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Veritas posted:thats what i told you at GSS ganja. you had good corner speed, and looked comfortable. i told you not to stress to much over BP, and just think about the line, and more importantly, have fun. you were moving at a decent pace out there. we'll ride together soon again, i'll shoot more vid. so many novices get hung up on 'being rossi', it's hard to instruct them. Yeah I'm a difficult person to instruct I'm guessing. I wasn't ignoring your advice, in all honesty I learn much better from doing/seeing so for example when you videoed me it made a lot more sense than someone saying I need to get lower on the bike. I think I was also a bit fixated on my BP as that was the main feedback the instructor (Joe I think?) was giving me earlier on. Looking forward to the next TD with you guys!
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# ? Sep 10, 2011 15:03 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:14 |
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Spiffness posted:Post the supermoto'est track face you got Your positioning is all off. You skipped the dirt section!
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# ? Sep 10, 2011 17:41 |
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# ? Sep 12, 2011 01:58 |
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Veritas posted:Post the posiest pictures you got:
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# ? Sep 12, 2011 03:22 |
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Anyone headed to Barber this weekend to run with Sportbike Track Time? I'm headed over for Saturday only, looks like a fun track.
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# ? Sep 12, 2011 14:05 |
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Z3n posted:Post the posiest pictures you got: nice one!
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# ? Sep 13, 2011 00:18 |
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Spiffness is late to this party, but he's a huge poser. *kickstand photoshoped out Zool fucked around with this message at 14:59 on Sep 14, 2011 |
# ? Sep 13, 2011 04:29 |
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keep 'em coming whooping up on 'the texas tornado' fellow racer photoshopped that, i did a double take when i first saw it. Veritas fucked around with this message at 04:40 on Sep 13, 2011 |
# ? Sep 13, 2011 04:32 |
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Haha, I love it.
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# ? Sep 13, 2011 20:08 |
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Veritas posted:
I thought that was real for a little bit.. and my first thought was you need more sponsors..
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# ? Sep 13, 2011 20:13 |
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I'm headed to Barber this weekend and was planning on using my SV650. My room mate has offered to let me use his R6 track bike for the day, he is figuring out a "rental" cost. If I use the R6 I'll swap it back to normal shift instead of the GP shift he has I think, make it slightly less likely that I kill myself. Would borrowing the R6 for the day be a good idea or should I just stick with my SV with commuter tires and upright bars?
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# ? Sep 14, 2011 13:26 |
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NitroSpazzz posted:I'm headed to Barber this weekend and was planning on using my SV650. My room mate has offered to let me use his R6 track bike for the day, he is figuring out a "rental" cost. Run the R6. God, they are fantastic trackbikes. Everything about them that's stupid and lame on the street is simply not a problem on the track. That is, as long as his "rental" fee is reasonable.
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# ? Sep 14, 2011 18:22 |
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agreed about the R6. i wouldn't want one for street (uncomfortable as hell to me), but it would be sweet for track.
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# ? Sep 14, 2011 23:49 |
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If you're comfortable riding someone else's bike on the track, go for it. Personally I can't have any fun on a bike that isn't mine. Too worried about breaking someone else's stuff to actually open the thing up and have some fun.
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 03:31 |
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-Inu- posted:If you're comfortable riding someone else's bike on the track, go for it. Personally I can't have any fun on a bike that isn't mine. Too worried about breaking someone else's stuff to actually open the thing up and have some fun. I always have a great time until I have a moment, and then I have those images of wadding someone else's poo poo and the affiliated repair bills start to go through my head...
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 03:40 |
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Looks like I'm taking the R6. So I'll be the guy in novice on a full race bike. Rode it into work today to get a feel for it, of course it started pouring about 5 minutes out. The GP shift isn't too bad, still trying to decide if I want to revert to normal or not. Should be a fun weekend. Will suck if I wad it up but then maybe I'll get a good price on a track bike since he wants to upgrade anyway.
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 13:05 |
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If it's easy to do, I'd flip it to standard shift. One less thing to think about. Also, be sure to properly warn it up...those bikes really need to be properly warm before they go out. I can grab the routine I use to make sure the oil is warm, not just the coolant, if you want.
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 15:25 |
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Z3n posted:Also, be sure to properly warn it up...those bikes really need to be properly warm before they go out. I can grab the routine I use to make sure the oil is warm, not just the coolant, if you want. That would be great. The less change I have of killing the bike the better.
