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http://www.kawasaki-techinfo.net/showOM.php?view_lang=EN&spec=US&book_no=99987-1497&lang_code=EN Take it to a race shop and have the sag set then a quick comp/reb setup done. It's worth the $20-$40.
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# ? Jan 5, 2015 20:13 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 20:12 |
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BlackMK4 posted:http://www.kawasaki-techinfo.net/showOM.php?view_lang=EN&spec=US&book_no=99987-1497&lang_code=EN Thank you! I will when I can find one around here. I just want to make sure the settings are at least the same on both forks for now. It had a previous owner so who knows what they did.
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# ? Jan 5, 2015 20:25 |
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What's the best way to remove those riveted front fender cable brackets? Drilled out the rivets, but it still doesn't want to budge.
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# ? Jan 5, 2015 21:41 |
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M42 posted:What's the best way to remove those riveted front fender cable brackets? Drilled out the rivets, but it still doesn't want to budge. Holy poo poo you've got a Martian on your bike: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E_jmwW2NUSI anyway they look like pop rivets which should come off with a little persuasion from a screwdriver under them once you drill out the centre - you might need to go up a drill bit size to remove enough material.
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# ? Jan 5, 2015 21:47 |
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goddamnedtwisto posted:Holy poo poo you've got a Martian on your bike:
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 02:21 |
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M42 posted:What's the best way to remove those riveted front fender cable brackets? Drilled out the rivets, but it still doesn't want to budge.
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 04:31 |
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So I had to move recently and I have no garage, and no cover in the backyard to at least put the bike under. I decided to get one of those clamshell covers and put in in the backyard. Does anyone have any experiences with these? The reviews on amazon are pretty mixed, with most people complaining about the lack of 100% weather proofing. I can live with a bit of moisture inside, but I don't want dripping water. This is the one I'm probably going to get barring any suggestions from you guys. http://www.amazon.com/Speed-Way-She...orcycle+shelter
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 04:35 |
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Thanks for the advice! Pics are were from before drilling, there's a hole all the way through now.
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 05:29 |
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Nitramster posted:So I had to move recently and I have no garage, and no cover in the backyard to at least put the bike under. I decided to get one of those clamshell covers and put in in the backyard. Nothing is going to be as good as bringing it indoors but a cover is nice to keep it out of downpours or whatever. I have been street parking my bike for going on 6 years now and while it looks like poo poo it still runs just fine and isn't really all that bad off for a bike that sees tons of commuting/road trip miles and no cleaning. If you're planning on storing it all winter under a cover I'd expect to see some rusted fasteners due to moisture getting trapped under there. I'd try to bum some garage space off of a friend if I wasn't going to be riding it for a few months personally.
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 05:43 |
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Sorry I should have clarified, I'm in Los Angeles county and will be using it daily, but it's also a brand new ZX6R and I do not want to street park it. At the moment I have it parked at my uncles house a bit across town, but that does me no good!
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 06:00 |
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Nitramster posted:Sorry I should have clarified, I'm in Los Angeles county and will be using it daily, but it's also a brand new ZX6R and I do not want to street park it. At the moment I have it parked at my uncles house a bit across town, but that does me no good! The cover will definitely help with the sun killing your paint, just make sure it's pretty clean before you put the cover on it so it doesn't get all scratched from dirty fabric rubbing dirty paint. My boss covers his BMW every day at work and after 4 years it still looks new while I never cover mine and it's faded as hell on one side and ok on the other due to the sun hitting it the same way each day. Other than that get full coverage and try not to worry when it's out of your sight.
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 06:14 |
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 06:43 |
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Bugdrvr posted:The cover will definitely help with the sun killing your paint, just make sure it's pretty clean before you put the cover on it so it doesn't get all scratched from dirty fabric rubbing dirty paint. My boss covers his BMW every day at work and after 4 years it still looks new while I never cover mine and it's faded as hell on one side and ok on the other due to the sun hitting it the same way each day. Well it's a shelter (look at the link!) You pull the bike onto a plastic platform then clam-shell a waterproof fabric over it like a tent, so it shouldn't make contact with the bike anywhere. it's very trick but it's not cheap either. Hence my tentativeness.
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 08:04 |
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$300 buys a lot of PVC and tarpaulin...
