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ReelBigLizard posted:I'm not sure there would be that much difference in power. The reason that was always given to me for dry clutches was for faster replacement while racing (you don't have to deal with draining the oil, spilling it, refilling it, etc). That seems way more likely. The power thing is something I heard for years and took with a grain of salt.
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 13:46 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:24 |
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The real reason is: Ducati
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 14:44 |
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I had my Ninja 250 covered for about week while it rained like crazy, and apparently some ants decided that the dry covering was a nice place to make a nest. When I noticed them yesterday, they were running from the starter housing, down the frame, to the back of the bike. I washed down the insides with dish soap+water and it seemed to stop them, but now they're running on the opposite side of the frame from the back to the gas tank. Any recommendations for getting rid of an ant nest without damaging paint/electronics/etc?
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 15:21 |
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Ride it?
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 15:51 |
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Even just idling for a while should trigger an earthquake/abandon ship reflex.
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 15:56 |
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KARMA! posted:Ride it? Rode it to and from campus, about 18 miles total around 55mph and they're still there. Tough motherfuckers.
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 16:17 |
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Nuke the entire site from orbit, it's the only way to be sure.
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 16:40 |
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You have to eat the queen.
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 17:33 |
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_Dav posted:You have to
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 19:20 |
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Air compressor!
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# ? Jul 18, 2012 22:03 |
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Z3n posted:Keep us updated on how this turns out...Hopefully you can get it covered under warranty. Welp I broke the pin on my chain breaker tool, should have read this first.
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 06:33 |
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I'm currently taking my MSF class and just rode a motorcycle for the first time ever. I've never owned a car or car insurance, so I've been a bit in the dark about how insurance works (for reference, I'm in the US). What I understand so far is: 1. I need liability insurance. I'm legally required to have it, and I want full liability coverage. I don't want to be financially hosed if I mess up somebody's fancy BMW. 2. I don't care to insure my own motorcycle, since it'll be a cheap beginner bike anyway. Can you get full liability insurance and have zero coverage on your own bike? 3. Medical stuff. I verified with my health insurance company that they would treat a motorcycle accident as a normal medical emergency (I've heard rumors that some health insurers reject care for a motorcycle crash). So I'd have a $100 copay and an 80/20 split (I get the 20) on any stuff like rehab, surgery, etc. Questions I still have are: 3a. Is it a good idea to get an additional medical component on my motorcycle insurance to supplement my health insurance? 3b. If somebody else is injured in a crash that is deemed my fault, is that covered by the crash liability insurance? Or do I need a medical component for that, or is there a "medical liability" addition I can get that does this? 4. How do I find out how much this would all hypothetically cost if I don't have a motorcycle yet? Progressive is asking me what kind of motorcycle I have, but I don't even want to insure the motorcycle itself, just the liability stuff. Is there a resource for this, or can somebody give me a vague idea of how much theirs costs?
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 20:22 |
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alnilam: see my comments below on insuring your bike. Hope this helps!alnilam posted:I'm currently taking my MSF class and just rode a motorcycle for the first time ever.
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 20:37 |
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I max out whatever personal injury insurance is available on my policy, just in case my health insurance tries to get cute.
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 20:47 |
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My bike ('81 Honda CX500c) has gone from "going around the block fine," to "going up the block and not working" to now "can't leave the backyard." I'm REALLY beginning to think I got hosed. The thing starts up fine. But as soon as I put it in gear, rev, and let out the clutch, the front wheel groans loudly, and then the bike stalls out. I try to push the bike in neutral with the clutch lever in and the same thing: the front wheel is so stiff and maybe rubbing (?) that it just groans loudly and is impossible to push. The groan is definitely coming form the front wheel. It makes it so the bike is unrideable. I can't even get off in first because there's so much resistance coming from the front wheel. After my bike stalls I'll start, grab the clutch lever, and all the tension immediately lets out of the frozen front wheel. I'm kind of at my wits end. Some people said this may be a airflow problem, but I think if there is one it takes back seat to the fact that my bike won't even go anymore. I will say that I test rode the bike fine, so maybe I mounted the front wheel wrong somehow? Did I put the front brakes on wrong? It's super frustrating that the bike seemed to go from marginally rideable to unrideable in an amazing amount of time.
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 23:23 |
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Get a manual and double check your work. Manuals can provide considerable ROI. If you touched the front wheel or brake, then I think chances are good the problems it is exhibiting is related to what you did. I'm not saying this to berate you, every time something breaks on me I think "what was the last component I touched" and check my work. Did you follow torque specs or just tighten everything down by feel? If you tightened the axle bolt on the front too much, you can pinch the spacer and the bearings can fail and that can manifest as a progressive inability for the wheel to turn. You have an old bike that's going to have problems, once you sort them out it properly should be all good so don't get discouraged.
