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docc

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Posts posted by docc

  1. Having had the privilege of learning more about this "intake air path", I would venture that this piece is a fine looking, yet hidden, "velocity stack" . . .

    big_69547-cornetto-di-aspirazione-per-mo

    No wonder chicks dig these airboxes. They are always knowing things we don't know . . . :rolleyes:

     . . . reminds me of something . . .

    DSCN3896.jpg

    • Like 3
  2. On 11/30/2023 at 4:10 PM, mikev said:

    This is what I have on it currently.  Looks like one piece vs 2 in diagram.  Also, airbox end doesn't flair out to seal against the box, so I think its not correct.

    IMG_7218.jpg

     

    On 11/30/2023 at 4:50 PM, Lucky Phil said:

    Looks like @Lucky Phil nailed this early on for @mikev's configuration:

    big_69547-cornetto-di-aspirazione-per-mo

    37114806_g.jpg?1668314134372

    • Like 1
  3. 13 minutes ago, Lucky Phil said:

    I just think of this stuff docc because I never commute anymore and all the miles I do on cars and bikes are either freeway or country roads pretty much. No point me testing anything in reality. Brakes, tyres, clutches etc last for ever with my vehicles. Maybe wheel bearings I could comment on if you have decades to wait, lol.

     

    Phil

    No worries, mate. I am the poster child for bashing the per-jeepers out of a V11 Sport . . .

    I've broken shit that hasn't happened to any other V11.  Not proud of it, more just doing my due diligence at the requisite Beta testing . . .

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  4. 1 hour ago, Lucky Phil said:

    I guess KLM's covered isn't the best measure docc. What you want it a bike that's used for suburban commuting with lots of shifter action. 

     

    Phil

    Well considered. When my second clutch master cylinder spring fractured into multiple pieces, I tried to conceive how many shift operations it may have sustained.

    I gave up on the exercise when the beer ran out . . . :blink:

    Perhaps it is valid to think that a particular rider in a given location would have ridden the 4-springs over the 46,000 kays in about the same fashion as the 1-spring lasting 27,000, so far. 

    The report also makes me ponder why some mechanisms are so much harder on this spring (multiple failures). And whether a proper application of the Lucky_Phil Shift Improvement is part of the solution . . .

     

    • Like 1
  5. 14 minutes ago, Speedfrog said:

    That clamp (#21) shouldn't be there, probably a remnant of earlier models... If you look at the drawing posted earlier, it's not there.

    Welldone, @Speedfrog! Combining those two diagrams is tricky.

    On the airbox diagram, it does appear my 2000 Sport has the #19 "trumpet" from the airbox to the back of the throttle body with #4 sealing the trumpet to the airbox. No #21 clamp.

    Then, on the throttle body diagram, my Sport uses the #16 "collar" and clamp #15 to connect the airbox trumpet to the back of the throttle body.

    [The #14 rubber intake to the #8 intake manifold in front of the throttle body is another matter, entirely.]

    • Like 2
  6. 3 minutes ago, GuzziMoto said:

    Pretty sure #4 is the adapter that connects #19 to the throttle body, not the part that connects it to the airbox.

    Ah, yes, definitely! I had not realized there is a separate "collar" to connect to the back of the throttle body. Thanks, @GuzziMoto! :thumbsup:

  7. 13 minutes ago, Lucky Phil said:

    Here's a tip, anything made of rubber buy as spares when you can and treat them with preservative and a clip lock bag and store them away out of the light. Rubber parts are a PITA to replicate or find an alternative to. I have my stash.

     

    Phil 

    Ah, yeah, rubber preservative/restorative:

    08798-9013_640x308.jpg

    • Like 2
  8. 33 minutes ago, Gmc28 said:

    Well hold on here docc…

    First, is that an MC mic in the foreground?

    And what’s the rock n run story (a different thread somewhere?).

    And can u remind me where you proposed I put that air sensor from the sport, that on my greenie was taped to an empty water bottle under the tank?😎 

    Haha, well, that is a "reintroduced" Shure SM55 microphone. She reminds me of mySport in "many ways." :wub:

    DSCN4616.jpg

    The "ROCK'N"RUN" banners/placards were supplied to the dealers with the introduction of the V11 Sport. Truth be known, the dealers probably had to pay for them in order to stock the new model. :rolleyes:

    As far as the ambient temperature sensor, @Gmc28, I don't recall my advice from the past, but enclose it protected from the weather (a canister or encasement of sorts) and secure it along the spine frame where it will find the ambient temperature, incoming to the intakes . . .

     

    • Like 2
  9. 37 minutes ago, Eamonn said:

    My trusty steed is an 04 Cafe Sport, the shift spring originally on the bike is the same offending one that breaks, I went through four of them in about six years before I purchased the upgraded one from Scud some years ago, I purchased two ‘just in case’ but it’s never been an issue since.

    How many "kays" in those six years/four springs, @Eamonn?

    And how many since the SuperSpring solution?

  10. I still wear my first motorcycle jacket, but only casually (not riding). A heavy leather Hein-Gericke Dakar in antique brown, it is an impressive piece of kit worn with my black Stetson on a blustery day. It's lack of armor failed to impress me in a crash with large farm dog on my GB500 back in 2002. The damage settlement led me to order a custom, quality race-grade leather jacket/pants set from Z-Leathers in California.  Like @Lucky Phil, my modern textile riding suits have proven more versatile, so the Sport-matched Z-Leathers remain in embarrassingly good shape after twenty years.  To their credit, they performed admirably when I crashed the Sport in 2003. (I would like to think I have the "crash" thing out of my system!)

    I do love the leathers!

    IMG_4163%202.jpg

    • Like 3
  11. That Lukas Nelson fingerboard work reminds of this (IMO:under-rated) guitarist. Grooving to "Bridge of Sighs" on the 8-track in the high school Florida cruise/beach scene was pretty eclectic. We all thought the vocals were Trower, but no. Vocals are the bassman, James Dewar. We had no idea, in the day, what a master guitarist Robin Trower was . . .

    Best audio version I could find:

     

    • Like 3
  12. 8 hours ago, LowRyter said:

    awful.  I will say it's another example where riding faster than traffic, speeding, is a safer way to ride a motorcycle.  I always felt safer on major highways passing traffic rather than riding with it.  I've had to limit that due to excessive enforcement over the last 10 years.  Much more stressful to ride with traffic.

    just my 2 cents

     

    34 minutes ago, 80CX100 said:

    Completely avoidable tragedies. 

    Stupidity behind the wheel,that's a scary combo. :(

    I'm grateful that I don't have to ride in the city,4 lanes etc; but I agree with LowRyter,no matter where I ride;I like to be at least just a bit faster than traffic,so I'm the one in control of my ride & doing the passing.

    As much as I can,I try to eliminate the possibility of someone coming up on me from behind. 

    When I was involved with Motorcycle Safety Training, we were privileged to learn a Highway Patrol technique of moving past traffic at a "walking pace."

    Combined with maintaining a "space cushion" and constantly monitoring the rear view, this technique has served well.

    Admittedly, I still get snuck-up-on from behind from time to time . . .

    • Like 4
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