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11-25-2012, 10:41 AM
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#1246 |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Oct 2009
Location: Finland-Australia
Oddometer: 990
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12-06-2012, 10:45 AM
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#1247 |
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Adventurer
Joined: Jul 2012
Location: Bella Vista, AR
Oddometer: 23
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New to the forums so I'm not familiar with all the acronyms.
Please tell me what ATGATT means. ![]() Thanks. |
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12-06-2012, 10:51 AM
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#1248 | |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Aug 2010
Location: dumfrie scotland
Oddometer: 705
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Quote:
only fools ride with out helmets and gear.
__________________
bmw r100gs i ride it all year round bmw r100/7 sold bmw r1oo/7 sold road legal stomp pitbike sold |
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12-06-2012, 12:44 PM
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#1249 |
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A nation in despair
Joined: Jul 2003
Location: NM, USA
Oddometer: 21,022
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I'm afraid of my bike.
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Why be born again when you can just grow up? |
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12-06-2012, 01:23 PM
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#1250 |
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British Hooligan
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Me too. Mostly when I'm riding it, but sometimes I think I catch it giving me evil looks as I walk past.
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“The problem with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and putting things in it.” |
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12-06-2012, 01:39 PM
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#1251 |
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SAND EATER!
Joined: Dec 2011
Location: Twentynine Palms
Oddometer: 474
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It is *very* important to intall the c-clip correctly on your drive-chain!!
a couple months ago I was eating up a wicked soft sand hill. I lost all power and the engine screamed to the moon for a second. looked down, no chain! found it on the side of the trail, nothing damage just the master link came undone. ![]() getting it down from the hill was a PITA
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'83 Honda XL600R valve seat ![]() RIDE RED! |
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12-06-2012, 01:41 PM
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#1252 |
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Adventurer
Joined: Jul 2012
Location: Bella Vista, AR
Oddometer: 23
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12-06-2012, 01:52 PM
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#1253 |
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A nation in despair
Joined: Jul 2003
Location: NM, USA
Oddometer: 21,022
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Dangerous items. Guns too. Just the other day, a friend of mine's rifle got annoyed at something, broke out of the safe, loaded itself and shot out a streetlight. He will have to compensate the city $500 for repairs.
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Why be born again when you can just grow up? |
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12-06-2012, 02:49 PM
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#1254 |
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British Hooligan
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The street light was asking for it in my opinion. Bastards, all of 'em.
__________________
“The problem with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and putting things in it.” |
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12-06-2012, 06:31 PM
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#1255 |
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Just practicing...
Joined: Jul 2012
Location: "The noobie" Otsego, MN
Oddometer: 242
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Filling the gas tank
As a total noob, here's what I learned about filling the gasoline tank on a motorcycle. Fortunately, I read lots of embarrassing stories so I didn't have to learn the embarrassing/painful/expensive way.
1. Get close to the pump. 2. Put your kickstand down. 3. Shut off your bike and open up the gas cap using your key. 4. Carefully put the gas cap down on something clean (or key side down) where it won't fall and roll away. 5. If you have a tank bag, you might want to remove it until you've filled your tank a couple times so you're sure you won't spray or dribble gas on it. Along this line, you may want to stand off the bike while filling it until you're sure you won't spill gas on your seat area - guys have reported gas in the undies is very painful. 6. Reset trip odometer if you don't have a gas tank guage. 7. Watch closely as you pump the gas in - unlike filling a car, you'll have to hold the handle the whole time. The flow should automatically shut off if the tip of the nozzle starts to get covered in gas. If it has a fuel vapor recovery slinky sleeve, you may need to crinkle it up with your non-filling hand so you can see how full the tank is. 8. Fill the tank almost full but leave a little room at the top so you don't accidentally overfill it, or slosh it if you bump your bike. 9. Slowly pull the nozzle out and give it a tiny shake to get any loose drops off so you don't dribble on your bike (or tank bag). Some people have recommended carrying a small towel to wipe any spills off the bike's finish. 10. Securely refasten the gas tank cap. Replace tank bag. Double check that you reset the trip odometer. Besides paying for the gas and taking the time to have a little stretch and walk around, please let me know if I missed anything! I don't have an experienced rider to learn from, so I read a lot and some things I had to find out just through experience and asking around. Someone out there probably didn't know all this either - hope this helps!
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Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgment. ~ various Believe you can and you're halfway there. ~ Theodore Roosevelt |
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12-07-2012, 05:45 AM
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#1256 | |
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Wet weather sucks!
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Watch out for puddles of the slippy stuff left by cagers who obviously have tons of money to waste, throwing gas on the forecourt floor ;-)
Quote:
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12-07-2012, 06:22 AM
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#1257 | |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2007
Location: U-gene, OR.
Oddometer: 17,983
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Quote:
English please.
__________________
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind." — Dr. Seuss “Watch out for everything bigger than you, they have the "right of weight" Bib |
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12-07-2012, 06:25 AM
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#1258 |
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A nation in despair
Joined: Jul 2003
Location: NM, USA
Oddometer: 21,022
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He means dirt riding for older folks starting out will cripple them every time.
__________________
Why be born again when you can just grow up? |
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12-07-2012, 06:50 AM
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#1259 | |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Oct 2011
Location: 33064
Oddometer: 2,482
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Quote:
I've also had a bike that would leak fuel out of vents if filled to where it looked full while on its kickstand. That was a cruiser with its fuel cap off-center, so the fuel cap area of the tank was much higher than it would be once the bike was uprighted and rolling... and this led to seepage from the fuel cap as well. I commuted about 22,000 miles for work last year on motorcycles, and I'd have to say that I got off of the bikes maybe three times to fill it up - and that was due to opening a new can of Sea Foam to put a little in the fuel, or forgetting my debit card and having to pay cash. |
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12-09-2012, 10:50 PM
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#1260 |
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Gnarly Adventurer
Joined: Aug 2012
Location: Phuket, Thailand
Oddometer: 128
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Having started motorcycling as an eleven year-old kid in 1966, who had been riding bicycles since a few years before that..... I cannot say that I remember what I wished I knew back then.
Maybe it was that my father had told me that the machine had several gears in my first lesson, instead of coming back a few minutes later and asking why I hadn't changed gear yet. That was my second and final lesson. It has all been the School of Hard Knocks since then, softened in those early days on the farm by spills into brambles and mud holes. With the exception of a couple of years when living in Japan, I have been riding ever since. Where I live now (in Thailand), everyone rides from a young age, and it is also mostly the School of Hard Knocks, which sadly a few don't survive. Going by what I see on forums, with a lot of people coming to motorcycling later in life, I reckon the thing they need to realise is that a motorcycle is not a car on two wheels. The dynamics of riding, and negotiating traffic are totally different.
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there are old motorcyclists and bold motorcyclists but you seldom meet an old, bold motorcyclist |
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