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I'm amazed my brakes worked as well as they did....they were full of muddy crap and was muxed in with oily crap in the rears. The shoe grooves were full!
Brakes all cleaned and greased up and working excellently.
How often are you guys stripping n cleaning out brakes...I would guess once every two years isn't often enough!
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I had to Google that, thought you were kidding!
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Thanks guys....I thought that maybe the case.
Off topic but the EC 200/250/300 series conrods crossover to Honda CR250 so more Honda DNA there.
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Probably just as comfortable sitting on the shell fish
did you know a fear of crabs and lobsters is called kabourophobia
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I ran my Suzuki GT250A 1976 on Spry Crisp 'n Dry over a couple months back in 1982 when I so skint...tweaked up the CCI auto-injection and no problems at all...other than it smelt like greasy spoon cafe behind me....I can't believe I took the chance, things were soooo much easier back then .
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many thanks for the help guys
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Apple of my eye Nice pear of... Maybe strawberry is simply safer.... Bought a lemon Feel a right plum Grapes...hemorrhoids.....and sour Oranges...errm sexual connotations Pineapple meetings Blow a raspberry Have I missed any?
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I've just got myself some Ipone strawberry scented ready to in the next fill.
I'm not sure if strawberries give a performance advantage, but if nothing else it's one of my '5 a day'
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http://www.freestylextreme.com/uk/six-six-one-red-blue-2016-comp-bolt-mtb-full-face-helmet-a.aspx?prodid=245414&gclid=CjwKEAiAgavBBRCA7ZbggrLSkUcSJACWDexAcRjoM0Y9x3rvJezqlyPVqmeZjote1zHd71viosbtxhoC2Tfw_wcB#top
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You're confusing me with someone with some ability
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Great vid.....but i do wish the riding talent could be a little more evenly shared out....I'm pond life compared to that.
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1980 TL320....being the anorak I am, I wish to get the correct colour.
Cheers
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Read last night that the EC series of enduro bikes, that ran thru the noughties were based on the JT/TX/TXT engine....is that true?
I had several EC's from 2006 up to 2011 models and all were 100% bullet 'n bomb proof, whilst all around me my friends pumpkins were throwning all manner of rattles out of the pram.
My friends used to call my little gasser EC-200's the 'lil woosh woosh....whilst they were changing out parts on their katooms as I looked on smuggly smoking a Marlboro light...
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Noticed the brake lever arm being a little reluctant coming off when I was practicing on Sunday....did the usual 'remove the dipstick from the van and dribble a tad of oil around the arm desperatation trick'....its bad maintainance on my part, no excuse. The more keen eyed would have noticed two dipsticks in my van on Sunday, myself being the other.
The old girl since being rebuilt 2 years ago (?), has only had the carb cleaned once and the gearbox oil dropped 5 or 6 times, in that time she has lead an 'on and off' life as my enthusiasm has gone from peaks to troughs...I'd rather lay on a Norfolk beach than do a trial in the summer and watch my 5 year enjoying herself...maybe I should drag Speedy down to Mundesley next time...anyhow...
I thought I'd strip and clean the brakes out but got beaten by bad light. I then come across an article about setting up brakes and thought, I wonder how much of this is new to those whom weren't brought up on drums?
Reading it I knew never to mix the shoes up once 'bedded in' but didn't think about marking the camshaft before removal, these old cams are all old and must have taken a 'set' by now.
The bit about centering the brake plate using the brakes themselves works well from experience and I even made my axle hole larger when I rebuilt her which improved things too.
anyhow most will know all this, but for some it may be useful.
The guy is writing about cycle drums but it all transposes over very well.
http://bikesmithdesign.com/tips/drum-brakes.html
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I keep hearing of this test and finally found it today.
What no one ever seems to mention (or I've missed) is how old this test is, published in 1978, although that may not be any cause for concern, but what is, is the use of Castor Bean oil, not mineral based oil.
I used to be an automotive test engineer and then went onto pure combustion research and a few of things from this report really bug me, all from the comfort of my armchair & not really knowing jack s**t about 2 stroke R&D. I was compression and spark ignition 4 cycle only ..or dirty diesels and gasolene's, sorry petrols outside of work.
