A brief update on the history of this project here. Tony didn't like hearing his Voyager 1300 "screaming" at 4000rpm at 70mph, and was trying to find a set of higher-ratio final drive gears for it. Not gonna happen! So, the alternative was to find an existing drive with the appropriate gear ratio. The Voyager 1300 has a 3.40 ratio, and the '84 Gold Wing has a 2.833 ratio. Both are right hand mounted, so they spin the same direction. In theory, by calculation, the Honda drive will give 3333rpm at 70 mph. Another requirement was that the shock mount had to be positioned to at least give me options for making an adapter to correctly position the stock Voyager shock's lower end.
So, since all final drives/rear wheels have a unique coupling, I bought the whole rear end from an '84 Gold Wing, including the swingarm, driveshaft, final drive and rear wheel. The project is to swap everything onto the Voyager's swingarm, then blend the front half of the Voyager's driveshaft to the rear half of the Honda's.
To start I cut the flange that mounts the final drive to the swingarm from each bike's swingarm. Each flange is a machined casting with a short nose that centers it in the swingarm's right tube, then it gets welded full circle around the tube. Simple! I cut the tube right along the weld on each swingarm without cutting all the way into the flange casting. Once it was thin enough I knocked the flange off with a leather mallet. Did this on each swingarm.
The Honda flange has a slightly larger diameter nose, by about .150", so I cut it down by about .130" because the Voyager's flange actually wiggled a bit inside the Voyager tube. The Honda flange now fits perfectly inside the Voyager's right swingarm tube. I also cleaned up the remaining weld on the flange while I had it in the lathe. I was worried about making the nose on the Honda flange too thin by turning it down to fit, but it turned out to be the same thickness as the nose on the Voyager's flange. It also tapers a bit to become thicker as you move from the edge of the nose.
So, we are now at the rough-cut stage. Next I need to make a jig to align the axle with the swingarm's pivot points, and at the Voyager's original span from pivot to axle. Once this jig is made I can weld the Honda's flange to the Voyager's swingarm tube. Then I need to assembled the whole thing to fit the Voyager's brake caliper to the Honda's rear wheel/rotor. I'm hoping it will only be a matter of a shim to correct side-to-side positioning from the Voyager's stock position. They both use the same diameter rotor. I also will have to make up a new axle spacer to fit the Honda rear wheel in the Voyager's swingarm.
Here are just a few pics of progress so far. The complete set of pics can be seen at the link below. The gold final drive is the stock Voyager drive, and the silver one is from the '84 Gold Wing.
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