Building A Honda Grom Roadracer

in #motor8 years ago


If you’ve been following Motorcycle.com lately, you’ll have noticed a recent Top 10 about Honda Grom modifications. The list, of course, was a teaser to a bigger event a few members of the MO  team participated in: a 24-hour endurance race. We’ll get to that story  in the coming weeks, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves here. Before  we could ever race a Grom, we’d have to transform it from the little  funster that it is in its stock condition into a dedicated kart-track  destroyer.

When we delved into what kinds of items are available  from the aftermarket, we were shocked to discover the breadth of what  can be bought to transform the Grom into something much more serious.  The Top 10 mentioned above listed the players who contributed to this  project, but they are worth mentioning (and thanking!) again. Major  kudos to Steady Garage, Blue Monkey Motorsports, Woodcraft Technologies, Spiegler, JRi shocks, K-Tech suspension, Lindemann Engineering and Brock’s Performance for the support and generosity they provided for this project. All told, these are the items we’re throwing onto our Grom:  

  • Morin oil cooler
  • Takegawa hi-flow oil pump
  • CR Racing Dragster adjustable handlebars
  • Spiegler steel-braided brake lines
  • Kuni levers
  • SBS sintered brake pads
  • Power Commander V
  • Healtech Quick Shifter Easy
  • Vortex 36-tooth rear sprocket
  • Sunstar 14-tooth front sprocket
  • Woodcraft rearsets
  • JRi Universal Double Adjustable shock
  • K-Tech fully adjustable fork upgrade kit
  • Chimera air intake with Sprint Filter waterproof air filter
  • Brock’s Performance Alien Head full exhaust
  • BST carbon fiber wheels with Michelin Power Pure tires

With less than a week to build our Grom into a racer, and nearly all of our staff resources dedicated to our nine-bike Ultimate Sports Adventure-Touring Shootout, there wasn’t much time for us to do the wrenching. For this, we were incredibly thankful Will Kenefick – proprietor of Motorcycle Service Centers LLC.  in Camarillo, California – stepped up and offered to help transform the  Grom on such short notice (meanwhile, I’d be taking pictures).  Conveniently, Kenefick and MSC is also one of a handful of K-Tech  authorized Service and Tuning centers in the country. Kenefick’s  background in motorcycle tuning could fill the pages of MO, but a short history includes wrenching in World Superbike, as well as creating the motorcycles used in the Transformers movies. Click on the MSC link for a more detailed bio. After all was said and done, our race-prepped Grom put down 9.1 horsepower and 7.3 lb-ft of torque on the MotoGP Werks  dyno, versus the stock numbers of 8.7 hp and 7.8 lb-ft. That comes out  to a 4.5% increase in power, but, interestingly, the torque number took a  dive by 6%. Take a look at the dyno chart below and you’ll also see the  stock Grom is noticeably more healthy in the midrange. This definitely  came as a surprise to us, but with our new wet weight of 187 lbs, the  whopping 38 lbs of stuff we shaved off the stock bike will help us  overcome this deficit. This just goes to show that shiny new parts  aren’t necessarily better than the stock components. But that’s where we  are now, and since a picture is worth 1,000 words, our Grom build will  be told in a pictorial to better take you along for the ride.

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