Gix11
09-01-2008, 03:22 PM
Ok ladies. Here's the deal......
Manit (nbnk) contacted me after the negative responses to his offer. I also thought the same as you guys as to the quality of the rearsets based on previous experiences. Anyway, Manit was so convinced his gear was better than the usual stuff that he offered to send a set over for us to look at, ...and look at it we did.
We had chance to do a comparo as Ozkat who was also there had a set of the Narsurin rearsets that he got from Ebay for around $110 (same as Veetwo got for $180). We laid them out together and gave them a good looking over. The top set is the cheaper Narsurin set and the bottom ones are the Nobunaka ones that nbnk is offering:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558879204.jpg
The first thing you notice is the finish. The Nobunaka have been finished off all over with a polishing wheel and all sharp edges removed, unlike the Narsurin ones. The finish is in a near gloss black as opposed to the flat black of the others. The next thing you notice is the actual construction.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558899289.jpg
Although they both come in pieces in a box, the Nobunaka ones actuall have all quality bolts all over and they fit the holes correctly at the right length and also leave all moving parts flowing freely when tightened correctly.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558881118.jpg
With the cheaper set there was bolts missing, the ones that were there were too short and some of the ones you didn't see from the front even had phillips heads as opposed to the allen heads. Not only that, the cheaper set need washers to space the bearings away from the hardware and even when that was done the movement was sticking.
The Nobunaka set came with a drawing to assemble it, but unless you look at rearsets every day you'd be hard pushed to put it together without going out to your bike to check what was what (which is what I had to do). Shayne's cheaper set on the other hand came with no instructions at all and we actual put his together in the shed that night while looking at the others as a guide!
The nbnk ones are highly adjustable with holes for different placement.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558887444.jpg
here's the brake side:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/274285588105385.jpg
and here's the gear side:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/274285588109590.jpg
Now although these things aren't going to ever compare to the top shelf stuff they are definitely worthy of a budget rearset buy based on build quality and components (although I have vouched to fix them and try them soon and I will let you know more after that). I would say that some locktite would not go a miss on either set though, just for security.
We came to the conclusion that the two sets in the comparo were definietly brothers but one was just a bit of a problem child. If you like to get stuff out of the box, fix it up and feel safe I would say that the Nobunaka set is well worth a look. If you are the sort of person who likes to count your pennies, replace all the bolts, pull your hair out trying to work out how they fit togther etc etc, then the cheap set might be for you.
All in all, if you are looking for a nice set of replacement rearsets without spending your life savings give nbnk's gear a go.
http://i19.ebayimg.com/04/i/000/cb/3f/dfe6_1.JPG
NOTE: The item sent was no bribe or a piss in my pocket and will be given away after final testing. This review is a non biased opinion by 5 members of this website.
Manit (nbnk) contacted me after the negative responses to his offer. I also thought the same as you guys as to the quality of the rearsets based on previous experiences. Anyway, Manit was so convinced his gear was better than the usual stuff that he offered to send a set over for us to look at, ...and look at it we did.
We had chance to do a comparo as Ozkat who was also there had a set of the Narsurin rearsets that he got from Ebay for around $110 (same as Veetwo got for $180). We laid them out together and gave them a good looking over. The top set is the cheaper Narsurin set and the bottom ones are the Nobunaka ones that nbnk is offering:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558879204.jpg
The first thing you notice is the finish. The Nobunaka have been finished off all over with a polishing wheel and all sharp edges removed, unlike the Narsurin ones. The finish is in a near gloss black as opposed to the flat black of the others. The next thing you notice is the actual construction.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558899289.jpg
Although they both come in pieces in a box, the Nobunaka ones actuall have all quality bolts all over and they fit the holes correctly at the right length and also leave all moving parts flowing freely when tightened correctly.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558881118.jpg
With the cheaper set there was bolts missing, the ones that were there were too short and some of the ones you didn't see from the front even had phillips heads as opposed to the allen heads. Not only that, the cheaper set need washers to space the bearings away from the hardware and even when that was done the movement was sticking.
The Nobunaka set came with a drawing to assemble it, but unless you look at rearsets every day you'd be hard pushed to put it together without going out to your bike to check what was what (which is what I had to do). Shayne's cheaper set on the other hand came with no instructions at all and we actual put his together in the shed that night while looking at the others as a guide!
The nbnk ones are highly adjustable with holes for different placement.
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/27428558887444.jpg
here's the brake side:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/274285588105385.jpg
and here's the gear side:
http://www.streetfighters.com.au/forum/upload/274285588109590.jpg
Now although these things aren't going to ever compare to the top shelf stuff they are definitely worthy of a budget rearset buy based on build quality and components (although I have vouched to fix them and try them soon and I will let you know more after that). I would say that some locktite would not go a miss on either set though, just for security.
We came to the conclusion that the two sets in the comparo were definietly brothers but one was just a bit of a problem child. If you like to get stuff out of the box, fix it up and feel safe I would say that the Nobunaka set is well worth a look. If you are the sort of person who likes to count your pennies, replace all the bolts, pull your hair out trying to work out how they fit togther etc etc, then the cheap set might be for you.
All in all, if you are looking for a nice set of replacement rearsets without spending your life savings give nbnk's gear a go.
http://i19.ebayimg.com/04/i/000/cb/3f/dfe6_1.JPG
NOTE: The item sent was no bribe or a piss in my pocket and will be given away after final testing. This review is a non biased opinion by 5 members of this website.