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Salish900

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Posts posted by Salish900

  1. 6 hours ago, Waldo Jeffers said:

    Agreed. Last time I road it, I got a pinch flat on my tubed Africa Twin in a heave in the road. Of course I didn’t have the tools or skills to fix it. I ended up getting my bike and I towed to my brother’s place near Portland. Not cheap!

     

    Well I'm sorry to hear this as I was looking at my map and planning to do that very ride this summer. 

    • Thumbsup 1
  2. That triple idles smoothly at resting RPM so I don't notice. And you are right about how it pulls smoothly from the start with even a lazy set of wrists. I wrote about this in another post. It's almost like an automatic or DCT in how far it can go in each gear smoothly and with my 2019 assist and slipper clutch it feels like I am merely thinking of shifting and the darn thing has shifted. Amazing engineering, if you ask me. 

  3. 12 hours ago, betoney said:

    You aren't joking about serious speed through the sweeping curves, I went up one morning with a small group, one guy on an FJR, another on a C14 and the last guy on a ZX-14, it was completely deserted all the way up, - I was by far the slowest guy in the group, they were GONE, even at triple digits I couldn't even come close to keeping up.   My buddy just got a Tracer a few weeks ago and had the same experience, he went up there with a guy on a MT10, another on a Super Duke 1290 and the last on a BMW K1300...  You can guess how that went.

    I have to admit there are times when I miss my C14, and have to talk myself out of getting a second bike to match a ZX-14 or Busa with my Tracer. I love the versatility of the Tracer as my go anywhere do anything have a lot of fun bike. But there are times when a pure burst of acceleration from a 1400 cc bike is just in order. Clearly I'm the kind of rider who leans toward sport bikes. But it's not only my wallet that keeps me from adding a bike to the stable, but my recognition that the only reason I would have one would be to do things I really shouldn't be doing at this age and style of life I have. So I just lust after those ZX-14's, and Busa's, and satisfy myself that 95% of the time I am happier on my 900 and more comfortable. Oh the hard choices we have right? 

    • Like 1
  4. I have to say that of all the bikes I've had, I just can't imagine how my 900 could be any smoother. The darn thing is so smooth in 1st gear off the line and at all speeds 0-30 that my wrist feels magical. It's one of the most remarkable things about the OEM ECU and engine that it is so smooth at all speeds, and spins right up to the rev limiter like butter. It pulls like a bull, and is stead like eddy. My Concours, FJR, Capo 1200 and Versys all had much worse throttle response and smoothness. This darn 900 amazes me. I've heard the earlier FJ09's had a snatchy throttle and maybe an ECU flash would really help that, but for anyone thinking of a newer 900 I would suggest they ride it a good long while before thinking they need a flash. That's my $.02. 

    • Thumbsup 1
  5. Hello James. Congrats on the new bike. Lots and lots of folks here who know CA riding well. You may want to be more specific about where you are picking it up and where you are going. Folks may have specific roads to recommend. But when it comes to break in process, that's akin to oil questions. Half will say follow the manual and stay mostly below 6,000 RPM, which on these bikes is really easy to do and still go highway speeds. The other half will say ride it like you stole it right away. There is evidence and data on both sides. 

    The more agreed thing is to change the oil WAY sooner than the recommended first change. Many here, myself included, did our first change at like 100 miles. There is manufacturing debris and early metal shavings that come out on this first change. 

    Welcome here. Read a lot. Unlikely you will have a question that has not already been answered. Search! 

    • Thumbsup 2
  6. Congrats! Would love to see any photos you might be willing to share. Not that you had a lot of time for that! What was your average speed? I imagine it would be slow on back roads. Not doing 90mph all day like on American slabs? 

  7. 1 hour ago, betoney said:

    And it can do that in 3rd gear. 👍🏻

    So true. Because I live between launch and maybe 5,000 RPM, I sometimes forget how much space and power lives above that range. I was feeling frisky and got onto a local highway recently and just left it in 3rd to wind it out. It was so damn smooth and quick, and I looked down and was doing 90+ and I was at something like 8 or 9K as I recall. The flexibility of an engine that has such grunt down low, and is smooth at low revs, and will wind up to 10K plus is really something. When I am up at those RPM's I often think of how fast the pistons are going up and down! 

    • Like 1
  8. Anyone here now how the titanium axle nut compares in strength or properties to the OEM steel? I'm thinking Ti is stronger but more brittle? Does it matter at all? Any metallurgists here? 