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 16:39 |
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NitroSpazzz posted:That would be great. The less change I have of killing the bike the better. This is ripped from EDR's words...one of the few engine builders out there who's bikes I'd buy. quote:Immediately after startup, hold idle to around 2K for the first few moments as oil pressure will be low for those few moments and the higher idle will raise oil psi to within safe pressures. Now, this is for racing, but figure heat soak is going take place first thing in the morning. First call is about 10 minutes before you roll it out for grid. Final call is about 3 minutes before you go out on track. Basically, it's super important to get it up to temp long before you actually run it. R6s are particularly prone to this, but no bike is going to be worse off if you follow these procedures. You could also just stay off the high RPMs in the first 2-3 laps, but on an R6, that's murder.
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# ? Sep 15, 2011 17:37 |
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I really need a trailtech vapor for warming up, since my husky has no temp gauge and is running SAE60 now (it's what AMSoil recommended).
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 00:17 |
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Gnaghi posted:I really need a trailtech vapor for warming up, since my husky has no temp gauge and is running SAE60 now (it's what AMSoil recommended). Why would you listen to AMSOil over the designers of the engine?
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 01:10 |
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All loaded up and ready to roll tomorrow, going to be a great weekend. Roommate gave me a quick overview of Barber. Terms used include back it in, jump the curb, drift and drag elbow. Ah the racer mentality. Trying to decide if it is worth running tire warmers. I won't for the first session because I expect that to be a intro follow the leader session.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 01:36 |
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Z3n posted:Why would you listen to AMSOil over the designers of the engine? Well it was that or 20w-50, didn't know which would be better. Bike calls for 10w-50 but most of the husky community runs a wide range of stuff, from regular rotella up to avpg or whatever the manual calls for. It also calls for some italian miracle oil for hydro clutch fluid while regular mineral oil from walmart works just fine. 12.99 + shipping for 10oz or 2.99 for 30oz and leaks anyway until you use an aftermarket clutch piston. Really all of the aftermarket parts I've thrown at the bike are to correct things that should have been done at the factory.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 02:53 |
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NitroSpazzz posted:quick overview of Barber
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 02:56 |
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Gnaghi posted:I really need a trailtech vapor for warming up, since my husky has no temp gauge and is running SAE60 now (it's what AMSoil recommended). You're running straight 60 oil Dude your engine is begging for mercy at startup. That's just too thick at ambient temp to provide proper engine protection. Multigrade oils were developed for a reason... use em.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 06:07 |
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NitroSpazzz posted:All loaded up and ready to roll tomorrow, going to be a great weekend. Not worth it. Tire warmers are nice for race use but silly for track use. Take 1-2 warm up laps each time, lots of braking and acceleration to deform the tire and get the suspension working through its travel to heat the oil. Gnaghi, you're not using straight 60 are you?
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 06:12 |
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Barber is awesome, you're gonna love it. and even if you're a novive, you'll be jumping the curb i use tire warmers on trackdays, but i'm also running race tires and trying to conserve tire life (keep heat cycles down). the average track day goer on a street bike, with street rubber shouldn't have to worry about it. which brings me to my next point. what do you guys think of the pirelli diablo super corsas? got a set, and i have to say i'm quite pleased with them.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 12:42 |
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Veritas posted:i use tire warmers on trackdays, but i'm also running race tires and trying to conserve tire life (keep heat cycles down). the average track day goer on a street bike, with street rubber shouldn't have to worry about it. I'm running Power One race tires. If I was running street tires I wouldn't even think about it. With these I'll see how just doing warmup laps feels, if I get bored or have extra downtime between sessions I'll toss on the warmers. Time to sit at work for ~4 hours watching Barber videos.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 13:02 |
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needknees posted:You're running straight 60 oil Oh my, yeah... use 10w-50. Remember the lower the number the better the oil is for a cold start, the higher the number the better it works when it's hot. Single weight 60 is too thick until the engine is up to temp.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 14:34 |
