Jump to content

Greg Field

Members
  • Posts

    1,920
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by Greg Field

  1. Well, I personally know of four red-frames that went into wobbles and crashed. It's true that none of them were set up by the god-like Hatchetwhacker, so no doubt those ones don't count. Another early one I know about is still owned by a local dentist. He describes it as twitchy but didn't want to do the triple-clamp update kit 'cause he feared it would slow the handling. He just keeps his damper cranked up and rides it sanely. Demons, yes . . .

     

    Did you know that a vast minority of V11 owners brave this list?

  2. Yes, probably the biggest V11 forum. Until what, a week ago, none of you knew that it was the triple clamps that were changed, let alone how and why. Good lord, with all you geniuses on this forum, you remained ignorant of this until I told you? How could that be? All the yammering for all these years and you had no idea what you were yammering about. What else might you be ignorant about?

     

    Christ, remember the glowing oil light thing? You clowns kvetched about it for years but none of you took the time to hook up an oil-pressure gauge and find out what was really happening. All you did was whine and wring your hands. Within days of first seeing my oil light flash while the bike was accelerating, I had a pressure gauge on it and proved what was happening and was on to solutions for it. Of course, there was no problem there, either; just more demons and haikus, too . . .

     

    Or remember the RLSH and the pink moly? Nothing but mocking there, either, until I proved it to you.

     

    COnsider the possibility that you will be proven as foolish about this as you were about that . . .

  3. So far Greg only's made up dead riders killed by made up normal use wobbles. So far no stories of Red Frames that become or became unrideable and deadly as soon as you touch the brakes. It seems you two are a good team, though, so who knows what story comes next.

     

    Hubert

     

    I never said anyone was killed on a V11. I said that several times in the past Guzzis have been designed on which some of them proved dangerously unstable. On those machines, Guzzi and most of the cheerleaders for the company claimed there was no problem. Guzzi even sent an engineer over to check the bikes for "proper set-up." Still, they wobbled, and Guzzi stone-walled until after more crashes and the further shedding of blood. It took the crashing of that Guzzi engineer and then the death of a factory test rider in one instance before they listened. That you don't believe it doesn't change the fact that it happened. Some of you are more comfortable with demons and haikus than facts. So be it.

  4. TM: If you want to send it to me, I'll field-strip it and see if it can be fixed. Likely, it's just a haiku problem or maybe a twitchy demon. I have a voodoo priestess on call and a lot of parts from junked ITIs. Or maybe send it to Luhbo? There are no problems with Guzzis. It's always the owners.

  5. Just go look up the old service bulletin on the rake change in the triple clamps. Dave Richardson showed it to me in early 2002 or so. It listed the part numbers for new and old, and what do you know? They match the two series of part numbers shown in the current parts diagrams. That's good enough proof for me, but you doubters can go ahead and do your own research, or not. Facts are facts. The earlier ones are twitchier than the later ones. We offered the upgrade kit (with the "canted" triples) to our customers, but few opted to spend the money. Instead, they just kept their dampers cranked up. But keep believing in demons and haikus if you want.

  6. And yet on this forum we have people unsuccessfully taking on the challenge of presenting such an argument. Incredible.

     

    If the subject that started all this was "Why It's a Good Idea to Have a Steering Damper as a Back-up," you'd have a point. As you know, that wasn't the subject. It was "Who Needs," arguing that everyone NEEDS one. That's just hogwash.

  7. No guys, that makes a triangle. You must add the missing upper part in your imagination of course. Do you get the picture?

     

    Ok, hold it then, and now think of all the tolerances that will stack up in this assembly. Bearing seats, height of their contact surfaces above or below the reference surfaces of the fork tube bores, distance of bearing seats in the frame, the bore diameters etc. etc.

     

    Something like that will not work at an (semi- ;) ) industrial assembly line. You can do something like that if you build bikes one by one and one per week, no problem, but you'd need shims to get the tolerances out and to get things straight. Cutting off the steering head and weld it back correctly would take less time and cost less money.

     

    And G/M, like you wrote already, for what reason if they keep the wheelbase constant?

     

    The raked clamps thing is nonsense made up by Greg. Hopefully he at least knows why he does such things.

     

    Hubert

     

    I did not make it up.

  8. Everyday at work, I watch Guzzi customers sign credit card slips. About 40 percent are left-handed. I also watch people I've never seen before signing test-ride forms. The left-handed among them are almost always signing up for a Guzzi ride, rather than an Aprilia or trade-in of another brand.

  9. They are bored off-axis. No need for shims. Or haikus. Or demons. What the Aprilia-era Guzzi factory did was far more interesting than demons or pathetic poetry. After that, the Aprilia clowns stepped on their @#$$#! trying to put hydraulic lifters in the Cali engines and installed a single-plate clutch that self-destructed sometimes in less than 200 miles. I suppose those things made sense to you, Luhbo? Or perhaps you think they're fiction, too?

  10. Trying to remove the D-section shaft that screws onto the reverse threaded trip reset axle in the old speedo/odo (knob broke off and small pieces of it are rattling in the case). The bugger won't loosen at all. I'm suspecting it's either glued or at least threadlocked real well onto the threaded axle. It looks a bit misaligned with the axle, so actually it makes me think that it wasn't screwed in but rather glued. I read that some folks got replacement knobs that didn't fit. Maybe the knob was sized for the Veglia odo reset axle and wouldn't fit the ITI ones.

     

    Also haven't found a way to block/hold fast the reset axle so that I can put more torque to try to loosen the D-section shaft. Anybody done it?

     

    The shaft and the brass collet have two different diameters. The only way to make them stay together is to glue them together. If the assemble aligns them properly during assembly, they will be close enough to concentric in axis. If not, You get what you have.

  11. GM: Sometimes the US VIN corresponds to frame number but more often to engine number, so I'm not sure how useful it is.

     

    Sorry, but I meant under the upper clamp. Does it read "01493100" or "01493130" (both early) or "501452" (most late)?

     

    Axle nut or not?

     

    It may or not be under the VIN plate, or alongside it. US bikes are hard to decipher. You almost certainly have the early, non-canted triple clamps.

  12. Greg, the number on the underside of the lower clamp is 502 481B.

    The last part of the vin # (I assume that's what you are calling frame #) is 112434.

    It was bought as a 2000 in early '01.

    What does that tell you?

     

    GM: Sometimes the US VIN corresponds to frame number but more often to engine number, so I'm not sure how useful it is.

     

    Sorry, but I meant under the upper clamp. Does it read "01493100" or "01493130" (both early) or "501452" (most late)?

     

    Axle nut or not?

×
×
  • Create New...