Earthing.
Is that what you call it when you fall off?
Earthing.
Is that what you call it when you fall off?
There are two kinds of adventurers: those who go truly hoping to find adventure and those who go secretly hoping they won't. We should come home from our adventures having faced their perils and uncertainties, endured their discomfort and beaten the odds, with a sly acknowledgment and revitalised solidarity of character.
Find the proper earths and clean them. May be a bit of resistance on one.
There are two kinds of adventurers: those who go truly hoping to find adventure and those who go secretly hoping they won't. We should come home from our adventures having faced their perils and uncertainties, endured their discomfort and beaten the odds, with a sly acknowledgment and revitalised solidarity of character.
One of the things that gets the XTZ's reg rect is its plug i.e. the plug connecting to itself. Best thing to do is cut the plug off and put on new insulated spade connectors. Apparently the copper connectors of the time corrode/crap out, resistance goes up, reg thinks the voltage has gone up (V=IR and R has supposedly gone up so the reg thinks V has gone up) so Reg works overtime to drop the voltage and ends up frying itself. Both my bro and my XTZ's had pretty black reg plug connectors. We have done the spade plug thing and not had any troubles.
Cheers R
"The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools." - Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
The plug that melted probably had a bad conection in it and built up heat.
Reconect them with spade conectors using a decent crimper and use some electrical grease.
Well that was bloody quick ! I just recieved my speedo drive cog and braided rear brake line from Wemoto in GB in my mail box 8 days from placing the order, and we only get mail delivery 2 days a week out here.
Woohoo rolling again.
Braided rear line...
So you'll be able to wear those pads out even quicker now
my girl is in bits in the man-cave for the next week or three. Waiting on new front discs from akl, also speedo drive and airfilters from Wemoto. Also want to mock up some new side panels and rallye-style front fairing and see how it looks...must preserve rare plastics...!
There are two kinds of adventurers: those who go truly hoping to find adventure and those who go secretly hoping they won't. We should come home from our adventures having faced their perils and uncertainties, endured their discomfort and beaten the odds, with a sly acknowledgment and revitalised solidarity of character.
Yeah , although the expence account wouldnt run to new pads ...so I dug a half worn set out and they should see me through the recession ,specially as Ive learned how to do without a rear brake now.
Buggs ,alot can be achieved cheaply with a heat gun and and some perspex .
yeah, I was actually hoping to stop in at a sign writers and get a sheet of PVC once I get the front and rad shrouds sorted. Thinking of straight aluminium plates for the rear sides after I relocate the reg/ rect forward into more air and find somewhere to stash the rad overflow bottle. Once that's sorted the plan is to use the plates as a mount for a. Pannier, b. fuel / water cells - just swap them out depending on the ride. jsut dreaming maybe, but basically a rough & ready cut-up version of the marathon - style @'s from back in the day. Just won't be so glamorous!
There are two kinds of adventurers: those who go truly hoping to find adventure and those who go secretly hoping they won't. We should come home from our adventures having faced their perils and uncertainties, endured their discomfort and beaten the odds, with a sly acknowledgment and revitalised solidarity of character.
Dunno that it's that bad. The LC8 twins are a bit convoluted but no worse than anything similar; modern machines are more complex. The superceded LC4 is no drama. The new 690 LC4 is much better for maintenance than most machines; ease of maintenance was one of the design goals. eg diagonal-cut rocker cover to make it easier to check the valves.
Cheers,
Colin
Originally Posted by Steve McQueen
There are two kinds of adventurers: those who go truly hoping to find adventure and those who go secretly hoping they won't. We should come home from our adventures having faced their perils and uncertainties, endured their discomfort and beaten the odds, with a sly acknowledgment and revitalised solidarity of character.
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