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Everything posted by motortouring
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Do you know (or have a good hunch) what the essential improvement is?
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Gratuitous Pics of Girls + Guzzi
motortouring replied to sign216's topic in Special place for banter and conversation
EICMA 2015 -
Gratuitous Pics of Girls + Guzzi
motortouring replied to sign216's topic in Special place for banter and conversation
EICMA 2015 -
Could be but still the underpressure is relatieve low. Verstuurd met Tapatalk
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In this forum is a pic of the interior of a breather box http://www.guzziriders.org/lm-breather-box-valve-fix_topic2432_page2.html
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I mounted a Agostini breatherbox at my LM2(950cc) and LM3. http://hmb-guzzi.de/Oil-separator-Agostini-LM-1-T3-1000-SP-etc That works fine, even without the valve, although I am not sure if the box has a valve installed after all. Every now and then I clean the inside of the box with diesel or petrol in order to solve the clotery. The problem that I could not fix before the Agostini was the pumping of oil after ca 10-15 minutes of constant 5500-6000 rpm (165-180 km/h). I never tried it at a higher speed, because maintaining 200km/h with a more or less standard LM2 or 3 is difficult. When using the throttle a lot, f ex on a twisty road, I never had a breather problem with the old little breather box, but that also needed serious cleaning to work nicely. I would estimate the total crankcase at a minimum of 10liters. The delta in the volume will not be more than 600ml, so the pressure will be 6% below the outside pressure. That is higher than the vacuum in the manifold when shutting the throttle. Maybe even higher than with open throttle.
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Biggest breather tank you can fit in the space ( with an oil seperator if possible ) available with a drain back line and the tank vented via a tube out the back of the bike. Ciao +1 Just make sure oil return is below the level of the oil Yeah, I always hear this, but what is the physics behind it?
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Grease them in to protect against rust, come on, you can do it..,. :-)
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Bingo in the Netherlands. Thanks Scud and Chuck.
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OEM Part Name: Headlight Sport Naked (EU-models) Moto Guzzi Part Number: GU03740430, Replacement Part Brand or Source: BOSCH Headlight 190MM Part number or other identifier: 1 305 504 944 Differences from OEM (if any): none Other Compatible Vehicles: Referenznummern (nur zum Vergleich) BMW 63 12 1 355 395 Other compatible Vehicles Hersteller Modell Typ Baujahr PS kW ccm Kraftstoff KBA-Nummer BMW MOTORCYCLES K K 75 (K569) Zweirad 07.1985 - 12.1988 75 55 740 Benzin 0005 113 BMW MOTORCYCLES K K 75 (K569) Zweirad 12.1984 - 11.1996 75 55 740 Benzin 0005 113 BMW MOTORCYCLES K K 75 (K569) Zweirad 10.1991 - 11.1996 50 37 740 Benzin 0005 119 BMW MOTORCYCLES K K 75 (K569) Zweirad 10.1991 - 11.1996 68 50 740 Benzin 0005 120 BMW MOTORCYCLES K K 100 (K589) Zweirad 10.1987 - 07.1990 90 66 988 Benzin 0005 111 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 100 R 100 R Classic (247E) Zweirad 01.1994 - 12.1996 60 44 980 Benzin 0005 115 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 100 R 100 R Mystic (247E) Zweirad 12.1993 - 01.1996 60 44 980 Benzin 0005 115 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 100 R 100 R (247E) Zweirad 01.1992 - 12.1994 60 44 980 Benzin 0005 115 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 1100 R 1100 R (R259) Zweirad 01.1993 - 12.1999 78 57 1085 Benzin 0005 128 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 1100 R 1100 R (R259) Zweirad 01.1993 - 12.1999 80 59 1085 Benzin 0005 127 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 80 R 80 R (247E) Zweirad 01.1991 - 09.1994 34 25 798 Benzin 0005 125 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 80 R 80 R (247E) Zweirad 01.1991 - 09.1994 50 37 798 Benzin BMW MOTORCYCLES R 80 R 80 R (247E) Zweirad 01.1991 - 09.1994 27 20 798 Benzin 0005 117 BMW MOTORCYCLES R 80 R 80 R Mystic (247E) Zweirad 03.1994 - 03.1995 50 37 798 Benzin BMW MOTORCYCLES R 80 R 80 R Mystic (247E) Zweirad 03.1994 - 03.1995 34 25 798 Benzin Other Comments: Website link for source: If the headlight breaks, you can buy separate parts: Lens for H4 63121358147 Gasket between lens and reflector 63121356403
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Guzzi is Junk lol. Now tell me about loopers? :)
motortouring replied to JesterGrin_1's topic in Older models
There is this guy, Paul Van Hooff, who took his v700 from Prudhoe bay to Ushuaia and from Amsterdam to Tokyo. He has some nice shots on YouTube https://youtu.be/07VDJXIowz0 and he has a website Guzzigalore.nl It shows the unbeatability of the looper. [emoji123][emoji123] Verstuurd met Tapatalk -
I never have a problem with paper gaskets, even though I re-use them several years and many valve clearance checks (in the California and LM3). I usually ordered them per ten (or a dozen if I felt Standard). By now I don't order them anymore and I always find them in drawers all over the place. If your in the Netherlands and happen to have a leaking rocker cover gasket, call me.
