1997 Honda CBR900RR parts, but I’m buying too many online when I’d rather buy them locally. For someone who would rather support local business, I’m frustrated at the lack of competent parts people. Canadian Tire needs to do better.
Fram oil filters:
The oil filter for the CBR is a fairly common filter – but the big Canadian Tire in Guelph didn’t have one… or anything else I needed. It’s things like this that force me online to purchase when I’d rather just purchase locally.
Strangely, the Walmart across the street, the only place I can find the Mobil 1 oil Triumph calls on for the Tiger, had an oil filter for the Honda. Not a great weekend for Canadian Tire. You can’t really brag on having 200,000 parts if your sales rep can’t find any of them.
Winter flushing oil:
This is what I’m going to put in the Honda over the winter as it gets sorted. In the spring I’ll do a flush and go with Mobil 1 synthetic.
The only place I can find the Mobil 1 is at Walmart – it’s the only time I usually go there. Since I’m already there for the Tiger, I’ll go for 7 litres and do the Tiger and CBR with the same super-oil. Running the Mobil 1 in the Tiger has stopped any oil burning in it. It’s good stuff.
K&N Filters for CBR900:
https://www.knfilters.ca/honda/cbr900rr/900/1997
The HA-9092-A air filter is a strange thing – I thought the filter element would pop out of the plastic, but it’s a single (expensive) manufactured piece. Finding these is tricky. You can find cheap, paper filters for about $40 a go, but I found the K&N on Amazon for $120CAD, so that’s going in and getting cleaned regularly. That should pay for itself within three changes.
I’m not in a place where I’m going to put the front end back together again and pop in the replacement LED when it comes in this week. With the replacement carb from NCK Salvage in hand, I’m going to try and rebuild as much of the Honda as I can over the long weekend (it’s Thanksgiving Weekend in Canada).
The Strange World of Dash Bulbs:
12v 1.7W wedge dash light is the warning light bulb needed for a ’97 Honda CBR900RR. These are hard to find – Canadian Tire was no help and the girl at the parts desk in Guelph couldn’t remember the numbers for parts, so I gave up on trying to find them. I want to buy locally, but with that kind of floor help, it just isn’t happening.
I found LED replacement lights that should last better and use less electricity in the process on Amazon.
This light search led to a crash course in bulb sizing. The dash lights on the CBR900RR are T-5 Wedge 12v 1.7W bulbs. T5 means it has a 5mm base. In this case they’re 1.7cms long on that 5mm base. The LED should be cooler, use less electricity and be brighter.
from Blogger https://ift.tt/2pjDZ5u
via IFTTT