
audiomick
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Posts posted by audiomick
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Yes, well done. Also a "party trick" at the end of the day, but difficult.
But no one ever said that Steve Vai couldn't play guitar.
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On 3/26/2024 at 2:22 PM, p6x said:
a custom set of in-ear monitors that fit under a helmet.... and it seats (allegedly) perfectly in your ear since they use a 3D print of your ear canal,
I can attest to the perfect seat. I bought a system from this company about 15 years ago:
It included the moulds, a set of drivers for listening to music (intended for in-ear monitoring on stage), and two different sets of filters, all of which can be fitted alternately in the moulds. On set of filters provides very little noise protection ( 7 dB) but "catches" short, sharp noises like when someone starts hammering on a bit of truss just behind you. The other set of filters provids 15 dB of protection, and is "flat" enough that I can mix a band with them in.
The drivers for listening to music don't fit under a helmet, but that doesn't bother me too much. Like many others, I don't want to hear music whilst riding, and I don't listen to what the navigation device says, I only look at it.
The point is, the moulds are really very comfortable. I can wear mine for six or eight hours constantly, and they never get uncomfortable. The problem is more that one forgets to take them out.
A note on the side: mine are probably too old by now. The ear canal changes a bit over the years, and one is recommended to have the moulds re-done after a number of years. Mine still work well, though, so I'm not planning on having them re-done yet.
Getting the mould done is no big deal. The man cleaned out my ears with a cotton bud, and squeezed some sort of silicon stuff in there. A bit weird for a couple of minutes, and then it was all over.
21 hours ago, p6x said:The only noise frequency I want filtered out is the wind.
Difficult, because wind noise is not "a frequency", but very broad band. More lows than highs, but everything.
The various filters they offer may have different frequency "responses", but they will most likely be principally more or less damping.
but...
that's ok. Firstly, protecting your ears is the main thing. Less noise in means less damage. Secondly, if the general noise level is lower, you can hear what is going on better. I didn't read about that, that is my experience. If you have good earplugs in, your hearing system isn't "screwed down" to protect itself (yes, that happens. There are muscles in your ears that tense up in loud conditions to "tighten" the ear drums and thereby protect the hearing mechanism in the inner ear ...), and can sort out what it is hearing better.
The frequency curve of the filters is relevant. If too much of the high frequencies is damped out (read: cheap filters), you wont hear things like valve clearance ticking or destructive engine noise, but if the frequency curve is flat, you will be able to hear everthing better than if it were all too loud.
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7 hours ago, LaGrasta said:
... I must have not inserted it cleanly more times than not...
It's a wide open door, but maybe better not to go there...
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For what it is worth, it looks bit like it might be possible to buy the hydraulic pre-load adjuster as an accessory part, i.e. buy it and retro fit it, or in your case (maybe) put it back on:
However, as has been said, if you're planning on selling, let the new owner worry about it.
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On 3/26/2024 at 2:35 PM, p6x said:
When you are four, and you can only afford a single guitar....
Silly bugger acrobatics, but well done. My respect for the one who figured out who plays what on which strings.
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Not silly at all. There is not enough of that positive stuff in the world.
And yes, the forum is fantastic. I'm glad I found it.
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I believe something similar went through in Victoria, Australia (i.e. Melbourne) some years ago. @Lucky Phil or @guzzler, am I right there?
When I was still living there, it wasn't legal, but was tolerated to a great extent. I know I did it all the time.
In Leipzig it is a little more difficult. The streets are a bit narrower, and sometimes there just isn't room. And there are drivers who, if they see you coming, will edge over to block you off. Never had that in Melbourne. Bloody Germans...
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3 hours ago, LowRyter said:The announcer said that Acosta thought the GP riders were too buddy-buddy and the sport needed rivalries. ...
I actually have no idea how well the riders get on with each other, but I can't agree with that opinion. Friendship definitely does not exclude intense rivalry. Just go for a ride with a couple of good mates on a good bit of road, and observe what happens.
Rivalry without a friendly basis, or at least mutual respect, only leads to nasty incidents on the field of competition.
EDIT: I just looked him up. The bloke is not even 20 years old, and Spanish. He's probably still half-drunk on his own testosterone.
Anuvveredit: apart from that, those blokes are doing somethng that nobody else can even remotely fully understand, except for other people who are doing the same thing. Of course they buddy up to each other.
