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Everything posted by Condor
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I'm a big guy too and wear a Fieldshear mesh with a zip out during the summer. Never heard of the brand either until I picked it up off Ebay for a half way decent price. Wore it to and from Ft Collins last year and it was great. Even in 105degs. I'd recommend Fieldshear to anyone. And the price is right. BTW: I got carried away and picked up a few extra new 4x and 5x FMC leather, and Power-Trip Ballistic jackets at an auction. Anyone interested, PM me.... http://www.power-trip.com/products.cfm?products_id=522
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I keep telling myself that, but it doesn't do any good......
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need help 93vr
Condor replied to wild hair 39's topic in Venture and Venture Royale Tech Talk ('83 - '93)
Looks like one to me, but it could also be a '92. What's the manufacturing date on the decal? Either way, for 300 you did good Lowell..... -
The only way they're doing it is issuing them both at the same time. The bad news is if your's is expired you're gonna have to pay the piper. The good news is that a birth cert. and picture ID will still be good until the end of the year.
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Yeah. i guess they want you to prove you actually have one before issuing another, as in the case of the card, a duplicate. If you don't have a passport you can apply for a card and book at the same time.... just costs more. The cards are not available at this time. You can apply for one now, but it'll be a while before you actually get it as they haven't even decided when to print them up yet. That's why I suggested if you already have a passport to hold on to it until they are actually available, or you could be stuck if you need to fly out of the country any time soon. If you don't have a passport, go for it now, but it'll be a while before you get it. Same goes for an expired passport. Apply now....
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Thanks for the links Al. Lots of good information, and more than I want to digest in one sitting. I did get into the alcohol report, but didn't see where 50% of all m/c deaths were alcohol related. The Hurt report leans more toward 'Left Hand Louies'. I did see where riders with lower blood/alcohol levels than drivers, with a higher BAL, were more inclined to be involved in an accident. I think the contributing factor is that balance and judgement are effected by alcohol and those are 2 items are the most important when operating a MC.
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Sometiome this spring the State Dept. will be issuing a passport card that can be used for land and sea travel when intering back into the US. I though for those going to VR II it might be something to think about getting. It might be easier to pull out a card than rummage around for a book. They haven't set an exact date yet as to when they'll be producing the plastic card, just that it'll be spring 2008, and you might want to wait until they actually do as you have to submit your current passport along with the app, and I wouldn't want to be without something. I called to get varification and you will get both a card and a new book. The cost is $20 bucks..... Here's the site to download and print up the app.
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The number to the left is the first three digits of the part number and the next is the model it first appeared on. If you go down to the 26H you'll see 1200TD listed after it. Kinda cool. I copied the pics to a file. Another piece of yamaha info that may come in handy down the road... Edit... I have the price list for 2002 in .Pdf format. It covers everything yamaha made, and most of it I can figure out but.... there's a column with A,B,C, D etc. Anyone know what that letter refers to???? 4TV-Y283U-70-3X PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-80-0X PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-L0-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-M0-4B PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-N0-7X PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-V0-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 B 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-X0-P4 PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 C 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283U-Y0-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 1 A 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283V-1A-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 2 A 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283V-1B-9X PANEL ASSEMBLY 2 A 1 322.14 197.71 4TV-Y283V-1F-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 2 N 1 366.42 219.85 4TV-Y283V-1G-1Y PANEL ASSEMBLY 2 O 1 366.42 219.85 4TV-Y283V-1J-P3 PANEL ASSEMBLY 2 P 1 366.42 219.85
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On this subject....sorta. Wasn't there a data base that show'd part numbers, and what bike and years they would fit?? A cross reference?? Man, something like that, available on the board, would be awsome. I thought there was someone selling on Ebay that had it available on CD, but I haven't noticed a listing for quite a while....
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You can get big swings in percentages when dealing with smaller isolated numbers. As an example, a 73% increase in 4 deaths is close to 7, and a 25% decrease from 10 deaths is around 7. Percents don't give you a true picture unless your dealing with larger amounts on a nationwide basis. Using a percentage based on small numbers usually is done for sensationalism, and when someone is trying to make a mountain out of a mole hill when trying to prove a point.......