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# ? Jan 6, 2015 10:55 |
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My dad's GS500 is doing something annoying. For some reason the float needle valves (sometimes both carbs, but mostly just the right one) aren't sealing, but it only happens sporadically. We'll clean the carbs especially well, put everything back together, and they'll be fine for a couple days, but after that, they'll start overflowing again. The valves are getting replaced, but any ideas on the back-and-forth nature of this? The tank is rust free, and there isn't any gunk in the bowls whenever we pull the carbs. I even temporarily messed with the float tangs to try and get some more sealing pressure, but that didn't work for more than a day. Also both floats still float and the petcock hasn't been left on prime or anything.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 02:23 |
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Rubber has dried out and is failing to seal appropriately.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 02:29 |
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I don't remember what kind of floats the GS500 has but I'll just throw out that I recently had an old GS550 with a confusing symptom where it would piss gas out of the overflow constantly for a few seconds and then stop entirely. Would do that randomly. It already had new float needles and seats. Had plastic floats on a brass hinge, the brass part was flimsy and most of the floats were a little bent off kilter on the brass hinge. Straightened them all out, fixed it. But usually new float needles and seats fixes those problems.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 04:33 |
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Geirskogul posted:$300 buys a lot of PVC and tarpaulin... No, don't. Tarps trap moisture.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 04:58 |
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clutchpuck posted:No, don't. Tarps trap moisture. Build covered vents into it, like most covers have. Easy peasy.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 07:26 |
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Geirskogul posted:Build covered vents into it, like most covers have. Easy peasy. Why not just a few 2x4s and some plastic sheeting? Either just four posts and a roof or you can build walls too if you want to get all fancy. I mean, aside from the fact that it will look like you have a giant shitheap of bungled carpentry/freely blowing tarp in your back yard, of course.
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 14:35 |
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Z3n posted:Rubber has dried out and is failing to seal appropriately. Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:I don't remember what kind of floats the GS500 has but I'll just throw out that I recently had an old GS550 with a confusing symptom where it would piss gas out of the overflow constantly for a few seconds and then stop entirely. Would do that randomly. It already had new float needles and seats. Had plastic floats on a brass hinge, the brass part was flimsy and most of the floats were a little bent off kilter on the brass hinge. Straightened them all out, fixed it. The 500 has the usual molded plastic hinge, and everything thing with them seems okay. Thanks guys!
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# ? Jan 8, 2015 14:38 |
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since we're doing GS500 carb chat, I have a question. Mine has been dripping fuel, so i'm getting new float bowl gaskets and float needle things for mine. My float bowls had gasket sealer in the gaskets. Is this a normal/good thing, or should I not use gasket sealer?
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# ? Jan 9, 2015 23:24 |
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nitrogen posted:since we're doing GS500 carb chat, I have a question. Mine has been dripping fuel, so i'm getting new float bowl gaskets and float needle things for mine. I do recommend a touch of bel-ray waterproof grease on the float bowl gaskets though. It's good poo poo, and you should use it on EVERYTHING.
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# ? Jan 9, 2015 23:28 |
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I'm a huge fan of lubing o-rings with a non-drying silicone before installation. I have been using Dow Corning 111 Valve Lubricant or High Vacuum Grease because both are super thick to hold gaskets in place for install and both are resistant to very high heat. Kinda expensive but one tube lasts me about two years at the dealer so should last forever at home.
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 01:13 |
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More GS500 carb chat: So I got gaskets back from partzilla, but they are the wrong gaskets. I am trying to figure out if they screwed up, or if my craigslist special bike has a different carb on it than it should. Partzilla says the part number matches what is called for on my bike, and the part number on the gasket matches what I ordered Bike is a 2001 GS500. Here's a pic of the gasket I got on my float bowl chamber. you can see it obviously doesnt fit: (there were some extra pieces on it, i snupped some of them to see if i could make it reasonably fit. the pre-snipped pic is too blurry) here's a pic of my float chamber (the gunk has mostly been removed now) pic of the side of the carb, with what appear to be model number markings I can't make any sense of:
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 18:58 |
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nitrogen posted:More GS500 carb chat: Given that it's not a pressure seal, surely your best bet is just to use sealant/liquid gasket?
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 19:44 |
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goddamnedtwisto posted:Given that it's not a pressure seal, surely your best bet is just to use sealant/liquid gasket? Gnarleycharlie above recommended against that.
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 20:05 |
goddamnedtwisto posted:Given that it's not a pressure seal, surely your best bet is just to use sealant/liquid gasket? No. However someone here a while back mentioned a type of cut-to-length rubber seal intended for just such a purpose that would probably do the trick.
