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peterg

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About peterg

  • Birthday 01/28/1944

Personal Information

  • Name
    Peter Griffiths

location

  • Location
    Hill Spring, Alberta, AB, Hill Spring

Converted

  • City
    Hill Spring, Alberta

Converted

  • State/Province
    AB

Converted

  • Home Country
    Hill Spring

Converted

  • Interests
    Riding/airgun target shooting
  • Bike Year and Model
    06 Royal Star TD
  1. And I actually forgot one. While riding in a town called Castlegar in B.C. which is built on the side of a mountain, I approached an intersection where there was a stop sign and almost no visibility to the left, so I had to fully stop and take a good look. The road sloped very steeply from left down to the right. I stopped, put my left foot down, and then went to plant my right foot and straighten up the bike, but the road on the right was several inches lower than I anticipated. My foot found only air, and plunk, down I went with my loaded for touring RSTD with a trunk and a bag on top of the trunk. There was no chance I was going to right the bike on my own on a steep slope with the wheels on the high side, but luckily a friendly local approached and helped me out and together we got it up without spinning it around on the pavement. Damage to a passing light, some nicks on the body work and up near the top of the w/s where it hit the curb, and a lot of my pride got bent. I had about a 9 hour ride from there to home, and I was surprised that it took me at least a couple of hours to get back my "good feeling" about riding. Ok. I think that's it. Peter
  2. Years ago riding my Yamaha RD400 on a gravel road "short cut" between two highways, my front wheel began to clog with mud between it and the fender. I wasn't going that fast but as soon as I began to slow, the front wheel began to lock up and slide. Eventually the front wheel stopped, just as the bike did, and we tipped to the left, shooting me into the muddy ditch. It must have looked like the guy on the tricycle on the old "Laugh In" show. Had the rear tire of my "recently" restored 1973 Triumph Bonneville 650 suddenly deflate. Control was to say the least awkward, and got worse (I needed all of that 22' wide highway) as I tried to slow down which I of course had to do. I forsook an opportunity to go into the nice shallow fairly soft ditch, not wanting to fold my forks under and almost immediately regretted it as I thought I was going down on the pavement. Having slowed at that point from about 60 mph to maybe 20 mph which seemed pretty slow, I thought putting my left foot down would be a good idea. I caught my heel on the ground, and my foot slammed down which was mighty painful. My knee was unhappy too. Shortly after, I rolled, sort of, to a stop several miles from town so I walked home on a very sore foot and knee. Heading out for a course early one morning on my 83 Goldwing, I passed the local gravel truck as we were both heading west on a narrow highway. A mile or two later I reached back with my right hand to make sure my saddlebag lid was secure and it wasn't there! Yow!! I pulled over and the gravel truck passed me again, and I felt back with my left hand and the other saddlebag top was ok. I raced back to town 3 or 4 miles looking in the ditches for my saddlebag lid hoping to see it and not its remains crushed by the gravel truck and got all the way home. I opened the garage door to look inside and couldn't find the lid anywhere. Sadly I turned to my bike to get back on and go to the course, and there was the lid, still sitting sideways on the passenger seat where I had set it before leaving earlier. Helping my daughter and her husband unload her Honda 750 Shadow off their pick-up down a 2"x12"x10foot plank. "I've done this before!" said I, and straddled the bike in the box of the truck while we guided it backwards to the plank. I'd overlooked the fact that when I "done this before" it was down a 5' wide ramp from my 18" high trailer. As the rear wheel started to roll down the plank, I applied the front brake to slow things down. (both feet were out to the side to balance on a ramp which wasn't there.) Front wheel began to slide rearward in the box. Other than a smooth descent, the next best plan