afastcar wrote:
I don't want to upset a lot of people I'm just asking a question that I can never seem to figure out, why would you modify a FL350?, seems to me if you sold it in stock form (we all know they are worth more in stock form) hold on to that cash and put the money you where going to spend on shocks, front a arm kit, cool head, have cylinder water jacketed, radiator, water pump, and various parts and effort you could have bought a stock FL400 for cheaper and have a far superior machine in stock form with a higher resale value (as long as you don't dump a ton of money in it)
Please FL350 owners don't get all P'ed off it just doesn't make sense to me, the only answer I get is I don't have all the money at once for a FL400, but you can come up with 1000-2000 for a FL350 then put thousands in it over the next 6 months to try and make it ride and be as reliable as a FL400, why not save your money for 6 months and buy a FL400?
Why?
Because Pilots are way over priced and out of the price range of us poor folks.

Average price for a fixer upper pilot is in the neighborhood of $4000. Even at this price, you will probably have to do at minimum a top end rebuild so add at least another 300 to 500 on to of the price tag. I can build 2 FL350's for the price I would have to pay for an FL400. The last 2 Odys I picked up I managed to get for less than 1500 bucks.
What I have added to mine....
Shocks 550
Pipe 250
Head 300
Fan 50
Basically you can put 1000 into an Ody and have a nice reliable machine that is close to the performance of a Pilot. With a pair of works shocks on the rear of an Ody, IMO they ride better than a Pilot in the rear. Front suspension of a Pilot is still superior. Torque of the Pilot is still superior.
Its like the difference between building a vintage Volkswagen versus building a vintage Camaro. I can make the VW go just as fast on 1/2 the money.
What it all boils down to is personal preference.....especially for cheap people like myself. I would like to have a Pilot but I can justify the price tag.
Rand