Jump to content

swooshdave

Members
  • Posts

    2,068
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    62

Posts posted by swooshdave

  1. Early RedFrames will appreciate careful suspension tuning and tire selection (like all bikes). Very, very early RedFrames had steeper triple clamps. What is the build date on this bike you're looking at?

     

    Not sure of the build date but it's listed as a 2001.

  2. Let's put it this way, all things being roughly equal do you go for the bike in better condition? Or do you still go for the Greenie even if it has some wear and tear? I'll post some of the scrapes and bruises later.

     

    Which models had gas tank problems?

  3. Up to you... but you said "help me find a green bike."

     

    I did say green, but if I start to have a modicum of sense I might want to look at the later bikes.

     

    I'm getting nervous about the cracked transmission now. The green bike has 18k miles on it so it's not fresh. Nor has he done anything with the electricals, unless they were done in the first 7k miles with the first owner.

  4. So then the question is do I go for the green one (and you know I like the green) or something like a 2004 Lemans? The fairing is tempting as I'm planning on riding to Barber next year. Help me spend the money!

     

    Of course I could just be patient and see if a Rossa Corsa or a Tenni pops up...

  5. I hope you cannot respond right now because you are at the airport. That would be an EPIC fly and ride. I would love to spend 3 days crisscrossing the mountains - or hugging the coast - between San Francisco and Portland.

     

    I wish that was true. I've had some bites on the Triumph but they've been on the east coast.

  6. Green . . . . black :ninja:  . . . . *silver* (looks like you've got *silver* covered :thumbsup: ) . . .

     

    Are you going to be a RedFrame guy or a LongFrame guy . . . . :glare:  . . . .

     

    In the end I'm going to try to find the best bike I can afford, with preferences as stated. It's not like they made an ugly V11 Sport...

  7.  

    I sat on a Scura today. I don't think a bike has fit me better.

     

    mmmm... that's a much darker shade of green.  :ninja:

     

     

    Very true, but I was fondling,,, not proposing. One owner bike, 61k miles. Well loved. Never for sale while owner breathing.

  8.  

    Reed valve breathers are the simplest way to reduce the crankcase pressure.

     

     

    I have been advised by esteemed sources as well as from some forum crawling that power brake booster check valves work well.

    Brake booster valves are usually flappy pieces of plastic. Engine pulses are quite rapid, several thousand times per minute, and will wear out or destroy a plastic valve.

     

    If they worked that well why do no manufacturers use them for crankcase evacuation?

     

    The caveat is that V-twins even the pulses out somewhat, especially compared to a 360 twin or a single.

  9.  

    It's a lot of oil. I recently left the breather hose disconnected by accident. Rode 4 miles - oil everywhere. It was a perfect topper to my clutch frustrations (now solved).

    Hmm, good to know. Theory is that a check valve in the crank breather can reduce positive pressure in the bottom end and thereby among other benefits reduce how much air/oil gets spat out. Ducati, BMW, even Harley uses them, and have been for quite a while. The new Panigale goes so far as to having a pump in the crankcase to keep it under negative pressure. Methinks it can help. They aren't expensive, either.

     

     

    Reed valve breathers are the simplest way to reduce the crankcase pressure.

×
×
  • Create New...