Rear wheel
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@autovictor never seen those on a dt before
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@jonne123 Yeah you know, the Aprilia has completely different geometry to the DTR. So it's going to need fabrication.
The front and rear wheel need to be aligned. The front and rear sprockets need to align. The wheels need to be centralised. Cause it's from a completely different machine.
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If money is a concern, stick with what you got and put some decent tyres on it.
Even Excel rims are expensive and require work. So there is no one easy solution.
The easiest way to do it would be to buy some nice and expensive Excel rims, and lace up your hubs to them That way you retain the original brakes and spacers and geometry with SM Rims.
The DTX solution, you need forks, brakes and wheels. These were hard to come by new, now it's practically a nightmare.
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@jonne123 If you don't mind fabricating parts, then you'll need spacers and the hub carriers modified to take the bigger brakes. and a bracket made to mount the brakes to the wheels.
Can see the work required in my DTRE build thread as I run RS125 wheels on my DTR.
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If you have access to a machinist, the cost is minimal. But it all adds up. Hours on the lathe and precise measurements were necessary to get all the stars to align. I had to shim the rear sprocket to get it to fall inline with the front.
When I took the bike in to have the tyres replaced. They omitted the shims and the rear sprocket carrier bearing collapsed shortly after. So it does have to be on point.