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BratmanXj

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Posts posted by BratmanXj

  1. On 9/29/2023 at 4:10 PM, Russ said:

    That'd be awesome! What exactly does that system do? It sounds like it's not really needed. 

    I guess that was some of the few parts I didn't keep.  Its an emissions control unit that injects a small puff of air into the exhaust pipe to cause a secondary burn of any unused fuel coming out of the engine.  I've disabled it on a few bikes during tuning with no adverse mechanical results, but obviously slightly higher emission out the tailpipe .

  2. 1 hour ago, Woody said:

    Sounds like at an idle it wasn't producing as much as was being used, heated grips use a lot of current

    Had the same issue last year on my '99 RSV, barely able to push 11v at idle & 12.5v at 2,000 RPM with all accessories turned off.  Ended up putting in a high output stator from Rick's, a bypass relay kit on the key switch that lead me to a slightly deformed (overheated) main power plug going to the ignition switch.  No more issues now with charging at idle or on the road.   

    • Like 1
  3. Over the weekend I finally had some down-time to address my power draw and charging issues on my '99 RSV.

    Ordered an ignition switch bypass relay off this forum.  Pull the tank to find the switch harness connector ground pin half melted.  Cut the end off and shrink-connector the relay harness into place.  Pull the ignition switch and open it up to polish the contacts.

    I was getting barely 12v of charging at 2,500 rpm with the radio & spot lamps turned off.  Orders a Rick's High Output stator and some new gaskets back in May that have been sitting on the bike seat for 2 months now.  Pulled the left side appar to find 1/2 of the stator epoxy heat-hardened and flaking off. Buddy comes by to help me remove the harness bolts inside the side cover (15 min where I needed 4 hands) then drinks all my beer.... It starts to rain so he leaves his Harley Ultra and takes my car home.

    Next morning I'm buttoning up the bikes and figure I'll check his bike over with my routine.  Front tire at 26psi and rear at 22psi.  This apple didn't fall far from his father's tree, who never did anything until his vehicles broke.  I send him a text giving him grief and he responds with the following pictures from is Road Star Warrior where the rear tire stem blew apart when he attempted to check that bike's tire pressure!

    So my Venture is mostly back together, no power draw with the ignition off and 13.5v at 2,000 rpm with the radio on.  I'm still fighting to get the master cylinder primed after a rebuild, the piston face had a nasty groove that would bind on the brake lever pin.  As for my buddy, there's a set of D404s on order for the Harley ('10 & '13 date codes on his tire) and Shinko Verge for the Warrior.

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  4. 9 hours ago, N3FOL said:

     Battery powered mowers are for homeowners who don't like to change oil on their equipment.

     

    34 minutes ago, Freebird said:

    In my opinion, it's just fake advertising.

    As a die-hard gearhead it hurt me to acknowledge when my mother moved last year to a townhouse that an electric push mower was the best option for her.  It only takes 15 min to cut her lawn and she can go 2-3 times on a charge with a small Ryobi push-mower.  It stores nicely in the corner up-right and I don't have to go over there every few months and change the oil, tune-ups or clean the carb because she got bad gas.  I don't want to say electric is false advertising, it's great for the suburbanite but doesn't scale up to larger machines required for larger properties.

    Every person I know who raves about their electric lawn care tools are people who couldn't fix a gas one if they tried.  I've bought my entire family nice snowblowers "used" because they weren't properly stored and the local shops in the Chicago suburbs want $175 up-front for diagnostics.  They'll sell me a 2yr old $500 blower for $100 and go out and buy an electric.  Its easier for them to buy a new battery every few years than learn how to clean & tune a carb.  They feel a sense of accomplishment because "they" fixed it with a new battery rather than paying someone to fix a gas engine for them.  

    • Like 1
  5. When Menard's has the 15% bag sale at the start of the year I make multiple passes through for gallon jugs of Penzoil iin 5w-20 & 5w-30, and Rotella 5w-40.  I try to buy enough to hold me through for the year, which usually is about $500 worth in one shot...

  6. Pulled my J&M headsets to install the Sena kits I got for Christmas.  Sena makes a helmet cradle that has an input port so you can use the Bluetooth AND still plug into the bike's systems for use in tandem.  So now the kid and I can talk with the bluetooth on the Ural and still use the CB to chat with the wife when using the Venture! 

