Givi rack for GenII
#1
Posted 26 October 2009 - 11:28 AM
If I first thread the screws (through the spacers) into the the three rearmost holes, there is a large gap between the rack and the subframe where the two threaded holes are under the seat. If I start the two holes under the seat first, the others won't start without cross treading.
Weird.
I called Givi and I am the only person they have ever heard of having this problem. I'm not surprised.
While I had 'em on the phone, I asked how to pronounce Givi. It's GeeVee (Gee as in "Gee Wally, that's swell!!" )
Anyway, if any of you Minnesotans with a GenII would like to help, let me know. I want to make sure the problem is the rack and not the bike.
#2
Posted 30 October 2009 - 10:21 AM
Corey
2008 A model (#2) mods: Tag Along Tank, V stream, Zumo 665, Escort Passport 8500 X50, Dual-Stars, 905 Racing Crash Bars, Starcom Advance, Throttlemeisters, Reinforced rear subframe, Russell seat, PCA mount, Givi V46, Ardmore lights, PIAA 910's and many more to follow.
#3
Posted 31 October 2009 - 11:57 AM
A picture is worth a thousand words. Here are the details:
The photo above and the photo below show that all of the screws start in all of the threaded holes if the spacers are removed.
If the three supplied spacers are used, and the the three screws through them are snugged down...
there is a gap between the subframe and the Givi rack under the seat:
It would be possible to press down on the Givi cross member and start the remaining two screws, ...
but I am not comfortable having that much torsional preload on either the Givi rack or the FJR's rear subframe.
I'm on my way to return the rack. Wish me luck.
#4
Posted 31 October 2009 - 01:10 PM
I wonder if the rack is mis-shaped somehow? Did you try screwing down the subframe section first? I think you're supposed to do that first and then do the tail section second.
For what it's worth, here's my 2009 installation write-up. Total installation time from unboxing to clean up was less than forty minutes.
Bummer, good luck
#5
Posted 31 October 2009 - 04:17 PM
#6
Posted 31 October 2009 - 05:00 PM
The only thing I see that you may be doing is mounting the plate to the support before mounting the support to the bike. Seems rather minor but I have always, including today, disassembled the plate from the support and then mounted them separately, support first. No logical method to the madness except it works every time.
If you're sure you have the correct support and rack it might make the difference. May be overkill but I have never had the kind of issues you're having.
Please keep us posted on your success.
Keep Going!
#7
Posted 31 October 2009 - 07:28 PM
The only reason the Givi plate is on the Givi rack is to keep track of the washers, vibration dampers and fasteners. The fasteners holding the mounting plate to the rack have not been torqued.
I keep hoping a local GenII owner will chime in because I want to eliminate my rear subframe as the cause of the problem. I've emailed Givi USA and the shop I bought the rack from. I didn't make it to the shop before they closed today. I don't want any hard feelings, I just want to return the rack.
When I buy my E52, I'll mount it using either the Givi E228, a Premier Cycle Accessories rack, or a plate I fab myself (thanks Shane for the Givi rack).
#8
Posted 01 November 2009 - 06:42 AM
This shouldn't take more than an hour of your time. It takes about fifteen minutes to swap the grab rails / rack. I want to know for sure that the problem is the new rack and not something I might have done:
If it turns out that there is nothing wrong with the new Givi rack, I'm going to have to pull all the plastic off the tail of the bike. I don't see anything abnormal in there now and I've looked at it pretty thoroughly.
#9
Posted 01 November 2009 - 06:52 AM
mr.paul, from Minnesota
#10
Posted 01 November 2009 - 06:54 AM
mr.paul, from Minnesota
#11
Posted 03 November 2009 - 03:16 PM
#12
Posted 04 November 2009 - 11:40 AM
#13
Posted 06 November 2009 - 03:53 AM
Last night mr.paul and I solved this little mystery. We removed his SR357 assembly (including spacers) and set them on my bike. I still had the gap under the seat. At this point, I'm thinking "Shit! It's my bike."
But, then we set my brand new SR357 assembly (including spacers) on his bike and the gap was there too!
So, all the worry over nothing. The rack seems designed by Givi to add tension to the rear subframe. (Thanks Solo and skortfire for confirming this.)
I'm still curious about why though.
#15
Posted 06 November 2009 - 06:49 AM
I don't see any in your pictures, do they not use or supply them on 2nd gens?
Nope. Spacers are not supplied nor used under the front cross bar.(grammar?)
0.0.1.man_sr357.pdf
#16
Posted 06 November 2009 - 07:17 AM
In any case, you do have those rubber cushion spacers (item 13) in there, right?
#17
Posted 06 November 2009 - 11:21 AM
#18
Posted 06 November 2009 - 11:24 AM
Not my picture, but...
Correct, but it would still space the cross member up accomplishing the same thing, right?
#19
Posted 06 November 2009 - 11:32 AM
I would expect the bolt to pull the rack down against the frame where the bolt screws in or a solid spacer to go in between. I wonder if the side pipes of the rack are just not bent enough.
#20
Posted 06 November 2009 - 12:16 PM
I would expect the bolt to pull the rack down against the frame where the bolt screws in or a solid spacer to go in between. I wonder if the side pipes of the rack are just not bent enough.
There is still time to correct your original post. (spelling error)
The only reason the rubber pieces weren't in the photo is because they kept falling off. I'm not sure what purpose they serve, but I suspect they have more to do with channeling water or something. They don't space anything; just get squashed when the Givi rack is tightened down against the subframe.
-Joe no "l"
















