The seat matches great.Put about 200 miles on my new Corbin, feels pretty good, thanks to lethaldose for selling it to me:eusa_dance:
What width is the rear wheel? Do you know how to measure offset by laying a flat stock across the rim edge from one side to the other (probably cannot be done w/the wheel on the bike), and then measuring the distance from that flat to the inner hub on each side? Then measure the thickness of the hub. I'd be interested to know what your offset is, and how far from your swingarm to the rim at its closest point. Do you have a widened swingarm?
thanx Eric, now i have to get my backrest pad re-done to match, The Max she's an evil mistress she's never satisfied....LOL unk:The seat matches great.
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Here's what I did recently, a bench rebuild of a complete front brake system. Actually, the system had coagulated orange snot in it, almost like a paste, at the caliper banjos at the splitter block. The fluid in the calipers was still intact, and while dirty, it was still transparent, not opaque.
I removed all the hoses, flushed them, blew them out, wire-wheeled the banjo bolts and also flushed them, & blew them out. The pads look almost new, they have a deep wear indicator groove yet.
I cleaned the calipers w/brake cleaner, pads and pistons too, and used a square screwdriver & a crescent wrench to retract the pistons.
With the caliper hoses & brake bleeder nipples off, I filled the calipers at the hose connections until I saw the brake fluid in the bleeder holes. Then I re-installed the hoses & nipples. I had already previously cleaned the master cylinder. Now it was time to connect the master cyl hose to the brake splitter block, and the upper caliper hose banjo bolts to the splitter.
Next I broke-out the 60 ml syringe and 6" of clear plastic hose, and hose-clamped the hose to the caliper bleeder. Filling the syringe w/~20 ml of brake fluid, I opened the bleeder and I reverse-flushed the fluid towards the brake master cyl. Quickly I saw fluid in the reservoir. I shut the bleeder nipple and fanned the brake lever w/the master cyl immobile in the vise. Immediately the lever was getting firm. I repeated the same thing for the other caliper (both calipers were on a loose rotor I hadn't discarded), and now I had a good lever, and a well-bled system.
The first step in getting a tired old bike back on the road. A heart donor already contributed its engine (thanks to a Captain Morgan lovin' member), yet to be installed. It's got a long ways to go, but one less job after today. The first thing I did was to ditch the z-bars for a stock set.
Then, the Elephant Burial Ground (last pic).
thanx Eric, now i have to get my backrest pad re-done to match, The Max she's an evil mistress she's never satisfied....LOL unk:
took the (shoulda-been-a-parts) bike to be done sooner than i can get to it. The heart transplant is bought & paid-for, being done by a yamaha factory mechanic, a 'side-job.'
he showed a bike to me that he had brought from the far west (nm) to fl, who knows the model designation? If you do, i'd say you can claim to be an older guy who's been doing bikes for over 40 years. It started first kick. Take a look at the odometer. About the worst thing was the paint was faded in places. He rode it in co for a couple thousand miles, before moving to fl, and he said he just sold it on ebay.
There were some other interesting projects in the building, an early '50's 3-window chevy pickup getting the tim worm eradication treatment, it's already got a 350 mouse motor & ac. The owner paid $10 for a ticket and won it in a raffle. It had a lot of crappy bodywork, now being done-over, correctly. It was standing next-to a real 'blast from the past,' an austin healy 3000 w/a 283 mouse motor also, from a '50's corvette. He's had that one for a long time, just waiting its turn. He also has a near-perfect a-h 3000, stock, being gone thru because it sat for awhile and ethanol did a job on it.
Then there are the original gs1000s pair, sitting side by side, waiting for wes cooley to clamber on and do battle w/eddie lawson, several triumph twins, the cbx...
I just arrived home from a somewhat zany (mostly weather driven...mostly!) trip around the U.P. over the last 3 days. It was forecast to be sunny and low 70's during the day but the end of the first day left me chilled and slightly damp when I arrived in Copper Harbor near the tip of the Keweenaw peninsula.
I covered almost 1200 miles in 170 mile runs between fillups where I covered areas from the aforementioned Copper Harbor, to Escanaba to St. Ignace, to Munising to Iron Mountain, Grand Marais, Newberry and Paradise. I had planned to go further west into the Porcupine Mountains but rain drove me south and away from the higher cooler, and more exposed to Lake Superior weather patterns. My main goal was to get a feel for rides on motorcycle friendly roads. There is a lot of straight roads in the U.P. but also some hidden gems that were just awesome to ride. There is still much to discover on the west end of the U.P. but it will need to wait until next season.
I will add some pictures later this weekend when I get a chance.
Yes, that and more! If this 3 day trip showed me anything spending the whole day riding in changing weather is something you have to build up a tolerance for. It also allows you some time to know what you need in terms of bike setup too. I really need to rethink the seat to footpeg distance, as in adding a inch or maybe 1.5" to the padding. Also the highway pegs, which need to be set out further than they are now and more foot support. The bike ran flawlessly save for a tiny oil leak which at first investigation appears to be coming from valley between the cylinders. Looks like a little teardown is in order but that can happen this winter.You practicing for a trip to Newfoundland next summer?
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1972
I just arrived home from a somewhat zany (mostly weather driven...mostly!) trip around the U.P. over the last 3 days. It was forecast to be sunny and low 70's during the day but the end of the first day left me chilled and slightly damp when I arrived in Copper Harbor near the tip of the Keweenaw peninsula.
I covered almost 1200 miles in 170 mile runs between fillups where I covered areas from the aforementioned Copper Harbor, to Escanaba to St. Ignace, to Munising to Iron Mountain, Grand Marais, Newberry and Paradise. I had planned to go further west into the Porcupine Mountains but rain drove me south and away from the higher cooler, and more exposed to Lake Superior weather patterns. My main goal was to get a feel for rides on motorcycle friendly roads. There is a lot of straight roads in the U.P. but also some hidden gems that were just awesome to ride. There is still much to discover on the west end of the U.P. but it will need to wait until next season.
I will add some pictures later this weekend when I get a chance.
Swapped out a nasty looking (annoyed me since getting the bike how pitted and bad the lacquer was) indicator mount for something nicer.
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