was for the front wheel to push the plank of the tail-gate and drop bike and me down but upright. The next next best (and also worst) plan was for me and the bike to tip sideways off the plank which we promptly did. Luckily our fall was broken by my head (no helmet of course as I didn't plan to go for a ride.) and right shoulder so there was no damage to the bike which partly stayed on the plank. I got to my feet and assured both my daughters and sons-in-law that all was fine. That had always been my plan. No vital fluids were leaking out of me or the bike, so I think they bought it. Looking back at this post it seems like I shouldn't be allowed anywhere near a bike (or maybe even out of the house), but in my defense, these incidents took place over a span of nearly 40 years. On the other hand I didn't seem to learn anything in 40 years. Oh well. Peter
  3. Hey Russ, Since this thread has been silent for about 18 months I'm just wondering if you're still happy with the modification, and whether or not you have some follow-up comments or recommendations after 2 seasons of use. I have also a couple of questions. Since the oil pick-up location is pressured and used to attach an oil pressure guage, will taking a small but "free flowing" line from there potentially reduce the pressure and inhibit the oil pump's ability to deliver oil to the rest of the engine? Is there enough pressure in the "new" line so that oil squirts onto the clutch basket gear, or does it just dribble? Is an orifice needed? Peter
  4. Just a short plug for Carbon One's crash bar supports. I ordered them a while ago, and got them promptly but didn't get around to installing them until recently. I've used my highway pegs before but hadn't realized how much tension was in my legs when I did until I rode with the supports. WOW!!! I would not have believed how much difference it makes to have that solid feel on the pegs, and how many easy miles now roll under me with my feet up. I know they're not a new product, but for anyone who has been thinking about them, just do it. They're an inexpensive way to make a huge beneficial difference in your bike. Peter:canada:
  5. My wife had one in about 82 or so. It was a great bike for folks (like her) who fear stalling when pulling into traffic etc. The guy who eventually bought it from us was still putting around the village of Foremost until just a few years ago. My objection was that when you closed the throttle, IT DIDN'T SLOW DOWN LIKE I EXPECTED. It felt like it accelerated. I'm sure it didn't but without compression braking it startled the heck out of me the first few times. And oh yes, it would do 60 all day, but it had a small fuel tank so when we'd ride west about 70 miles against the wind into the nearest city, she'd have to fill up.
  6. A few years ago, riding my 83 Goldwing (the saddle-bag lids weren't attached to the bags, just clipped on) I was on my way to a class early in the morning. I got out onto the highway, passed a friend in his gravel truck which was going too slow for me, set my throttle lock, and casually reached back with my left and them my right hand to touch the lids to check that they were secure. The right lid wasn't there! I pulled over, looked over my right shoulder, and yup, it wasn't there. I headed home watching the road surface for a beat up lid, hoping my friend hadn't accidentally run over it, and got all the way home, about 4 miles. I was hoping I'd left it in the garage. I got off, looked in the garage but it wasn't there. I turned to walk back to the bike, and there it was. Sitting on the passenger seat right where I had left it. It made it about 8 miles at highway speeds without falling off. I'm now obsessive about checking the saddle bag lids, even though my RSTD has them attached. However I did once forget to check the (aftermarket) trunk lid which is hinged on the left side, and the wind caught it, flipped it up and emptied all the light stuff onto the road. Luckily no traffic, and no damage as the restraining cable caught it. Now I do a walk-around before I leave just a light aircraft pilot does. Sometimes I stop a block from home, and do another one just in case I forgot to do the first one. Peter
  7. Hey Oldseadog It sounds like you married your best friend. Good on both of you. Peter:canada:
  8. peterg