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Interesting facts Al. Can you post a few links where we can find this information?
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Here's a link. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2008/02/27/state/n103701S80.DTL
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Interesting. Wonder what that's going to do to the price of the Wing. One of the reasons they are built in the US is to circumvent the added import/duty excise tax on anything over 650 or 750cc's... can't remember which one it is???
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I'd check the charging circutry. I'm thinking that if the noise quiets down when an increased load it put on the system that it might be stator or rectifier related. Possibly a ground wire that's worn thru and the current is using the frame to complete the circut??? Or the antenna shield is shorted to the frame somewhere. Years ago we used to get a lot of plug popping or alternator whine in the CB's and an inline frequency choke in the power leads usually cured the problem.??
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If you need to look at it that way I guess it's a difference between 'the will of God', and 'freewill' and which one you choose......
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Yep, I just don't want to be waving my hand around yelling 'Here I am.....'
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I respect your opinion Bill, and it's a good one, but..... let me play devil's advocate a bit here. I think all super bike riders are susceptible to catastrophic injury when speed is thrown into the mix. Ride a ZX-14 at realistic speeds, and they are no more dangerous, and probably a lot safer, than a Venture would be under the same circumstances. I would say that professional super bike riders are some of the most experienced and talented riders on the planet, but it seems like every year a death occurs. Here's a link to the deaths since 1980. So in my opinion any experienced street super bike rider, no matter how tallented...or not, will push the envelope, and when they do the odds of dieing are increased beyond acceptable limits. The old saying 'speed kills' couldn't be more appropriate here.
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VMax rear end - first 600 miles
Condor replied to BigShell's topic in Royal Star Venture Tech Talk ('99 - '13)
To each his own I guess. When I'm running down the highway I wish I had one more gear above 5th... Don't do burn outs... can't afford the tires. Don't need to beat anyone off the line... Don't need to prove anything. I'd rather mooch along and enjoy the scenery. -
It may have something to do with tire brand and rolling radius?? I never checked mine with a GPS until after I'd mounted an Avon Venom. It might have been off with the E II???
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I found this posted to another board, and found it a very interesting read, even if it is a little outdated. Especially the last few paragraphs, and how the percentages pertain to a majority of the members on this board. The over 40 statement makes one think. Something to take into consideration when looking at bike industry and where it's going in the next few years. ********************************************************** Wall Street Journal September 18, 2007 Bigger, faster, more-powerful machines are helping to make 2007 the deadliest year yet for motorcycle riders, say safety officials and a new insurance-industry study. In the past few years a horsepower battle in the cycle industry has produced bikes that have the power of a car but often weigh less than ever. Sophisticated suspension and braking systems and other electronics make them easy for inexperienced riders to handle -- up to a point. But the bikes' potential speed and violent acceleration can quickly overwhelm all but the most skilled riders. The new Ducati 1098's 160-horsepower engine makes it the Italian company's most powerful regular production model. These high-performance machines, often called "superbikes" or "supersports," accounted for less than 10% of motorcycle registrations in 2005 but accounted for more than 25% of rider fatalities, according to data collected by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and analyzed in a study released last week by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The total number of rider deaths has more than doubled since 1997. At the current rate, some safety experts say, fatalities in 2007 could surpass the previous peak of 4,955 set in 1980. Superbike riders suffer much higher death rates than riders of other kinds of bikes. And while superbikes still aren't as popular as the larger, more laid-back cruiser-style bikes made by Harley-Davidson Motor Co., such bikes have been one of the fastest-growing segments of the industry. They represented 9% of the market in 2005, compared with 47% for cruisers. But superbike registrations jumped 83% between 2000 and 2005. In addition to more-powerful machines, an influx of inexperienced riders is also helping to drive accident rates higher. And as