot! You do some nice work.

The initial state didn't even look TOO bad. You had a nice starting point. Care to share your running tally?
Thanks, The total including my shock that's on order is still a few grand less than a new one would cost.
 
Discussion starter · #11 ·
I thought the Galfer lines piggy-backed directly from the master cylinder and to each caliper, not in series from one caliper to the next... was that a personal choice?

"Features:

All Galfer lines are coated with a clear or colored protective coat, protecting the line from the weather and the bike from scratches.
All Galfer kits come complete with banjo bolts and washers for easy installation. Banjo bolts should never be torqued over 12 to 15 ftlbs.
All Sport Bike kits are 2 line kits; with the lines traveling from the master cylinder to the caliper directly.
All kits are made bike specific. "

Oh, and it looks GREAT! Excellent job.
Good eye, yes I prefer the look of the stock routing. Since I had to have a custom length, I went with stock routing as well. Galfer does the dual line to the caliper because " you may have uneven pad wear from one caliper to the other with the crossover". To that I say.... well my Street Triple R has the lines routed the same way as the Kawi, and the Triumph has the best brakes of any bike I've ever ridden, with no uneven wear. I am perfectly happy with the brakes on the Kawi, a huge improvement over stock, and I believe it was only $30 more to have custom length, and routing.

Thanks.
 
Discussion starter · #12 ·
Updated pic with the new Penske shock, added 2 inches of ride height over stock, compliments the ZX6R front end very well. Much more compliant, no more getting bounced out of the seat.
 

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Discussion starter · #23 ·
Also I'm only in about $210 on the front end swap so far, $325 if you include the fender,SS lines, and levers I ordered.
Ya, I forgot the '03-'04 had a 3 spoke wheel. The forks and triples, clip-on's levers, etc. were some of the cheapest parts of my build too, about the same price you paid. Since I wanted to use superbike bars and not the clip-on's, the new top triple cost more than the whole front end. The wheel was even more than the top triple. Money well spent in my opinion. The Penske rear shock is a must have also, after the front end upgrade. I hope you budgeted for a replacement shock.
 
Discussion starter · #25 ·
Ya, I don't budget either, just try to shop for a deal.
No doubt the 180 kit looks great, but I bet you'll lose 3-4 or more hp at the wheel due to the extra weight of the heavier wheel and rim, also slower acceleration and braking due to the rotational forces, otherwise I'd be all over that mod too. White wheels look hot, sounds great.
I bought my Penske from BRP (Blue Ridge Performance), Gary was great to work with. I wanted the Penske because it has adjustable ride height, all of the other lower priced shocks I saw did not. I knew before I started looking at shocks that I wanted to increase the rear ride height for more weight on the front tire. I increased my rear ride height by 2 inches (after setting the sag), and am very happy with that so far after a couple hard rides. I also wanted to increase the seat height as well, so double win. The only downside I've found so far, the kick-stand is too short now. To answer your question about is it taller than stock, I know I saw that with some shocks you can specify length, don't remember if the Penske can be built that way, but I would say probably, and with the extra adjustability you could always go up in small increments to your liking.
 
Discussion starter · #29 ·
I'm one step ahead of the decreased braking effects on the rear wheel. I already purchased an aluminum 46t rear sprocket, stainless lines, and a wave rotor. The kick stand issue sounds interesting to tackle.

I'm sure I'll have more questions for you, but thanks for taking the time to answer the ones I've had for you and just sharing a general conversation over the 3rd gen 650. There's not a lot of guys out there trying to make the 3rd gen 650 perform better.
No problem, that's what forums are for... sharing information. The 3rd gen will catch on with a little more time, lots of room for improvement.
 
Discussion starter · #30 ·
Where are you guys finding these front ends for so cheap?
I found mine on a local bike forum. Got the front end from a "racer" that bought a new bike. Look into local racing in your area, most racers improve suspension, before looking for more power. Better suspension = quicker lap times.
 
Discussion starter · #32 ·
I need to find a local forum then. I knew a really good one in Washington, PNWriders. I haven't found anything near Savannah though. I DID find some good roads while poking around maps though and that Roebling Road is in my back yard should I want to take the track day plunge. :)
Winner, winner, chicken dinner. That's where I found my front end, I live in Washington. Surely there must be some forum there with Roebling Road, lots of racers I'm sure. I believe one of the best American racers comes from Georgia, a certain Mr. Scott Russell..... I believe he rode a Kawi once or twice.
 
Discussion starter · #34 ·
I don't like it.
Sorry but the gold and the missing farings look odd.
That front end doesn't look right either.

I would patch and paint the originals and put them back on.
To each his own I guess. :AR15firin

Well everyone has a different taste. What do you mean by the "front end doesn't look right either."

I much prefer naked bikes, that's mostly all I've ridden for years, and as a side bonus, removing the rashed plastics shaved 20lbs. of weight off the bike. Lighter is always righter.
 
Discussion starter · #36 ·
The stock front ends don't look right. They do the job, but not well at all. It's a 460ish pound bike supported by 41mm un-adjustable forks. If you rode a 650 with an upgraded front end you'd feel immediately what you're missing.

What he said!!!
 
Discussion starter · #38 ·
Could you take an up close pic or two of this setup? I understand that a versys lower triple will work well for steering lock. They're rare though so it'd be nice not to have to source one. Does your fork lock still work?
If you run clip ons, instead of superbike bars (like my bike), the front end swap is far easier and cheaper, and you may not have the steering lock problems I had.
I'll see what I can do without having to remove my headlight assembly. Fork lock does not currently work, but could made too, if I really wanted it too.
 
Discussion starter · #46 ·
Hey guys ...I just brought home a 650r with front end damage ....Versysrider , you got PM
Yes I have a complete front end with wheel, tire, fender, just minus the rotors. All in very good to excellent shape with 457 miles on them, not entirely sure I want to sell them, but if the price was right. Better yet buy my whole bike, already done. I'm first on the list for the new 3 cylinder FZ-09 at the same dealer that I bought my 2 new quads from last year, dealers should have them in October. The ER-6N (Ninja) will go up for sale next spring.