    Whine?

    Like Illinois said. Earplugs. Cdn$0.25 a set for the good ones. (US0$0.10) Peter
  9. I have a Premeux on my 06 RSMTD. I can't provide costs etc., because it was there when I bought the bike about a year ago. It's pretty light weight, but I'm very happy with it. It looks like a Harley Tour Pack trunk, (without the lights). I've added a chrome "Harley Tour Pack" luggage rack, and it looks like it belongs on the bike. I haven't added lights to it yet because I'm looking for something not too expensive which will work as brake/signal lights and won't show unless they're in operation. (I already have those Harley brake/tail-lights with the chrome licence plate thing.) Peter
  10. Hey Phil I have an 06 RSMTD and I love it. I bought it in December (can't ride in Alberta in December) so I took a chance, but I've never regretted it. They're listed at around 800 lb, and my 83 GW was 750 lb, so I thought what the heck. The GW was great except that I have long legs and my 70 year old knees could no longer handle being cramped for more than about an hour. I've put on over 16,000 km this year (by far my best riding year ever), and recently put new tires on it. Shinko's front and rear and the front is a 130-90-16 instead of the 150-80-16 I had on before. Wow! It's like going from manual to power steering. Steering is almost effortless, and on high speed highway curves, completely neutral. No more "holding" it into the curve. Heavy isn't an issue even though I'm getting older and weaker by the day. Once I "heave" it off the side stand and get under way, it feels lighter than my old GW. I can't think of a bike I'd rather have. You'll love yours too. Peter
  11. Hi Scott. I am the father of a daughter born out of wedlock. Her mother and I were not in a position financially, jobwise, or maturity-wise to take on the raising of a daughter in April 1964, and she was put up for adoption. But we were in love. We married in Feb 1966, and have made it past our 48th wedding anniversary. At first, we felt that we had left the "situation" behind us, but as time went by, we desperately wanted to know that child, that we still loved. One day in about 1995 (My wife would know the exact date) I got a letter from a Social Services department, and both my wife and I leapt at the chance to meet this child who was and yet wasn't our daughter. We knew it would be difficult, including how to tell our other three girls about their older sister. We got through it with love. We now have four daughters who all love one another, and as I sit here today, that little girl (who is now a 50 year old woman) is visiting with us and chatting with my wife in another room. In about 1986, our "middle" daughter announced that she had made the same mistake that her mother and I had made. At that point, our "actual" first daughter was still a secret from the others, and we didn't then disclose the secret, but it made us able to more easily understand the fears of our daughter. She was as terrified as had we been. She thought her future was destroyed (she was still in her final year of high school) and the outlook was bleak and depressing. The boy did have the courage to make the "announcement" to us with our daughter, but that relationship didn't last, and we believe that our daughter knew it wouldn't, which made her fears even worse. Her child (a son) was given for adoption to an agency which kept her in touch with the adoptive parents and the child. (Our wishes were that she "cut the string" sort of as we had, but she was right, we were wrong.) She finished her high school, and two years of college, and she is now a very happily married woman with three other children, and all of them have a loving relationship. If I can offer any advice, it is to make sure that your daughter knows how very much you love her, and want only what is best for her; that she will always be your much loved daughter, and she and your grand-child will always have a home with you. Peter
  12. I have an ME 880 150/90 B 15 on the rear of my 06 RSTD. It fits fine, but after 13,500 km, all this year (around 8,000 miles) it is about 3/4 worn out. I ride single and have 46 psi in the tire, so maybe that's too much air. I don't know what normal wear should be for my bike and that tire. Peter
  13. I bought my bike with 80K kilometres (50,000 miles) with clean oil from a dealer. I didn't ask what was in there but assumed it was the cheapest stuff they had "on tap". (probably dinosaur oil) I switched to Amsoil which I had run in my GW with success, but it made my particular bike (06 RSTD) scream like a banshee. I went to Castrol GTX 10-40 and it vastly reduced the whine. I am now trying out Rotella-T and it seems to be reducing the noise even more. Because it's designed to run in diesels, it has (I think) more resistance to sheer break-down which running it in a m/c transmission (apparently the source of the whine) might induce. Anyway, it seems to work. As far as I can tell, oil is oil. It is designed to lubricate, and it does. Why did Amsoil work so well in my GW and not my RSTD? I don't know, but I've never seen a scientific explanation of why one shouldn't switch from one to the other. I avoid any oil that says it has "additives" to make it "fuel efficient", as I'm concerned that they might affect the clutch. I'm back to dinosaur oil and staying there. Others may have better success with synthetics. Just my (Canadian) two cents worth, although we don't have cents in Canada any more. We round down or up to the nearest nickel, so rounding down I guess my ideas are worthless. Peter
  14. Hi Zoller When I bought my 83 Goldwing (in 04) it had one of those monster, almost over your head windshields with a vent in it. I rode around a bit carrying an erasable felt marker, and marked where I would prefer the top to be. Then I masked off where I thought I'd like it, and rode around some more. Eventually I decided on the height and shape, marked the windshield, and cut it off with a mini-grinder. I used a palm sander to finish the edge, and it looks (I think anyway) great. It's hard to tell without close inspection, that it isn't the original top edge. I already had the tools, so it didn't cost me a nickel, and I got exactly the height I wanted. Just a thought Peter
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