I spent 10 years keeping my Tbird in showroom condition and hanging in the shed. Was enough.
Belt drive - tell me they are ghey to my face :-)
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When dealing with this electrickery one must take care as the smoke trapped inside the thing is what makes it work. Let it out, and you're done for.
true. but the really important thing is not to become confused between imperial and metric smoke. Try to use metric smoke in imperial electrics and you'll blow them up for sure. Of course, with Eytalian bikes , metric electrics will blow themselves up frequently, with no input required at all. Just ask any Ducati owner.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
Gaps! gaps are the devil. Cycle threa dis CEI. Discussed at present in this thread
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
What I hate on my "modern" bike is if i get a flat battery i can't push start the thing because the bloody electronics won't initialise and therefore no engine management system and no spark. FFS. Surely it would be easy enough to set the bike to start froma push start then have the battery charge.
There are a fair few stories on the BMW forum of said rider merrily riding along and then the bike cuts- out and dies (while riding). The bike batery is found to be dying and consequently the bike can't be re-started. I like the stories when people are running in heavy fast traffic in the outside lane.
This is a real backward step. I'd hate to be caught out in the middle of nowhere with a bike I can't push start.
Yes, call me a old bastard. but I won't have a bike that I cant kick to start it. Got a NV 400 sorted for my oldest, and I did take her to SI for a ride. (see my Blog) Worked bloody well, but I was soo worried that I would get a problem with the battery/drain it, and then have to push the thingy.
A kick, a carbie, taps w/o any vacuum stuff, no "black boxes" and air cooling and I can fix the thing on side of the road.
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
One thing I do NOT miss is the Whitworth thread - coarse as hell and always prone to stripping...I lost count of the number of times I had to pull out a stud and replace cozza stripped thread. Gimme nice fine metric thread any day...
. “No pleasure is worth giving up for two more years in a rest home.” Kingsley Amis
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