Tony. It was easy. The part numbers for the steering head bearings were the same number for the 1980 R65 and the 1988 K100RS front end I scored off ebay at 2 in the morning. Plus I had previously checked with Nathan at Boxerworks and he said that he had done one or two previously. When I got the parts I took both the bike and the complete front end to Nathan and he did the install. There is a LONG story behind my decision to procure this front end. I tried everything: Font end braces, larger tires. I considered bracing the rear swing arm with the San Jose BMW mod and bracing the frame (all in search of better handling) until I talked with a gent, no longer with us, who said that the R65 swing arm, due to its shorter length, was already the stiffest airhead swing arm out there.
Why I did what I did: the stock R65 front end is too flimsy for a bike with a Side panniers, a top case, and a large front Luftmeister front fairing. No matter what I did, had unstable steering above 60-65 mph. The stiffer 38mm front forks of the K100RS front end and the wider 2.5" width of the K100RS 18 front rim gave me steady handling all the way to 90 mph. Best money I have ever spent on the R65.
The K100RS 38mm forks and front wheel solved All my handling issues.
Now if you do not have a large front fairing to hide the Farkel that is my instrument console then you may want to reconsider this set up. The stock frame that holds my instrument is is attached on top clamp but is
zip tied to the bottom clamp. I am OK with this but you may not be. No machining was necessary.
regards,
SG
PS Tony - I scored an entire front end: Handle bars, Master cylinder, triple trees, forks, 2.50 X 18 inch rim and tire, with brake rotors, calipers, front fender and axle off ebay at 2am. I was shaking when I saw it. I figure I got about $2500 of parts for $400.
Every now and then a squirrel finds a nut!


PSS - The K100RS front end had the same configuration as the R65 forks. Both had 18" rims - the K100RS was wider which I wanted for the modern front tires. Also the axle was mounted on the same place - the bottom of the forks - not out in front as in some of the GS and RT forks. The fork tubes went from 32mm to 38 mm is the real difference and they are taller. That does not seem to be a problem with my bike. Also there is a "S" stamped on the top of the forks so these are "Sport" forks. Because the forks are taller I changed to center stand to the R100 center stand.