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 20:45 |
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Those look like the same type carbs from an 04... Not sure if the 01's are the same or not.
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# ? Jan 10, 2015 21:27 |
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Slavvy posted:No. However someone here a while back mentioned a type of cut-to-length rubber seal intended for just such a purpose that would probably do the trick. That was me. I would do that or just go to a parts store and see if they have a big circular O ring that fits in there (usually they have an assortment behind the counter that some of the employees don't even know about). It doesn't need to be molded any special way. Put a few small dabs of grease in the channel to keep it still and fit it into the bowl.
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 01:27 |
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I think that gasket is for the newer carb... Yours should be the Mikuni BST33 Twin ... Part# 16: http://www.bikebandit.com/oem-parts/2001-suzuki-gs500/o/m6062#sch246380 It's too bad bike bandit's shipping is slow boat from china speed on top of being expensive, I've never gotten a wrong or bad part from them.
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 02:31 |
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Wel, I bought it from bike bandit, so we'll see. Thanks for your help. Partzilla has been great up until now, if not a bit slow due to never having the parts on hand i've needed. When it comes to gaskets and gasoline, I dont like to gently caress around. I am replacing these gaskets becayuse one of the bowls was leaking and stinking up my garage with gas smell. I'd rather not have a gas fire in my garage. If this doesn't work, I see rebuild kits that have the right gaskets, but those are not cheap. Don't buy craigslist special bikes, folks. I've spent the purchase price on new parts it's needed. I also blame the friend I brought with me as being useless when he looked at it. I'm becoming an expert on spotting stupid poo poo on bikes thanks to this thing. nitrogen fucked around with this message at 03:00 on Jan 11, 2015 |
# ? Jan 11, 2015 02:57 |
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they mailed you the wrong gasket, contact them and fix the issue
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# ? Jan 11, 2015 03:41 |
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nitrogen posted:Wel, I bought it from bike bandit, so we'll see. Thanks for your help. That's the whole reason I buy craiglist special bikes... I have a bad habit of picking something up for 500$ - 600$ and throwing way too much money at it. For me the trick is I'm still single and have money to "waste". I figure if I get the dollar amount of enjoyment out of my purchase, it makes up for the expenditure. I seem to always need one backup/project bike in the garage. I like to tinker and doing so with my primary bike has never sat well with me, plus I like the idea of having a light weight small displacement bike for around town that's a bit ridiculous. I also use the spare bike as a loaner when friends/relations come out and want to ride. old project: 1981 GS450e, Bought for 700$, used exhaust replacement, brand new hagon rear shocks, all new brake pads/shoes, rebuild kit for the brakes, new front brake reservoir, new chain and sprockets, and other odds an ends. I spent about 800$ getting it to where I thought it was safe. Rode it around for 2 years. My young cousin said she wanted to start riding, double checked everything, gave her the bike. new project: 1996 GS500e, Bought for 600$. So far I have chain and sprockets, new tires, the rotors aren't warped and are in spec but a caliper rebuild kit was done, and new handle bars (nice set of pro-taper bars for 30$ off craigslist.) At some point I'm going to throw a jet kit, 2 - 1 pipe, and pod air filters to see how ridiculous I can make it.