    Put the J&M sets on our marketplace cheap if anyone is interested.

  7. J&M HS-CD9291-UNV-XHO Fits full face, modular & 3/4 helmets boom mic, modular design can be adapted to Harley Davidson & other bikes.

    J&M HS-8154B-OF Fits Modular & 3/4 Open Face helmets boom mic

    HS-8154B-FF Fits Modular & Full Face helmets mounted mic

    All headsets are fully functional and set up for a 5-pin interface for Honda & Yamaha. All can be made to work with other model motorcycles by replacing the cords.

    $25 each. Willing to ship at buyers expense, $10 per package.  All three can fit in one package

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    • Like 1
  8. When I first started having this issue on my '99 I needed a new brake lever because the brass bushing that the lever pivots on had elongated causing a bind in the pivot-point.

    The 2nd time this became an issue was the hydraulic plunger in the master had a worn "divot" where the lever pushed on the plunger.  $30 master cylinder rebuilt with a new plunger fixed that issue.

  9. 13 hours ago, BlueSky said:

    At CT70 just popped up on Facebook Marketplace I noticed today.  It looks like new.  The owner said he bought it at an estate sale and it only has 300 miles on it.  

    Wife's youngest brother had a 90's Chinese knock-off CT70 when he was younger.  It had been sitting in the back of the parents shed for 10+yrs when I asked him if he was just going to let it rot away.  He tells me "You can't get parts for it! It's worthless." He had ridden it like any 12-yr old would and smashed it against trees, left it in a creek, etc etc etc...  I knew of a shop in Michigan that specialized in Honda mini-bike restorations, said they could get me parts that were MOSTLY a match but would take a bit of fabrication or re-wiring to be totally correct.  $300 in hand controls and misc parts later its a fully functional 4-spd centripetal clutch runner.  In the Chicagoland area real Honda 70s & 90s go for upwards of $3k.
     

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    • Like 1
  10. Just out of College I came across a black 100th Avn. Road King Classic for a stupid-cheap price with only a few thousand miles on it.  Nothing fancy, but just a "classic" looker in black and chrome on spokes and white walls.  Bike was the epidemy of Friday-afternoon construction and spent 360 days out of my 3-1/2yrs of ownership in the shop....but when it was washed and waxed it looked phenomenal, and you didn't see many all-black 100th's.

    Edit:  3+ yrs and I managed to put 30k miles on it despite the constant breakdowns but my warranty was up and I was done.  Ended up selling it private for the same money I had into it minus the warranty (that did pay for its self).  

     

    As for straight up smiles, I currently have '07 Ural Tourist.  My wife hates it cause every gas stop is a 30min conversation with everyone who comes out of the woodwork to ask what the hell is that...   

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    • Like 2
  11. Don't forget a coolant flush and probably replace the rubber "freeze plugs" on each jug behind the bolt on fins because they tend to shrink with age and leak.  Otherwise a nice touring bike at a fraction of the cost of other options on the market.  

  12. 22 hours ago, Freebird said:

    @BratmanXj,  I’m not very familiar with the full floating discs   What are the advantages?

     

    The braking ring is supported by rivets with a light metal (typically aluminum) inner mounting ring.  They're slightly lighter, not that it maters on our big o'l bikes.   They dissipate heat a little bit better and since they float your less likely to have pad chatter.

    Biggest thing....they're chrome an match the "lighter" look of the bigger wheel with more open space than the stock rotors.  

    • Like 1
  13. Just now, BratmanXj said:

    Stratoliner is an 18" wheel with a 130 tire that's a direct bolt on to the Ventures.  Upgrades the looks with the bigger front wheel, lightens the steering with the 130 (vs 150 stock) width front tire.

     

    If you get REALLY lucky and find the chrome Stratoliner rotors they're full-floaters vs our solid disk on the Venture.

     

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    • Like 2
  14. 30 minutes ago, dueyk1111 said:

    so a dummy question  here, is the stratoliner rim smaller?  🤔

    Stratoliner is an 18" wheel with a 130 tire that's a direct bolt on to the Ventures.  Upgrades the looks with the bigger front wheel, lightens the steering with the 130 (vs 150 stock) width front tire.

     

    If you get REALLY lucky and find the chrome Stratoliner rotors they're full-floaters vs our solid disk on the Venture.

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