Stereo wrote:So basically, if you can dig up a photo of a production bike from 1980 with wicked shit on(upside down forks, floating disks etc) it you can use it?
in a nutshell - Yes.
The onus of proof is always on the competitor to prove that any modification or part was available or used in the period (for P5, thats 1.1.73 to 31.12.80). This is possible with period publications that actually *date* a product/modification etc....
Floating discs first appeared on Suzuki square four 2-strokes in 1976 - they have been around for ages. But the replica ones cost a motza !!
2 horizontal-bolt fork leg lowers ( the type that they currently try and ban) first appeared on a Munch Mammoth in 1968 FFS !!!

And yet, some people on some forums do their level best to argue that this style of fork leg is a *Modern* style. What a load of frogshit that is.
Jase - up here, maximum rotor size for a P5 bike is 300mm. I think they finally settled on that size, as it was the biggest rotor available in the period ( and is actually from an XS1100 - you may want to try fitting one of these rotors to the LC mate, it could be the ducks guts !)
If you run a twin piston caliper (like a Brembo - one piston each side), then you can only run 1 disc. If you run stock single-piston sliding calipers, then you can run a twin-disc front end.