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Veritas posted:Barber is awesome, you're gonna love it. and even if you're a novive, you'll be jumping the curb Even on my SV I was at the wearbars before the tires had heat cycled themselves to death. Heat cycles and modern tires is kind of a anachronism these days. There definitely were tires that did that 10+ years ago but these days you can run them to the wear bars on trackdays with no problems. But in spite of that you still get people replacing tires after 2 days because they're "done". Diablo supercorsas are my favorite tire on the market right now. I've run them on every bike that had 17s that I've owned in the last year or so. That includes street/touring use on the drz/ktm, race use on the SV/Gsxr, and touring on them up to Seattle and back. I also had them on the F2 and they were good enough in the wet to pull the back end off the ground. They also go off really progressively so I'm not afraid of running them into the ground because I know it'll slide nicely and progressively. After 7 trackdays on a rear takeoff on my SV, I had it go off and spent an awesome session sliding the bike into the corners and back out of them. It was awesome. Can't speak highly enough of the tires.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 15:59 |
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Nitro, no point in bothering with warmers, assuming you're running a N pace. The tires are just going to cool down once you get on the track. Z3n, I agree with you for every brand except Michelins. Their race tires are notorious for heat cycling and holy gently caress if I wasn't on a slip-n-slide last time I ran a (slightly) heat cycled power one rear.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 17:09 |
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-Inu- posted:Nitro, no point in bothering with warmers, assuming you're running a N pace. The tires are just going to cool down once you get on the track. I ran the P1s on my SV for awhile and never had any issues with them going off even when heavily worn. SVs are lighter on tires though...didn't like the way they felt, and they never paid me the contingency I earned () so I dumped them. The older PRs definitely had that problem though, so I'm not surprised to hear it carried over to some degree on their new ones. I've just never really clicked with Michelin track tires, although I love their road tires.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 17:23 |
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needknees posted:You're running straight 60 oil I emailed amsoil this morning and a guy called me at work. What he said is SAE 60 is not really "straight 60". The cold starting weight is just not measured or not advertised, but it would be 20w-60 if it was. It isn't as if it's 60w-60 and he said the bike will be fine for track and street, even into the fall. The manual calls for 10w-60, and 20w-50 is commonly used too.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 22:01 |
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Gnaghi posted:I emailed amsoil this morning and a guy called me at work. What he said is SAE 60 is not really "straight 60". The cold starting weight is just not measured or not advertised, but it would be 20w-60 if it was. It isn't as if it's 60w-60 and he said the bike will be fine for track and street, even into the fall. The manual calls for 10w-60, and 20w-50 is commonly used too. Seriously? That's a pretty important thing. I've always been a little leery of AMSOil, but that's pretty loving over the top for anyone.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 22:17 |
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Yeah but I've heard that elsewhere about all SAE-- oils. I dunno why they do it, industry practices or whatever, but it isn't like it's amsoils own dirty trick. I actually was going to go with the agip oil first but they only sell by the case.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 22:49 |
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Gnaghi posted:Yeah but I've heard that elsewhere about all SAE-- oils. I dunno why they do it, industry practices or whatever, but it isn't like it's amsoils own dirty trick. Personally, I wouldn't use any oil that didn't have an advertised cold start viscosity at the appropriate level. It will probably be ok, but highest wear is going to occur when the oil is cold and hasn't thinned out yet, and no modern bike calls for SAE oil, they all call for proper multiweight oils. There's a reason we use them. According to AMSOil's site, their SAE60 should be used only in bikes that call specifically for SAE 60 (IE, early air cooled Harleys). http://www.motorcycleoil.co/Amsoil-SAE60-Motorcycle-Oil.html
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 22:58 |
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Z3n posted:It will probably be ok, Yeah I'm just hoping to get through one event, in more ways than one. Fall is here and temps will be dropping so I can switch it out anytime after the event. Still don't want to drop $122 on agip though.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 23:04 |
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Gnaghi posted:Yeah I'm just hoping to get through one event, in more ways than one. Fall is here and temps will be dropping so I can switch it out anytime after the event. Still don't want to drop $122 on agip though. What about MotoREX? It's 10w60 and what the KTM runs.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 23:09 |
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Z3n posted:What about MotoREX? It's 10w60 and what the KTM runs. That looks pretty good. You can't order from the company but you can buy it on amazon and get free shipping. Also a place 30 minutes away carries it too. It works out to be around $100 every 1000 miles if I stick to the street change intervals, haha.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 23:37 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 03:14 |
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Gnaghi posted:That looks pretty good. You can't order from the company but you can buy it on amazon and get free shipping. Also a place 30 minutes away carries it too. This is why I didn't buy a "proper" supermoto for street use. Those oil change intervals are murder.
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# ? Sep 16, 2011 23:39 |