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audiomick

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Everything posted by audiomick

  1. Hopefully donate it to an appropriate museum.
  2. That is a point that is discussed regularly on the german forum, and which came up this evening at dinner with a couple of Guzzi owners here in Leipzig. One of the blokes I was with proposed that there is a "low point" about 25 years after the introduction of a vehicle on the market (assuming it has the potential to remain interesting over the years), after which the price goes up again, at least for a while. The other side of the coin is, the type of person who collects motor vehicles seems to be becoming less common. The younger generation(s) doesn't (don't) seem to have the same interest in cars and bikes, and therefore has less interest in collecting the "dream of their youth" as they get older and more affluent. The older Guzzis seem to be, at least here, stagnating in value. There is a school of thought that says the prices are going to drop in the next years as more and more older owners of several machines sell their collections due to old age, or the bikes are sold by their heirs after they pass on. I think there is a lot of truth in that thought. It will be interesting to see how the percieved value of the various V11 models develops over the next years. I tend to think that there will be a few, maybe very few, enthusiasts who are interested in them. On the other hand, I can see the possibility that the interest will wane as the generation that was young when they came out no longer can or will ride them. Having said that, there was a bloke at the Edersee Rally this year with a greenie. He was only about 30, and seemed to be quite rapt about his V11.
  3. Exactly. I wear a hat whenever I leave the house, but I take care to take it off in the car to ensure that I drive safely... I remember one day when I was on my way from Greensborough in to the city. Late eighties or early nineties. On the way through Ivanhoe I came up behind a Volvo station wagon, a couple of years old, squeaky clean and polished to a tee. The custom number plate said "GRANDPA", and the bloke in it hat his hat on. I pulled over and waited for a couple of minutes until he was well gone.
  4. Yes, I remember that period. In Melbourne in the late eighties, Volvos were considered to be the most dangerous cars on the road. Not for the people in the Volvo, for everyone and everything else on the road. Particualarly motorcycles.
  5. I'm sorry Dave, I can't do that.
  6. For an unfortunately large proportion of drivers people in general, probably nothing. People are often "comfortable" (i.e. lazy and self-centred...).
  7. Another voice from the (no doubt eminently sensible... ) Aussie faction: As Phil said, why do the pipes have to stick out from the heads like an ugly set of crash bars? Fairly obviously too loud, but that is the muffler, not the headers. What happened to the heat shield? Where those headers are placed, the heat shield is definitely a good idea. Fairly obviously too loud, but I may have already mentioned that. Don't like the colour. Edit: oh yeah, nearly forgot: 1 cm more diameter is all well and good, but how does that relate to the diameter of the outlet port in the head? If that is well matched to the stock exhaust, I can't really see any benefit in larger bore headers.
  8. Those old farts in the VIP box looked pretty happy, so that must be a good version.
  9. Once again from the Stein-Dinse catalogue: https://www.stein-dinse.biz/etkataloge/etkataloge.php?l=de&h=MG&m=220&t=5368 #4 on the diagram, GU 95021114. The part offered for sale is apparently after-market, not original Guzzi. https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/zahnscheibe-nml/item-2-1310507-95021114-.html #8 GU 91120620, "spacer washer". This is an apparently original Guzzi replacement for GU 95005320 https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/distanzscheibe/item-2-1302017-91120620-.html No dimensions there either, unfortunately. The outside diameter could be guessed from the photo, I reckon. The thickness, perhaps more critical when they call it a "spacer washer", might be harder. Going by the picture, I'd guess something like 4mm.
  10. I had to look for that, and then had to chuckle a bit. For those not familiar with US culture https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rube_Goldberg
  11. In a similar vein (although musically very different) NB: Consumer advice: this video may contain traces of *guitar*
  12. Looks to me to be a bit of a "special" item. The picture is from Stein-Dinse, where it is quite expensive. https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/staenderschraube-daytona-2-serie/item-2-1117062-30432801-.html Wendel apparently has one (but only one...) for a lot less money. The question is, what would it cost to have it sent to where you are. https://wendelmotorraeder.de/schraube_gu30432801-p-1009294.html?ref=expl EDIT: PS on the Wendel page, underneath the price, it says "(statt 39,90 € ehemaliger VK)" which means "instead of the original list price of €39.90". So even though the Stein-Dinse price seems high, it is apparently not exorbitant.
  13. I'm not convinced he invented any new techniques. What he is doing with his right hand looks like pretty much what classical guitarists do, just not as relaxed.
  14. Right off topic, but I had to grin at that. The reason is advice that someone gave about these measurement mics: https://www.thomann.de/de/behringer_ecm_8000.htm The advice was "you can use them. The best thing to do is buy ten, test them all to find the best one, and flog the rest off on e-bay". To put the price into perspective: I have one of these, a very solid and affordable mic that has been on the market for a long time, i.e. the developement costs have been recovered several times over https://www.thomann.de/de/beyerdynamic_mm_1_2023.htm and here one from the class of mic I can't afford... https://www.thomann.de/de/earthworks_audio_m50.htm Heading back towards "on topic", Phil hit the nail on the head: there is a reason the Behringer is so cheap. The design is, as with a lot of Behringer products, quite ok. The production tolerances are lousy.