OK, any test such as this, and this is a real biggie should have been an A, B, A test to have any meaning (such as 20:1, 30:1, 15:1 then back 20:1 again). There is no mention of barometric corrections which can cause errors both positive and negative and few other bits and bobs that may have been edited out for all I know but the author has gone to long lengths to go over the test methodlogy. If I made a mistake then I appologise up front, there's a lot of work gone into that report that much is evident.
Also, another biggie, the oil used is castor bean oil so it follows that it can't be assumed that it's relevent to petroleum based oils, be they mineral, para synthetics or synthetics, we like to compare apples with apples when testing things, keeps the anoraks happy.
Somewhere there is a Castrol or Shell test report (someone told me about it in the mid-90's at either Castrol Sunbury or Shell Chester) that shows issues arising from using too much oil in the ratio for mineral oils. I was doing enduro's at the time so it caught my attention.
From memory it was something to with having to work the engine so hard to produce enough torque due to poor combustion that it caused elevated piston crown/cylinder head temperatures etc going on to cause hot seizures. All of that sounds counter intuitive, but hey, these guys do know a thing or two about oil....not forgetting this would go against the all important internet conspiracy theory of "they want us to use to more oil so they can sell more so they would say that wouldnt they...ohh"
Anyway up, best bet is simple, run an SWM and don't worry, our Rotax lumps don't seem to be oil ratio sensitive from what I hear, and, my owners manual from back in late 70's states 50:1 on pure dinosaur oil....so all hail and kiss the toe's of the mighty & tough as old boots Rotax mill.
enjoy, if you like the smell of napalm castor bean oil in the morning....and it's even more fire on the "what oil for my bike and what ratio"....
http://www.bridgestonemotorcycle.com/documents/oilpremix6.pdf
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Ok used my 661 fullface helmet today and its great....light at 900grms ish and well vented, lower chinguard is cool. Good fit and finish. 46 quid delivered from a blowout deal.
I'm Totally converted to full face now, dont even notice it...i'm riding stuff i would quake at before, its helped my confidence on the tougher rockie stuff for sure.
Just my 2 cents
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I should get a drink out of all this Wulfsport love.
Finally bought a proper trials top and pants rather than use my enduro gear.
Pants are excellent with padded knees, shins and side of legs where i always get a bruise....from where i dont know. I'm 32/33" and medium fits well. Thought I'd feel a prat in these tight fitting pants but they are a real help when riding with no baggyness and a better fit for trials boots....and shows off my bootie to its best!
Top is on the tight side for my camel front but good on length, collar feature is cool too.
Total cost was 60 quid delivered found on fleabay deals. Nice build n finish too.....only problem is I look the part, now I got ride the part'
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Well done that man....serious research. Interesting stuff....a winter and summer grades of trials tyres, but with hugely bigger markets worth doing I suppose?
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Even if a tyre's nomenclature doesn't change over the years the tyre build does.
So a MT43 from the 80's wouldn't be the same as a 2016 MT43, it should be better or its market target changes....just sayin'
Interesting that its also suitable for road use....I didn't even think to check when I bought some.
here is a pretty fair but rather enthusiastic review.
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I've used them on an enduro kdx220 and they were excellent around kent and wiltshire. Hare and hounds and trail riding
It was a long time ago, 2005 'ish and I'm sure the later compound and build recipes are even better.
They were used and liked by the more cerebral South West and Welsh trail riders....almost unfair when the going got technical.
Supposed to be worse than a mx tyre in mud but i never had any issues.
Nowhere near as gummy aa a full on modern trials tyre so ultimate grip won't be as good.....but would you notice?
On the plus side mileage was good on my kdx220.
If you want to use to for enduro practice I would buy some. I see them used for trials too by far, far better riders than myself.
If they are cheap check the date stamp cartouche of manufacturing....four figure number.
For example 3415 would be 34th week in 2015.
How old is too old....depends on storage, with good correct storage I still wouldn't go past 3 years maximum but I'm no tyre expert so err on the side of caution.
'Most' name brand tyre manufacturers warrant up to 5 years old from date of manufacturing.
Offroad tyres do tend to have a lot more natural rubber to synthetic in their content than a road tyre (80-20 to 50-50) and its the rubber that tends to age quicker....harder less flexible.
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Did gasser actually make Fortuna livery replicas and if so what years?
Were they 1994 JT25's per chance?
Cheers guys
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