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12 hours ago, docc said:
I wondered who might wade into these similar words . . .
I might have been taking the piss there just a little bit.
Baklava is pretty close to my favourite accompaniment to a cup of coffee.
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Balaclavas taste great, and baklavas make you look like you're about to rob a bank.
I think....
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16 hours ago, GSXR814 said:
... confirming the bulb was OK. Filament looks fine...
Did you check both filaments with a multi-meter? I've had a number of bulbs for various lights that looked fine, but weren't.
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12 minutes ago, p6x said:
He did! second!
Ahhh, first loser then.
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9 hours ago, p6x said:
closer to you than Maton...
Indeed, but still on the other side of the country. I had a search a while back, and immediately found at least three luthiers in Leipzig, one of which who specialises in electric guitars. No idea how good they, but if I wanted to start looking, I could start here. However, as you say, good guitars cost a fortune, and I can't even play very well, so I'm not looking. Deliberately. If I did even think about looking, things might get very expensive very quickly.
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8 hours ago, GSXR814 said:
... Ignition on, fuel pump primes, jabbed the starter and just a click, it did that twice, then started up fine.
5 hours ago, GSXR814 said:Its very much all or nothing. Either no fuel pump prime and nothing on the starter button. Or pump primes and she fires up.
I reckon there might be a couple of things happening there.
Firstly, have you got a workshop manual? There is one here:
https://guzzitek.org/gb/ma_us_uk/1100/V11_1999-2003_Atelier(Compil-GB-D-NL).pdf
On page 457 there is a listing of the fuses, and two pages later a wiring diagram. But have a good look at it yourself. The document is a compilation of several versions of the workshop manual, and you should make sure you are looking at the section that refers to your bike.
Anyway....
The "click, click, click, start" is well known. Mine does that. Starts mostly, but often enough the first couple of presses on the button just produce a click. I cleaned up the electrics a bit, and it got better, but it is still there. The basic problem there is that too many volts are getting lost between the battery and the starter solenoid. There doesn't need to be anything specifically broken. It can be just a cumulation of slightly dodgy connections.
The other one, no fuel pump prime and nothing, sounds like a different problem to me. Hard to say what it is, maybe "just" an intermittent connection somewhere, maybe something really broken.
So...
have a good look at the circuit diagram, so you have an idea how it all works. The relays are really important. Most of the important things, crucial to the bike running, involve a relay somehow.
Then...
go through and check and clean all of the electrical connections. Ok, that is a fair swag of things to look at. Start with the strap between the negative battery terminal and the back of the gearbox. That is your main "earth" connection.
As far as the fuses go, dont just check the fuses. The fuse holders (and the relay sockets) are a plastic block that accepts a female spade connector with a barb on it to hold it in place. These connectors are the socket that the fuse or relay sits in.
One can get the connectors out by going in from the fuse / relay side with a very small flat bladed screwdriver to depress the barb, and pulling the connector out to the rear side. Electrical contact cleaner might be enough to clean things up without actually pulling the connectors out.
To sum it up: have a good look at as much of the electrical system as you can. As I already wrote, it sounds to me like you might have a couple of things happening there, not just one.
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Yes. That is the "growth" that the economists are always raving on about.
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10 hours ago, Daveguzzi1 said:
... If I spray starting fluid on the (intake) manifold while running and warmed up it should be noticeable I would think.
Yes, that is the method that I have seen recommended by any number of reliable sources for looking for air leaks in the intake passage. If you spray and the revs go up, there is a problem.
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On 3/21/2024 at 3:13 PM, p6x said:
Wasn't Tommy Emmanuel playing on Maton guitars? I did not know they made electrics.
Yes, Tommy Emmanuel is their principle sponsored Artist, I would say.
https://maton.com.au/artists/tommy-emmanuel
As far as electric guitars go, I believe the company made electric guitars right from the beginning. Apparently George Harrison played one once, but only as a replacement guitar for one, maybe two shows. Whatever, the acoustics are much more well known.
The last time I looked at their site, there were a number of electric guitars available. At the moment I can't find any, although there is a link there to electric guitars. Don't know what is going on there.
Doesn't really matter to me actually. Buying a Maton is definitely exclusively on the "when I win the Lottery" list. I'd love to have one, but....
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8 hours ago, swooshdave said:
I'm surprised Guzzi ever sold any of those bikes.