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# ? Jul 19, 2012 23:32 |
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alnilam posted:3. Medical stuff. I verified with my health insurance company that they would treat a motorcycle accident as a normal medical emergency (I've heard rumors that some health insurers reject care for a motorcycle crash). So I'd have a $100 copay and an 80/20 split (I get the 20) on any stuff like rehab, surgery, etc. Most medical insurance won't pay out if you get into a motorcycle crash without a valid license, that may be what you're thinking of.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 00:12 |
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clutchpuck posted:Get a manual and double check your work. Manuals can provide considerable ROI. I'm at the point too where I'm assuming it's my "work" that caused this mess, haha. I very well may have tightened it up too much, so I guess the front wheel is coming back off this Saturday!
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 00:52 |
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Boru posted:I'm at the point too where I'm assuming it's my "work" that caused this mess, haha. I very well may have tightened it up too much, so I guess the front wheel is coming back off this Saturday! You don't need to take it off. Just loosen it and see if that works. After you check it, go buy a torque wrench.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 04:36 |
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Boru posted:My bike ('81 Honda CX500c) has gone from "going around the block fine," to "going up the block and not working" to now "can't leave the backyard." Did you dismantle the brake calipers or touch the brake fluid?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 11:14 |
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_Dav posted:Did you dismantle the brake calipers or touch the brake fluid? A buddy of mine helped me bleed the front brakes a few weeks back. I've heard that a fresh bleed will make the front wheel grippy, but this is well beyond the "grippy," and more in the "frozen" category. I'll see if loosening the wheel does anything, and then its on to check out the calipers and master cylinder. Oh also, I'm sick of using a ladder and ratchet straps to pop up my bike's front end. Is there any $40-ish dollar solution for a fork stand? I saw a few fork stands on Amazon that were that much, so I was thinking of going in for that to save hassle for next time. Are they worth it?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 11:41 |
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Boru posted:Oh also, I'm sick of using a ladder and ratchet straps to pop up my bike's front end. Is there any $40-ish dollar solution for a fork stand? I saw a few fork stands on Amazon that were that much, so I was thinking of going in for that to save hassle for next time. Are they worth it? Some people swear by the high end stands (Pit Bull) but I know plenty of people have been just fine with the cheap stands from harbor freight. Also check craigslist for used stands, I picked up a set (front/rear) of pit bull stands for $125.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 13:51 |
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Can you get a center stand for it?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 14:19 |
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Boru, is the brake fluid overfilled?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 14:24 |
I doubt you can fill a reservoir so full that putting the cap back on locks the front wheel entirely though. I usually fill my reservoirs pretty full and at that point the bladder would probably push out a good bit of the excess fluid.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 14:36 |
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Here's something weird, Crouching Triumph hidden warning light. This showed up while I was riding last night, not twisting the throttle crazy or anything, my GF was on the back if that accounts for anything (she weighs 135, so not bike crushing). It would still turn on when I turned the bike on this morning but went away after a few blocks. Before startup After startup Any ideas what the hell it is? I didnt see anything in the manual.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 15:10 |
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Did you check the oil? That's an oil warning light. Depending on the bike there could be a number of reasons it comes on. - low oil - low oil pressure - something fancy Edit: V Doh! V Bondematt fucked around with this message at 15:36 on Jul 20, 2012 |
# ? Jul 20, 2012 15:28 |
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Bondematt posted:Did you check the oil? That's an oil warning light. He's talking about the mystery light behind the face of the tach, where the 7 is supposed to be.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 15:32 |
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Z3n posted:Boru, is the brake fluid overfilled? When we bled them out we refilled just right to the line, so I don't think that it's overfilled. Honestly I'm leaning towards a user error on my part when I installed the front wheel. I probably over torqued it because I'm an ogre, haha. And I do have a centerstand on the bike. I guess I'll just have someone sit on it so the back goes down and the front wheel pops up.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 15:55 |
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Tie two gallon jugs of water together and sling them over the rear seat like saddlebags. Add jugs as needed.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 16:06 |
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Boru posted:When we bled them out we refilled just right to the line, so I don't think that it's overfilled. Honestly I'm leaning towards a user error on my part when I installed the front wheel. I probably over torqued it because I'm an ogre, haha. Was it fresh brake fluid? My uncle did pretty much the same thing and spent 3* brake calipers diagnosing it. Freshly bleeding with fresh fluid sorted it, 80s ABS system wasn't exactly helpful with this.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 19:22 |
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titanium posted:Here's something weird, Crouching Triumph hidden warning light. Do other Triumphs have the same rough instruments? Try checking the manuals for them and see if it's something that isn't supposed to be on your bike but is wired up anyway? It's really weird because it's obviously painted/printed over. I'd be sort of tempted to say from your description that it's a low fuel warning but I can't see that they'd wire it up, put a bulb in, and then paint it over. Well, not *modern* Triumph, anyway.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 19:46 |
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goddamnedtwisto posted:Do other Triumphs have the same rough instruments? Try checking the manuals for them and see if it's something that isn't supposed to be on your bike but is wired up anyway? It's really weird because it's obviously painted/printed over. I'd be sort of tempted to say from your description that it's a low fuel warning but I can't see that they'd wire it up, put a bulb in, and then paint it over. Well, not *modern* Triumph, anyway. I checked the manual and nothing shows up, I also posted on the triumph675 forums and a couple guys seem baffled by it. I might hit up an OReily and run a scanner on it to see if it actually logged it.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 20:26 |
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titanium posted:I checked the manual and nothing shows up, I also posted on the triumph675 forums and a couple guys seem baffled by it. I might hit up an OReily and run a scanner on it to see if it actually logged it. Actually, stupid question - what colour is the backlight on that clock? It couldn't just be a bulb that's broken its mount or something like that?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 20:29 |
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Can you crack it open and look at the back of the face to see what was painted over?
