Crash bars were a challenge to fabricate. Especially the top mounts. On a K75 RT, the only available place to mount upper crash bar is to the upper front engine mount bolt that holds the engine to the frame. On an RT, that is through the gill openings in the lower fairing panels. The available "hole" in the gill does not line up with the bolt either, so it is necessary for the crash bar to be offset an inch from the mount bolt.
I chose to fabricate from steel a mount that bolts to the engine mount, and also fastens to the round frame tube with an 8mm u-bolt. So that mount, rather than putting all the load under the head of the engine mount bolt also spreads that load to the frame tube.
The bottom of the crash bar structure fastens to the oil pan. There are 4 x 8mm bolts in the corners of the oil pan, about 30mm deep and into what looks like some substantial casting. On an RT, those holes are not occupied and plugged with plastic plugs. I fabricated a u-shaped frame to bolt to those 4 points, at the front of the engine is a 1x2 piece of rectangular tubing across the lower front, and a couple pieces of 1" square tubing off the sides of the U about 6" to the rear. The ends of the tubing have 1/2" nuts welded inside, and provide the mounts for the real "bars". The bars themselves are 1-3/4 w x 1/4 thick flat aluminum bars. Cold bendable with a vise and hammer and press, and quite strong and light. The angled bar is parallel with the angled line of the rear edge of the fairing lower. Those bars form a triangle from the base u-frame, so I think that will be stronger than just a bar supported on two ends.
More pictures coming when I get it off the lift and outside in the real light.