Many over here ride with a reversed lever.
this is my Yamaha but, no matter, it is the same engine and the self-same lever shown in the next picture.
- 1994 Skorpion Tour, my "blue"
Using the standard Tour bracket (the Sport brackets are far too far back and clumsy) and pegs from the Replica. The lever is a runofthemill XT lever, the folding nose cut off and a simple turned aluminum nose screwed on. The stock MZ ET175 lever fits particularly well (racer below). The spline of the shaft is pretty standard.
Here is the other side using a Yamaha brake lever on a Replica peg:
- Yamaha brake lever
So, you can get a much better, far less clumsy, "hand-forged" looking (like an early John Deere Tractor) brake lever that fits as if made for the bike.
- Last version of SOS racer
And this was my racer, here with the lever connected to a speed shifter sensor.
my last Skorpion, the air-cooled version, used a shift linkage because I wanted the complete Gilles AS31GT MZ01 setup for demonstration purposes.The rear sets, which I developed, are available for the Skorpion from Gilles as shown in titanium, gold or black color. The Gilles (here a one-off prototype I made) on the Yamaha does without as can be seen.
It the case of the Gilles, you can chose various ratios for the linkage at both ends ans well as length of lever and whether to use a fixed peg or a "roll peg" as show. Of course you can set 1st gear up or down. There are also tow different foot pegs; these are the new model. This shot of the last air-cooled version shows the old style pegs which I prefer.
I always ride 1st gear up where I have a choice. One should have the presence of mind, tho, to be able to ride either way and on either side, otherwise one is not a safe rider, doing too many things too unconsciously.