Simple.
Plastic shatters into itsy bits pieces when you crash.
Fiberglass cracks and wears and eventually holes.
Try fixing plastic bodywork, then try fixing fibreglass and see which is easier.
Fiberglass may get cosmetic cracking in the surface but it tends to generally stay together. There is a fighting chance of the part remaining more-or-less serviceable for the weekend and a reasonable chance of the part being repairable using relatively straightforward tools and procedures.
Moulded ABS plastic tends to explode into a million bits when crashed on and be very difficult to repair.
Normal fiberglass fairings are quite a bit thinner and lighter than the moulded ABS OEM parts.
Fiberglass replica parts can be fabricated using relatively ordinary hand tools. You could do it at home if you were so inclined. It is a slow, manual process but the tools needed are relatively cheap. (Low capital investment but high labour cost per part)
Large ABS parts require a several-thousand-tonne injection moulding machine and an enormous set of carefully-machined steel dies with an investment of a few million bucks up front but will knock out a part every minute. (Very high capital investment but low labour cost per part)
If you are an OEM manufacturer planning to make quantities in the tens or hundreds of thousands, it's worth that few million bucks capital investment for the ABS injection moulding equipment. Spending the couple hours of labour to make hand-laid fiberglass is not even worthy of discussion, that process cannot compete when big production quantities are involved.
If you are a small aftermarket parts manufacturer then it's more cost effective to spend the labour time by using the hand-laid fiberglass method because you would never recover the huge capital investment cost for an injection moulding machine and the building and the infrastructure to support it.
Hot bodies are junk.Thank you so much for the info. Very useful.
How are hot bodies race body? Through my search they seem to have good price on a full set.
Budget is tight if i convert street bike. I will sell every stock parts that i can to help abit
Hot Bodies are generally not very well regarded for fit and finish.Thank you so much for the info. Very useful.
How are hot bodies race body? Through my search they seem to have good price on a full set.
Budget is tight if i convert street bike. I will sell every stock parts that i can to help abit
My rear hugger is hotbodies. While the color is perfect and finish looks nice it's been warped since day 1 and finally a couple weeks ago it cracked at one of the mounts on me. It's replacement will not be from hotbodies. I wouldn't even entertain their track fairings.Hot Bodies are generally not very well regarded for fit and finish.
油井緋色;2352270 said:Reviving this thread to ask a question about track bodies/fairings.
If you have street plastics and the side panels are cracked/lightly damaged and the tail lightly rashed, front perfect, would you buy track fairings or just track with the street plastics?
Trying to figure out what to do next year. Thanks!
No. Your OEM bodywork is not going to hold up better than quality fibreglass bodywork in the event of a crash.
I've seen fiberglass disintegrate into pieces beyond repair in some crashes, unless you're racing where you require numbers and a belly pan to pass safety I see no point in spending money to buy track fairings
I'm going against what everyone else is saying here, I find OEM fairings are better than the aftermarket track fairings in all fit, finish, and durability! This is true for all 2001-2003 GSXR600, 750, 1000s I have owned at least. Think of it, OEM is a product that had to pass quality and safety standards in fabrication and be road legal. I had a 2003 GSXR 750 that I rode both street and track, I totaled it once with a bent frame, and crashed 4 more times lowsides, highsides. Those fairings took a beating and were still holding up well until I sold the bike. I just replaced the street fairings on my track bike with squidskins and I was disappointed at what everyone else is saying about fiberglass. These fairings are very brittle, I had a couple of clips come off loose on the tail and it started to crack in a couple of places already from vibration, their flexibility sucks. And no they are not lighter than OEM! And you have to take the belly pan off every time you need to do an oil change, at least this is good in terms of track safety though cause if your bike leaks oil it will go in the belly pan first.
If I were you I'd just block the headlight hole with a plastic plate and ride on those fairings. You're better off investing that money on track time, gear, or tires...
This is what my last track bike looked like, and what I should've done with the current one too
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