And on the Busa, coupled with the Extreme Pro Pads. These pads are expensive but if you want that extra bite, these pads are amazing.
Tossing your stock lines isn't that hard of a job. But it's messy and requires swapping out the fluid and bleeding the brakes which can be a multi-day job.
When I was a kid, I can remember helping my dad bleed the brakes on our '72 Ford Pickup. "push the pedal" he would say and I remember that sensation of no resistance to the brake pedal while he bled them. But I learned about brakes.
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I have sold hundreds of brake line kits as a Galfer Dealer, and many kits to members here.
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And I'm still an ardent believer in tossing your stock rubber lines. Many new bikes these days don't even come with rubber lines anymore.
On the Hayabusa, it is a simple swap job. Remove old line, and replace it with the new lines from the kit. Many of us do Front/rear/clutch kits to make them all match. While there's likely not any real performance benefit with having a braided clutch line, my OCD wants that 'complete kit'.
Rear line is easiest so I'll do that first. Unbolt & replace, right?
Not quite. I didn't realize the two banjos bolts are different thread pitches. One is fine thread, other is coarse. Nuts.