The Kentuckiana Scooter Chronicles is a journal of a man's entry into the world of motorbikes. It also contains product evaluations, reports on regional scooter events, and interviews with various people in the growing worldwide scooter and motorcycle culture.
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Visit to Don Spencer, V.D.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
Followup on Stranded
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Failure at Gasoline Rally
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Weekend Two-Bridges 2 - flat tire
We had Jeremy with is 50cc which does fine, but you don't want a line of cars and trucks behind you so on occasion I will pull off the side and let faster moving traffic by. We got almost in to Corydon, and JD said my tire looked low. Well I just thought it was me on the scooter, but he said "no, you need some air." Luckily there was a service station across the street and they looked like they were open so I went and asked to use their air. The guy working there said no problem. I went to air up my back tire and I could hear hissing. I had a good-sized hole in the tire! I thought I was completely screwed, but the guy had a patch kit. He bragged on the hole-plug kit and we asked "so how soon should I replace this...will it make it back to Louisiville?" He told us a story about the trucking company down the road that hauls for the rock quarry. One of their big dump trucks had a slash in the side wall about 5 inches and they just stacked these plugs one on top of the other until it was filled. He says the chemical galvanizes the rubber to the tire's rubber and it will hold forever. The one on the dump truck (which from his explanation you're not supposed to plug a hole in the side-wall with most plug kits) lasted until the tire was completely worn out! He said just to run like it had never happened!
Weekend Two Bridges Ride
Friday, June 6, 2008
Fried on June 1st
May 23rd - Impellizeris
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
300 mile Weekend!
Friday, May 23, 2008
Interest in Scootering and our Group!
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Should I buy a Chinese Motor Scooter???
Well, I must tell you straight out--unless you can work on the scooter, or know somebody who will do it for free, you should not consider buying a Chinese scooter online. Go to a local dealer if you've got one. Now, with that being said, there is a wealth of information and people to help you troubleshoot if you don't know anything SPECIFICALLY about scooters, but you know which end of the screwdriver is which. Where are you looking to get a scooter? Local, or online? In your research, include such sites as
http://scootdawg.proboards59.com
http://powerscooters.org/cgi-bin/discuss/YaBB.pl
http://www.scooterforumonline.com/smf/
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/Chinese_scooter_forum/
http://www.oregonvintage.com/Scooter.html
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/tankscooters/
I have had a lot of luck with these resources. Its a LOT of really kind helpful people are at these sources to help answer questions and trouble shoot.
Word of warning: Whatever you do, DO NOT show your face at a site called scooterbbs[dot]com asking ANYTHING about Chinese-made scooters. There are a LOT of hateful people there who will do NOTHING but make fun of you for considering a Chinese scooter. They are completely biased, and should not be considered helpful for those of us wanting to own a Chinese Scoot.
Keep in mind, there are people who will debate this, but the Chinese scooters have come a LONG way in quality in the last two years. When you look at opinions, be sure to check the dates if available. The first people who purchased chinese scooters were a violently unhappy bunch. That's because their scooters (regardless of the sticker on the side) were pretty much crap with lots of little problems and even a few big ones. Do not get an older scooter. Get one made late 2007 or later. If you get something from 2006-2007, you will likely have more problems. I have just 2000 "miles" on my odometer, and mine did have some problems in the beginning, but they were not costly to fix, required no extra money to fix. I am probably lucky...
If you want to know everything I've been through, you can read through this blog from the beginning.
Keep in mind this one thing: You are not ordering a Honda, Suzuki, Yamaha, Piaggio, or Vespa. Chinese scooters cost 1/3 to 1/4 the price of these brands, and you can not expect the same quality. My seat is hard to latch. Some of my body panels do not fit together seamlessly. It takes 3-4 pushes of my starter button to get the scooter running. The lock on my trunk got jammed. There was a rattling chrome cover on my muffler. My radio is pretty useless. My alarm malfunctions so I don't use it. These are problems that could be solved if I put the effort in, but you know what? It starts, I can ride it, and I am getting around 50-60 miles per gallon. Also, it is FUN! Going to work was never FUN before!
Order online if you must, but seek out a local dealer. If the prices online are what is hooking you, consider the extra $300-$500 a local guy may charge as well worth it. I could have saved myself a LOT of headache if I'd bought from a local guy, and made my problems HIS problems. It would have been worth the extra $500. I bought my scooter from Valley Scooters for $1999. If I had purchased from a guy about 30 minutes away, it would have been more like $2500. I am satisfied with how i've been treated, and where I'm at now. But it was a bit of a rocky road!