more middle-age consumers return to motorcycling -- often after not having ridden for 20 years or more -- more older riders are being killed in crashes. Another contributing factor: a trend toward more-liberal helmet laws. "These guys start riding again in their 50s and don't realize that they aren't the same physical specimens they were in their 20s," says David Livingston, director of the New Jersey Trauma Center at University Hospital in Newark, N.J., who has recently seen an increase in motorcycle-related injuries. "During June, July and August, about one in four patients hurt in traffic accidents have been motorcycle riders," he says. SUPERBIKES Motorcycles, much like cars, have gradually become more powerful and nimble over time. But the more-rapid run-up in engine size and performance has occurred in only the past few years, as overall sales of motorcycles have boomed. New construction techniques and the widening availability of lightweight materials like carbon fiber and titanium "have made it easier to reduce weight and increase power cost-effectively," says Ted Miller, director of the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, a research group. "The stoked sport bike," he says, is a fairly new development. Bike makers across the industry are conspicuously boosting power. Italian manufacturer Ducati Motor Holding earlier this year began selling the 1098, a superbike with 160 horsepower -- a big jump from the 112 horsepower the company's racy 996 model put out 10 years ago. The bike has about as much power as a Honda Accord EX sedan. BMW AG's motorcycle unit had a reputation for building sedate bikes with less than 100 horsepower until it rolled out the 167-horsepower K1200S about three years ago. Even Harley-Davidson, long known for its slow cruising and touring models, recently released the Night Rod Special, a fast, low-slung bike with a 125-horsepower engine developed with sports-car maker Porsche AG. In the late 1970s and early 1980s -- the last time motorcycle fatalities were this high -- the hottest bikes included machines like Kawasaki Motors Corp.'s Z1000. A fearsome bike at the time, its 90-or-so horsepower and total weight approaching 600 pounds seem benign compared with the nearly 200 horsepower generated by the company's new ZX-14 or rival bike maker Suzuki Motor Corp.'s GSX-R1000. The Suzuki weighs barely 400 pounds with a full fuel tank, and can accelerate to 60 mph in about 2.5 seconds. It even comes with a switch so the rider can select low, medium or high power settings. Other bikes have adopted electronically controlled brakes, transmissions and traction control to keep the rear wheel from spinning out of control under acceleration. Many supersport bikes are actually built for racing. In popular racing events like the American Motorcyclist Association superbike series, riders use bikes that are modified versions of those available to the public at dealerships. In order to compete in the races, cycle manufacturers have to build hundreds of the bikes for sale to consumers. The process, called "homologation," is meant to guarantee that the bikes found on the track are roughly the same as those widely available to the public. The bikes sold this way are sometimes touted as "race replicas" or "homologation specials." Although a tripling of motorcycle sales over the past decade accounts for some of the rising death rate, fatal motorcycle accidents have also risen proportionally. Over the time period of the IIHS study, from 2000 to 2005, the death rate for motorcyclists rose to 7.5 deaths per 10,000 registered motorcycles from 7.1. In the same period, the percentage of motorcycle deaths among all highway fatalities rose to 10% from 7%. Superbike riders had a death rate of 22.5 for every 10,000 registered motorcycles. In 2005, riders 40 or older accounted for 47% of motorcycle fatalities, compared with 24% 10 years earlier. In the same period, the fatality percentage for riders younger than 30 years of age fell to 32% from 41%. Safety officials attribute this in part to a tendency of "returning" riders to overestimate their ability to handle the latest powerful bikes. "You have a lot of people saying, 'I'm in my 40s and I want to start riding motorcycles again,'" says Daniel Lonsdorf, director of the Wisconsin Bureau of Transportation Safety. "But these aren't the same motorcycles they remember from 20 years ago." Write to Jonathan Welsh at jonathan.welsh@wsj.com2
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1st Gen Radio help
Condor replied to lonestarmedic's topic in Venture and Venture Royale Tech Talk ('83 - '93)
Yeah, I was going to make that suggestion too. On 83#1 I always had marginal performance from the system. Speakers cutting in and out, no audio at all then suddenly it's on, no power, etc. Last week I swapped out the whole audio system, and while the dash was open I seperated all the connectors and amp plugs, and sprayed them with that electrical cleaner stuff GeorgeS had recommended way back when. I'd swapped other units in the past without any improvement.. Lemme tell ya, it now runs and sounds great. Amazing what clean connectors will do for the audio.