Wayne,
  Mine will not come out unless you apply alot of force then try to put
it back in.
 It is impossible on my setup . If you could get it to slide in it would
scrape away the coating and set up corrosion . The angle at the bottom
of the joint is wider than the top .                            The
reason that I have played with the sissy bar a lot is my
nitrous bottle is mounted to the sissy bar . If you can come up with a
system that slides in & out without
damaging whatever the coating is to prevent corrosion from setting in I
would be very interested . I've had two
machinists look at it with no solution yet .
Eric  H.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Wayne Pettipas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "V-MAX TECH LIST" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, November 12, 2000 7:45 PM
Subject: RE: Grab bar


> Erica:
>
> Actually if you remove the pad plus the bolts holding the top part of
the
> bar in place, then grab the top part and give a good upward tug the
top will
> come right out.  There's enough spring in the vertical legs to allow
this.
>
> A shorty replacement bar only needs a top bar with undercuts on the
bottom
> plus to angle legs to fit the vertical legs of the sissy bar bottom
and the
> tope of the legs need to be machined to fit the bottom of the top bar.
>
> Needs some machining and welding.
>
> I'm going to draw one up and get the local m/c shop to give me a
price.
>
> Wayne
>
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