Parts catalog — sec. 01–14

Parts

Every build is the same fourteen decisions in a different order. Each section below gets its own page — what the upgrade buys you, the brand ladder from budget to premium, and typical street prices.

Index

Fourteen decisions

The number is the shelf, not the order to buy — each bike page carries its own street and track sequence. Stock is a starting point; this is the map.

Sec. 01

Exhaust

The first mod on almost every build. A slip-on trades the stock muffler for sound and less weight; a full system replaces headers to tail and chases actual power. The ladder runs from a $250 budget slip-on to a full titanium GP-style system.

$250–$4,000
Sec. 02

Tune

ECU flash or piggyback fueling — the unlock for everything upstream of the throttle. Mail-in services remap your stock ECU, DIY kits let you flash at home, and a piggyback bends fueling without opening the ECU at all. Air filters ride along here.

$60–$450
Sec. 03

Suspension

The upgrade that makes the bike better everywhere, forever. Springs matched to your weight first, then cartridges and a shock when you outride the stock internals. Steering dampers and triple clamps live here too.

$130–$3,400
Sec. 04

Brakes

Pads, braided lines, and a radial master cylinder — roughly in that order of cost, and close to that order of feel. Rotors and calipers are the deep end for riders who cook the stock hardware.

$60–$1,700
Sec. 05

Tires & Wheels

The only parts touching the road, and the purchase you'll repeat most. Hypersport street rubber, trackday DOT-race, or slicks — plus the wheel upgrades (forged aluminum, forged magnesium, carbon) that make every tire work better.

$340–$580 a set · wheel sets $1,500–$6,500+
Sec. 06

Levers

Adjustable, foldable, crash-replaceable — the $200 mod your hands touch every second you ride. Lever guards for track days live here too.

$60–$260
Sec. 07

Rearsets

Adjustable footpegs that buy cornering clearance and put your legs where they belong. Race seats, seat cowls, and seat foam ride along here — the whole rider triangle below the bars.

$180–$650
Sec. 08

Clip-ons & Throttle

Clip-ons set your wrist angle and drop; a quick-turn throttle shortens the twist to wide open. Grips and bar ends finish the cockpit.

$15–$260
Sec. 09

Crash Protection

Frame sliders, engine case covers, axle and tank sliders — the parts you buy hoping never to use. Most track organizations require case covers before they'll let you grid up.

$60–$500
Sec. 10

Tail Tidy & Billet

The fender eliminator is the first cosmetic mod on almost every bike — the stock plate hanger is the ugliest part they sold you. Integrated tail lights, LED signals, bar-end mirrors, and the billet hardware that finishes a build all live here.

$30–$350
Sec. 11

Bodywork

Race glass for the track, carbon for the street, windscreens for both. Fairing kits turn a street bike into a crashable track bike; carbon pieces, windscreens, and tank grips dress and protect what's already there.

$44–$1,300
Sec. 12

Quickshifter

Full-throttle clutchless upshifts — strain-gauge kits for bikes that never got one from the factory, autoblippers for clutchless downshifts on the way back.

$160–$650
Sec. 13

Drivetrain

Chain, sprockets, and the 520 conversion — the cheapest 'feels faster' money in the catalog. Minus one front or plus two rear wakes up gearing that was chosen for a brochure top-speed number.

$200–$450
Sec. 14

Electronics

The data and display layer: gear indicators, lap timers, GPS dataloggers, race dashes, and the small modules — speedo correctors, brake-light flashers — that make the rest of the build behave.

$50–$1,400

Prices are typical US street prices at publish time and drift with sales and supply — verify at the retailer. Fitment is advisory: always confirm the exact part number for your year, generation and market before buying.