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# ? Jan 13, 2015 17:11 |
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Skreemer posted:That's the whole reason I buy craiglist special bikes... I have a bad habit of picking something up for 500$ - 600$ and throwing way too much money at it. For me the trick is I'm still single and have money to "waste". I figure if I get the dollar amount of enjoyment out of my purchase, it makes up for the expenditure. I seem to always need one backup/project bike in the garage. I like to tinker and doing so with my primary bike has never sat well with me, plus I like the idea of having a light weight small displacement bike for around town that's a bit ridiculous. I also use the spare bike as a loaner when friends/relations come out and want to ride. It's a fun project, sure, but since i'm new to a lot of this, it makes me a bit nervous too. Since you are/seem more experienced, the craigslist special bikes are probably more up your alley. I'm certainly learning a whole lot, though. I'm glad all this is happening during the winter where its been pretty cold and not conducive to riding at least. I will probably buy a more modern bike in a few months, or later this year, and keep the GS500 as a post apocalyptic fun around town cheap bike to mess with. (probably something more cruserish or touring-ish that is more comfortable to ride for long distances)
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# ? Jan 13, 2015 18:15 |
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Hey guys, So I'm planning a full top end rebuild and ultimately a Stage 0 of my Bandit and was wondering if anybody had any recommendations for tools and parts I should address while I'm in there. I want to replace: Engine: -Piston rings -Valve stem seals -GSXR1100 exhaust cam and B12 intake cam with GSXR750 cams -Cam chain -Cam chain tensioner gasket -Exhaust gaskets -Helicoil the M7 valve cover bolts -Head bolts -Anything else you guys recommend I do for essentially a major engine tuneup Any special tools while I'm in there? For the cam chain and valve stem seals? Should I take the head to a machine shop for honing? Carbs: -Clean air filter -Vacuum hoses -Gas analysis tune for new cams Brakes: -New braided lines (I'm running K1 calipers and need to swap to K1 from my K2 lines due to fit issues) Tires: -Pilot Road 4 front and rear Forks: -Seals and fluid Rear shock: -Hayabusa shock right now. Suggestions? I'm at a point though where if I'm to be tuning my engine's carbs and have everything apart, there's no reason I cannot run microsquirt and fuel inject my motorcycle with a major gain to performance and quality of life. Build threads: http://www.gixxer.com/forums/showthread.php?t=289452 http://www.gixxer.com/forums/showthread.php?t=303736 http://www.gixxer.com/forums/showthread.php?t=289452&page=2 Looks like K3 GSXR600 carbs work for this and the overall price for the build won't be too crazy.
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# ? Jan 13, 2015 18:45 |
For the cam chain you'll need a cam chain breaker/riveter. They are't expensive. You'll also need to grind/lap the valves into the head. People recommend you should get a professional shop to grind them but, honestly, lapping them in by hand will work just as well for what you're doing and is very cheap and easy (just time-consuming). On the other hand, a shop can grind your head and your valves for a relatively reasonable combined fee. On the gripping hand, on a liquid cooled engine I would definitely say get the head skimmed, but on an oil boiler it's not as critical.You'll also need to reset your clearances. It's also worth swapping out your valve guides if they're worn but I don't know what sort of setup your engine has WRT this. Ask for some prices from an engine shop and decide if it's worth it for you. Are you cracking the cases? If you are it's worth checking the gearbox bearings and poo poo because something will break if you've got a spanking new engine making an assload of power and a tired old gearbox. Especially if you go MS. Also I need this to happen because retarded gigantic powerhouses are awesome.
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# ? Jan 13, 2015 19:08 |
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Picking up my first bike later this week. I've looked at a bunch of bikes, and this one is the winner. It's a used 2006 BMW F650GS with ~13k miles on it, also has ABS, center stand, and heated grips. Clear title, good price, etc. Plus thump thump thump is way cooler than a twin. Things I'll be doing after getting it: Oil, filter, and coolant changes. Oil was pretty dark. Adjusting/tightening the gear selector. These bikes are known to be "clunky", but this one felt a little too sloppy, and was a bit low for where I thought it should be. Removing the PO's goofy and way too huge (blocks turning the handlebars fully ) windscreen and putting another more stock one from some of the junk/parts he had sitting with it that he is giving me. Chain and sprockets looked to be in good shape, but will be cleaning/lubing them. Battery and tires are <1.5 years old and look to be in decent shape. Brakes seemed to work/look ok I think? Front suspension seemed to dive pretty hard on the test drive, but maybe this is normal? Any other things I should look into or should be done taking in a used bike? I'm not a mechanical wizard, but can do basic things like oil changes, change bulbs and whatnot. I have a family member that is good and knowledgeable on BMW bikes who will be checking it out in detail in a few weeks when visiting and could probably help with any major work.
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# ? Jan 13, 2015 22:48 |
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The dive might just be the suspension not dialed in. Or typical adv style travel and damping. I'd feel the wheel bearings and check the steering for notchiness. Also if you're putting in fresh fluids, don't forget the brake and clutch hydraulics.
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# ? Jan 14, 2015 02:36 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 20:12 |
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AuxiliaryPatroller posted:Picking up my first bike later this week. I've looked at a bunch of bikes, and this one is the winner. It's a used 2006 BMW F650GS with ~13k miles on it, also has ABS, center stand, and heated grips. Clear title, good price, etc. Plus thump thump thump is way cooler than a twin. That's what my husband has! Enjoy the glorious CHAINSAW sound it makes. Also, if you have someone ride 2up with you, they will have their guts vibrated. You may want to bleed the brakes if it hasn't been done recently.
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# ? Jan 14, 2015 08:36 |