    Update: Trying to answer my own question and found that titanium is not as strong as high tensile steel above 8.8 but is stronger than mild steel. So the question is what sort of steel that OEM nut is made out of? 

    http://faqload.com/faqs/bicycle-components/bolt-tuning-replacing-heavy-steel-bolts-with-titanium-aluminum-and-carbon-fiber#:~:text=Titanium bolts come closest to,for high tensile steel bolts.

  9. Welcome to the fan club of the 900 engine. It's no Feejer, Concours or Busa, but from 0-60 it's so much damn fun. And it does sound and feel better. My Feejer sounded like a sewing machine, just a muted rhythmic machine sound. My Connie sounded better, but still muted and a classic 4 cylinder smoothness of tone. But the 3? The 3 sounds and feels like it's trying harder, and is way more fun below 80-90. To get all that and have it be bomb proof is just amazing. 

    • Thumbsup 4
  10. 8 minutes ago, Warchild said:

    Dayumn, Randy, that is quite the bummer... I feel for you, 'bro!

    You are quite accurate in saying the stock setup is a hassle to adjust. It's even more of an ass-pain than my previous Hayabusa, and CBR1100XX Blackbird before that. Unless I am willimg to send the major $$$ that a proper Gilles setup would cost, I am sticking with the stock adjusters. The only thing different thing I have done is swap out those ho-hum, questionably-plated adjusters with some god-like, polished Titanium equivalents. And the factory axle nut replaced by a black-anodized Titanium equivalent; all these Ti products are from Pro-Bolt USA: 

    TiAdjusters.thumb.jpg.56ce8e061bc2e42fd033045cff44022d.jpg

     

    Does this Ti hardware make finding that perfect 25mm slack easier to obtain? Not really. It's just calm and soothing to wrench on beautiful titanium hardware, vice the plain-jane oem steel. Not everything on a motorcycle has to be justified from an engineering perspective; some things are more emotional in nature.  😃 

    I hear you on not everything being either rational or financial. That titanium stuff is cool! What is the spec or model on that titanium axle nut?

    I find I have a very personal relationship with my bikes. I trust that thing to carry me safely through hell and back. When I'm leaned over in a corner at 80 I need to know that every single thing is solid. That't not purely intellectual. I have a saying: Love your machines and they will love you back! 

    This means more than normal maintenance. I'm the sort of person who thinks about all the points of possible failure, and it's not from a worried or paranoid perspective. I just relate to my machines. Like they are alive, really. There are things I do for and on my bikes that make me feel better in terms of reliability or safety, even if they are not entirely rational. Nothing too strong ever broke. I live an adventurous life on boats, bikes, kayaks and my own hands and feet. I'm alive today because I play the odds and obsess about little things. 

    I plan to play and play and play long after my age says otherwise. Buddha willing. 

    • Thumbsup 1
  11. On 4/9/2021 at 11:48 AM, redfjniner said:

    Yes, 101,461 US miles, A small increase since I posted those numbers.  Looking  great in March on a 350 mile ride to Sweet Home and Detroit, OR.

    20210313_155119[1]e.jpg

    Hey, what are those hand covers you've got and do you like them? There are lots of varieties and I'm thinking about that route next winter. 

  12. 50 minutes ago, kilo3 said:

    I hate you all, my helmet is so bad that I have to use the best foamie earplugs. I don't hear crap. Still debating an exhaust or roll the dice on a new lid.

    I now wear a Shoei Neotec 2 and love it, but around town I still go out without it if I'm always below 45. So I know what you mean. You lose all the finer points of the roar if you have your earplugs in. It's really something. It's not that it's loud, we aren't the HD small prick low HP jerks, but it's tone and timber, depth and vitality, are really something. 

  13. Coming from a Hot Rod family that juiced up Mustangs and everything else my Dad touched, when my parents got their first Toyota in 1976 we swore the gas pedal was only connected to a SPEAKER! If you mashed the pedal to the floor, there was a lot of discordant noises and growling, but no discernible change in the velocity of the vehicle. 

    To this day, I refer to gutless cars like the Mini having only a speaker connected to the pedal! 

    Our bikes on the other hand, well, that sound is a genuine reflection of violence occurring between our legs and if you roll the wrist and don't hold on tight, you will be road grease...

    • Haha 1
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