Well since I have four of these pretties and the chances of a fuel pump failing goes up as the mileage increases (already had 3 stockers fail), I decided I'd see what was available at a reasonable price with the ability to replace the stocker and leave everything as is. This is the link -
Gradient density fuel strainer for superior contaminant filtration. You will not find a stronger warranty from any other performance fuel pump manufacturer, period. Compatible with modern ethanol-infused pump gasoline.
www.ebay.com
Since I have a few tank 'stems' laying around I pulled one from my inventory and commenced to proceed. The price was good but there is one caveat. You will need to buy about a foot of some 5/16" fuel submersible hose (about $20 a foot) because once the pump is in place the stock hose is a wee bit too short (the hose they provided looked suspect to me).
Priced by the foot. We dispense off a roll. Priced by the foot. quantity ordered will be the number of feet in one continuous piece.
www.ebay.com
You do have to shorten and re-terminate the wires to the new pump as part of the replacement procedure. I also did not want to yank out a working pump and install the replacement so I came up with a good testing method that might be of value should you find yourself with pump troubles. Here's the pictures -



This test setup allowed the bike to run as 'normal' without removing the original pump. I ran it for about 10 minutes at various RPMS (including up to 6,000 RPMS) and let it idle some so the engine would get up operating temperature. With this pump there was no stutter or stumbling and the bike idled just fine. I rev'ed her up quite a few times and everything appears to be proper and working. Hope this will help someone somewhere along the way. Total cost with the extra hose was about $80 - way cheaper than the $350+ Mother Honda wants. Also these pumps come with a 'lifetime warranty' - which is only good as long as the vendor stays in business.