  15. If they did, they most likely didn't weigh the same as the standard pistons, and I reckon a crankshaft balance was indicated.
  16. Only slightly jealous about that workshop.
  17. And yet it apparently is. The search for the MG part number at Stein-Dinse, a reputable supplier, threw up apparantly conflicting results. I see your point entirely, but also the value of pointing out that one may need to look closer when a simple search throws up apparently conflicting results. NB: searching using the Brembo part number threw up several results from other suppliers that seemed to be consistent. Perhaps that is the better method in this instance.
  18. EDIT: docc was quicker (again...) but I'll leave the post as I wrote it. Ok, I went searching again. On the basis of the part number for the "correct" kit, GU28659378, I got a couple of hits. Stein-Dinse: no photo, so I don't trust it https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/bausatz-pumpenueberholung/item-2-1588574-GU28659378-.html with a photo, but it looks wrong. I think their search function had a brain fart https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/bremszylinder-reparatursatz-ps-13-hand/item-1-1046268.html This one looks close to right, but claims to be for a PS 13 rather than PS 12 https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/ducati-kupplungszylinder-reparatursatz-ps-13-750-sport/item-1-1001089.html This one from Wendel looks like it might be right https://wendelmotorraeder.de/bausatz-pumpenueberholung_gu28659378-p-1005001.html seems like it is not all that easy to find the right kit. another edit: PS, I have it in the back of my mind that Stein-Dinse did a complete re-build of their website a couple of months ago. It is pretty good, but I don't quite trust it completely yet. Maybe there are still a few bugs in the catalogue.
  19. Thanks, docc. That's for the clutch master cylinder, isn't it? [docc edit: I posted the wrong part for the clutch master cylinder rebuild kit, so these links are not correct, either. My bad. @Speedfrog posted the correct part below. ] For the europeans, Stein-Dinse and Wendel both seem to have an equivalent: https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/bremszylinder-reparatur-satz-ps-12/item-2-1045955-17659352-.html https://wendelmotorraeder.de/rep-satz-handgeber-12er-rund_gu17659352-w1-p-6111800.html In fact, Wendel has two alternatives, but I'm not convinced that the price difference justifies this one... https://wendelmotorraeder.de/bausatz-hpumpenueberholung_gu17659352-p-1001708.html
  20. That's this, right? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lidar If they couldn't get it to work right, it should be removed. At least until it is reliable. If the decision to leave it out was "planning by budget", it was a wrong decision. Such systems need to have everything possible to make them reliable, no matter what the cost.
  21. Very, very pretty car. But Harry should talk to a competent sound engineer about where he mounts his microphone. He's got it on his left lapel, and everythime he turns his head to his left, the sound of his voice changes. Amateur...
  22. Or just buy the part for the later bikes and fit it to your V11. https://www.stein-dinse.com/de/ablassrohr-kupplung/item-2-1031196-05606630-.html You need part #8, the screw, and two of part #9, the seals, as well. https://www.stein-dinse.biz/etkataloge/etkataloge.php?l=de&h=MG&m=210&t=5004#a165229 I got one for my Le Mans, and bleeding the clutch now works like this: Note: I didn't figure all that out by myself. The tip came from this forum.
  23. He should have seen that coming. Trucks are only allowed to do 80 km/h on the Autobahn. Everyone knows that. There are far too many drivers who seem to think that anything over the speed they choose to drive at is far too fast. There are also far too many who seem to believe that putting on the blinker to change lanes gives them right of way, although the road law states that the onus is on the driver who is changing lanes to make sure he doesn't hinder anyone. All in all, that means when you are approaching a bunch of cars with a truck in the middle, you "know" that some prick is going to pull out in front of you. If you get past without it happening, you were lucky. Don't get me wrong, that's not old-fart-preaching. It is just real-world experience. The law states that the bloke on the bike was in the right. My experience with "my accident" makes me think that, despite that, the damages settlement will probably give him 25 or 30% of the blame. In my case, I was overtaking a line of cars, and someone pulled out in front of me to turn into a side road. Techinically, I was 100% in the right, but the blame was determined at 25% for me and 75% for the other bloke. Anyway, what I'm getting at is that anyone who has spent any time at all on the Autobahn here should have seen that coming. It happens all the time, i.e. that some idiot will pull out in front of much faster traffic. The bloke on the bike was legally in the right, but I suspect he was too keen on getting a good video to concentrate on riding sensibly. And by that, I don't mean "not at 300 km/h", I mean simply observing the dynamic of the traffic ahead.
  24. So the current MV Augusta design department is trying to dock on to a "classic style".
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