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Hi Chuck, as we say in the Netherlands, "waar gewerkt wordt vallen spaanders". Free translation: those that do the work, are more likely to make mistakes than those that do nothing. So, I stepped in and will support you guys all the way, even if it is only on a distance and with the cost for the springs etc. I personally favor the solution according to spec. and am willing to pay for it. However, I also agree with you about the small difference in length, reducing the force only 10% and the wrong angle being the real bugger (more spring tension). I wonder what the spring bender will say. Time and machine are probably more a thing than the material.
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Count my PlayMoney in, then . . . Seriously, though, if the product doesn't fit the working drawing, the manufacturer *should* square it away, yes? With docc Verstuurd met Tapatalk
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It will be difficult to predict the effect of this. One thing, longer arm less force on the bend, since the spring angle stays the same or even reduces a bit. That could be a pro. Otherside: The shoulder will introduce an other direction of the force on the bend. Possible with some friction. That a con. Verstuurd met Tapatalk
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Thats why track days are such a valuable thing, you can push the limits in relative safety. I think if your not doing track days then you're not serious about improving and maintaining your riding skills. Its not about setting "lap times" but about improving and learning new techniques and practicing the already known ones without the risk, like really heavy braking and looking through the corner and weighing the pegs. Things that you tend to drift away from riding on the road all the time. Every first session on the track is the re familiarise session of looking through the corner, using footpeg weight esp on the long fast corners, not trying to ride the bike all through the bars and feeling the force of really heavy braking, together with getting your brain ahead of the bikes speed. Ciao Funny how a motorcycle track day and car track day are so different. Motorcycles: keep your head up, look as far ahead as possible. Your bike will go where you look. Cars: slow to this braking point, gas at this apex, one make mark after another mark, point to point. Hmmm, LowRyter, the difference you are mentioning between Motorcycle and Car, is actually the difference between a known track and an unknown (or two way traffic) road. Apex clipping-points can improve your motorcycle speed on the track. It helps you to realize where your braking, steering and accelerating should be, and how you divide brake friction and sideward friction during the turn. It is also interesting for the old Guzzi's with Tonti-frame, braking and lowering RPM's makes the rear-end go down, this reduces the handling, the ideal line on the track is different from a Spine-frame Guzzi. On a normal road you should always see the road ahead, "the vanishing point" is an indication if you cannot see the whole turn. Interesting VID from the Aussies:
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On #2 Start on the outside and use the road to steer to the inside. If you start at the outside, you can usually look further into the turn. And don't steer to early, you will have not enough road width to stay on your lane. The principle "adapt your speed to free road that you can see" is also a good way to go. It helps to focus on the free road instead of other obstacles. And to frank, my stomach was turning, when I saw the crash.
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Single malt - what are you drinking?
motortouring replied to Denis's topic in Special place for banter and conversation
Great topic actually. I have a Aberlour Abunda'h, straight from the Cask 61.1% in the drawer. For me it's too spirited to drink straight. And mixing feels like abuse. Do any of you have a good advise on this. So, the Laproaig with the tast of an astray and boiled out gear-oil is my favorite for the time. Or just a good old Famous Grouse (I am ready for the comments :-) ), because it brings back great memories. -
Can I still jump in for 2 pieces?
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International Motio Guzzi Rally Tienhoven by MGCN
motortouring replied to motortouring's topic in Meetings, Clubs & Events
Credits for the photographer: Nino And for the DTP-er: Wilko of Studiotekst And the lovely model and V7 -
V10 W. V11fairing September 2017
motortouring commented on Niels Knudsen's gallery image in Members Gallery
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International Motio Guzzi Rally Tienhoven by MGCN
motortouring replied to motortouring's topic in Meetings, Clubs & Events
We are very liberal. Everybody that sympathizes with our brand is more than welcome. :-) And if you're coming from that distance, we will for sure not be the spoiler. Last year we had quite some visitors from the UK, actually. -
I had this with an old LM2, when the oil-line to the rockers started to leak at the ring of Antwerp. My friends refer to it as "The Minardi Incicdent" https://youtu.be/td7uQYq20SQ?t=15s