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 20:31 |
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It looks like where an ABS light might like to live. I GIS'd pictures of the gauges and none of them have anything there, however.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 20:40 |
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_Dav posted:Was it fresh brake fluid? My uncle did pretty much the same thing and spent 3* brake calipers diagnosing it. Freshly bleeding with fresh fluid sorted it, 80s ABS system wasn't exactly helpful with this. Yup, brand new out-of-bottle fluid. I'm thinking it was probably a lovely install job on my part. I'm going to take the caliper off and see if the front wheel spins: that should tell me all I need to know. Or at least point me in a good starting direction.
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# ? Jul 20, 2012 23:40 |
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Boru posted:Yup, brand new out-of-bottle fluid. I'm thinking it was probably a lovely install job on my part. I'm going to take the caliper off and see if the front wheel spins: that should tell me all I need to know. Or at least point me in a good starting direction. Some wheels have different sized spacers on the left and right sides, it almost sounds like you have the spacers on the wrong sides.
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# ? Jul 21, 2012 01:01 |
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Doing a little work on my '81 CX500c today. I feel like I'm innundating the boards with my ape-like attempts to actually get the drat thing out on the road. The good news is that it seems to be the caliper (and not my wheel installation) that's gumming up the front wheel. The bad news is that I can't seem to remove the caliper or the bracket... Speedo cable is disconnected here. Both bolts for the caliper bracket are out, as well as the two bolts for the caliper itself. At this point it should just fall right off, right? Welp. I rock the bike back a tiny bit, the wheel now moves freely, and the caliper moves with it. So, uh, I guess my best course of action here is to remove the whole caliper somehow and see how the front wheel behaves without the caliper being fused to the disk. Any suggestions...? EDIT: Haha. So I have all the finesse of an enraged orangutan on bath salts. I encouraged the caliper to come off with some swats with a rubber mallet, and in the process realized that I had smashed the socket to my speedo cable! I then got the caliper off. Well. It plummeted to the ground with a resounding cascade of clanging and a heavy fume of burned brakes. Here's the naughty caliper in question. My last bit of collateral damage came when I tried to put my bike back on its centerstand. It had already almost toppled on me once when it was on the kickstand (probably cause I kept dicking with the front wheel like the genius I am) so I figured better safe than sorry, as it's *probably* not going anywhere in a while. However, I forgot that my forcks chronically lose all their air, so as I was flailing around like a drunken bear trying to catch a salmon, I snapped my left blinker clean off! Surprisingly I'm not too upset. I think I've accepted the fact that the bike isn't going anywhere any time soon (especially because I break two things for every one thing I *fix* ) so at this point I just kind of laugh it off. As usual any direction to getting my bike road worthy would be great. I'm assuming I could zip-tie/electrical tape the speedo cable back in, and fix my rear tail-light with duct tape. As for the caliper & bracket, what do you think? Bleed them again? Get new ones? While I wait for answers from you guys and dwell on how much I'm KILLING the re-sale value of this, I'm going to "fix" my (black) seat with some white duct tape. Time to be fashionable! I'm realizing now that this bike has gone from a "one or two questions to get her fixed" to a full on "lets bomb the thread with problems I'm having with my lovely bike!" If you guys want I could move this to it's own thread, or maybe the vintage bike thread? Lanky_Nibz fucked around with this message at 15:20 on Jul 21, 2012 |
# ? Jul 21, 2012 14:42 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:24 |
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Where is the best place to source some touch up paint? I have some rust starting on the frame where it was scratched previously that I would like to take care of. I also just nicked my tank down to the metal with a wrench adjusting my mirrors. My local dealer wasn't much help finding touchup paint. It's a 2002 Suzuki Bandit in Silver. EDIT: Shipping to Canada. Colorrite won't ship to Canada. Ziploc fucked around with this message at 18:22 on Jul 21, 2012 |
# ? Jul 21, 2012 18:01 |