6 hours ago, Bill Hagan said:I think that Guzzi sold quite a number of the Tonti California models,
Funny you blokes should write that...
I started riding motorcycles in about 1984. My impression of Guzzi (in Melbourne at the time...) was red, eccentric, and sporty. I.e. Le Mans. The first time I saw a California (or was it a Nevada or a Florida? Chopper style, whatever...) I thought "why on earth does a company that builds such beautiful sport bikes even bother to build something like that?".
Then I came to Germany, got a bike, got a Guzzi (the first one was a V35 Imola. No power, but red, sporty looking and beautiful...) and started spending time on a German Guzzi forum.
It turns out, in Europe (or at least in Germany, but I'm convinced it is not restricted to Germany...), the Tonti California is considered to be "the" iconic and defining Guzzi. The beautiful, sleek, sporty things are just a niche product.
Weird, really, because they all know about the V8 race bike, and the the first Tonti frame was the V7 Sport (sleek, sporty, beautiful...) and so on. But the California seems to be considered to be the "mainstream" Guzzi model.
I still can't quite come to grips with the idea.
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8 hours ago, Daveguzzi1 said:
...electrical values and such for the tps ...
157 mV measured across the TPS with the throttle completely closed...
Yeah, I know, that doesn't help much.
If you are only just starting in on working on the bike yourself, I would suggest looking at these three threads first. I only bought my 2002 V11 Le Mans about 18 months ago, and found them very helpful in quickly getting to a point where I can start to do sensible work on the bike (which needed it, and still needs a bit more...).
read that one first, then look at these
A tip for getting the tank off: your 2003 V11 should have the "click-on" connectors for the fuel lines. Be careful there: the plastic elbow coming out of the tank is fragile, and about as easy to find as hen's teeth. What helps a lot: pull the plug on the fuel pump, start the bike and let it run until the motor dies. This relieves the pressure in the fuel line, and makes it possible to disconnect as easy as it is possible to get it. To disconnect, push the connector firmly towards the tank, pull the ring back and pull the connector off.
PS: mine coughs too. Pretty much as you describe yours. Going through the "decent tune up" helped quite a lot. Further research remains to be done...
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You can look at that ad without signing up (I'm allergic to facebook too....).
But here's a summary:
2003 model California, 38.600 miles, $2.500. Comes with a set of panniers, looks like Hepco & Becker. Looks clean in the video and photos.
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1 hour ago, OuijiVeck said:
so I could get to the clutch bleeder...
Look at this...
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Ah, ok. As far as I know, they are the standard mufflers, so that could well be the case.
PS, I actually quite like the colour they have now.
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On 2/16/2024 at 11:12 PM, Lucky Phil said:
... the handlebar holes in the top triple clamp...
I found an explanation for that: a forum acquaintance from a couple of german forums turns out to have fotos of my Le Mans from the time it was owned by the owner previous to the bloke I bought it off. According to the papers, he had it from some time in 2017 until the middle of 2022. The bloke before me bought it then, and sold it on to me at the end of 2022.
Anway, in the one photo there is a conventional handle bar on it. Also, the mufflers in the photo are light gray coloured, not the purplish ones that are on it now.
So the old girl is obviously a way off being "original". Unless, of course, one means "original" in the sense of "one of a kind"...
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I worked for this band for about a year in the first half of the nineties. I reckon this "concert" was recorded within about a half a year after I gave up the job. The bass player was always on about the "carbon fibre" bass that he was having made, which I never saw. I reckon the one in the video must be it. The trick to the bass sound is, it is a double bass, but it has a magnetic pickup in it like an electric bass. The one he was using when I was doing their sound was a cheap wooden double bass, but it had the magnetic pickup, and sounded great.
The brown guitar is a Maton. A truly beautiful guitar. I think the black one is a Gibson. The guitarist bought it from a bloke in Adelaide during the time I was working for them. I reckon the Maton was better.
They are/were all truly excellent musicians. The songs were all "pop songs", but good.
It was fun while it lasted, but it is probably good that I stopped doing it when I did. What came after was also good.
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What [music] do you listen to? Share your favs
in Special place for banter and conversation
Posted
Yes, I feel pretty much the same.
I believe Steve Vai played on some Frank Zappa albums, and was listed in the credits as "stunt guitar". That comes pretty close...