Any specifc questions, you can more than likely find answers most efficiently at the links I gave you above. Last word of advice...if you DO get a Chinese scooter, brand is irrelevant because the same parts are used and much of the time assembled in the same plants. Don't let anybody tell you that one Chinese scooter brand is better than another. The main factor to having a good scooter, regardless of the sticker on the side, is to do your Pre-Delivery Inspection and be THOROUGH as HELL. Drain and replace ALL fluids. Check all hoses, lines, and wiring. Expect problems and be proactive. This will save your butt from any catastrophic failures. Change your oil OFTEN--more often that you think you should.
Good Luck!
Friday, May 16, 2008
eco2 concept
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Now even rain
UPDATE: Rats! I found a tear in the pants! They're sending me a replacement, but there's rainy days this week I will miss out on. Grrrrrrrr!
Sunday, May 11, 2008
Saturday Ride
At one point, I looked back, and saw that another motorcycle or scooter had joined up with us! That was pretty cool, so I pulled into a church parking lot. Come to find out, it was another person in our group, Jeremy, who had caught up with us on his 50cc Aprillia! Man, that little thing will fly. We had to stop and get some gas for him because he was on 1/4. I plugged "nearest gas station" into the GPS and we found a place to stop. We must have been pretty close to Taylorsville lake. You can see the signs at the gas station said "Welcome Fishermen" and "Live Bait".
By this time, it was getting late, so [name omitted] and George rode back to Louisille. Jeremy and I stopped for Subways, then continued on through Bardstown and then in to Louisville. All it all it was a great ride!
Thursday, May 8, 2008
My Next Scooter
http://thelab.thoughtlab.com/newimages/scooterteaser/ScooterFlyer.jpg
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Piaggio Sales Drop - Forbes
"Chinese Junk"? This Forbes article
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2008/05/07/afx4979829.html
doesn't mention off-brand competetion as being any percentage of the
Piaggio sales drop, but I am confident that it is having some impact.
To my end, I like this because it will only make the Italian and
Japanese scooters come down in price. Bad news for current owners,
but good news for scooting in general. The more affordable it is to
get into the trend, the better (IMHO). Even if you despise the
mainland China scooters, you can thank them for the global market
competetion they provide and how that will affect prices for everyone.
Pushing the 50cc's
shows the media's focus on pushing the 50cc scooters at "100 miles per
gallon" without mentioning the "oh yeah, top speed is 35-45 miles per
hour..."
Ride Last Night
Today is calling for scattered thunderstorms, so I might take the car. Naaaa...I'll ride the scooter if it's not pouring, then just cover it up when I get to work!
Fairdale Kentucky
New summer helmet
Grocery Getter
This thing is really turning out to be a great vehicle. It's a convertible, a sporty utility vehicle, errand runner, touring bike. If I could only haul kids on it, that would make it perfect, but I think that defeats the whole purpose.
Thursday, May 1, 2008
1400+ China Miles
probably be changing belt and tires next year in March or April. That
works out great! This weekend, I REALLY want to get my plug changed,
alarm put in, and 12V plug put in the front of the scoot. I'll be
taking a moderate ride next weekend (hopefully with a couple guys) and
want to get the plug done. The thing about that is if you're going to
open it up for that, you should take care of the other items at the
same time.
pizza delivery
delivering pizza on the Roketa MC-54-250B!
It worked fine last night bringing pizza home from Little Caesar's.
This morning, right there in front of the place (it's on Outer Loop)
was parked a bright yellow Honda Reflex! I wanted to say "Hello!" but
it was parked with nobody around it. It was soooo pretty!
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Tonight's LSG meeting
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Yesterday Meet at Culver's
To that end, I have started a Yahoo group:
(http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/louisvillescooter/).
It called LSG or Louisville Scooter Group. Might use the same name for the club if I get my druthers. I have the domain http://www.louisvillescooter.org/ forwarded to the yahoo group for ease of reference.
There is at least one more group in Louisville I know of, but they do not give a warm welcome unless you're on either a classic Vespa, or an expensive Japanese scoot. My objective is to turn nobody away based on make or model of scooter. I would even welcome anybody on two wheels, really. As long as everybody shows courtesy and displays some level of friendship, I think they should be able to join this scooter group.
Finally, my mirror is FIXED
http://powerscooters.org/cgi-bin/discuss/YaBB.pl?num=1201200588/23#23
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Gasoline Rally June 20-22
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Castrol Syntec

I changed the oil in the scooter tonight. I switched to Castrol Syntec. It is 100% synthetic oil, not a blend. The scoot now has 1200 miles on it! I planned to switch gear oil, and do a flush and fill on the radiator at this point too, but I need to go to my girlfriend's house (she has a hose). Also, I have two installs to do. I want to put in the new Bulldog alarm I bought, and an auxillary lighter plug for running the phone and or GPS. I will need to take the front off to do the alarm and the sides and bottom to do the power cord for the lighter plug.
Friday, April 18, 2008
Update on Jacket from Jafrum.com
Well, a lot of people say "you get what you pay for". I believe thatto an extent, but I did buy this rock-bottom cheap Chinese scooter.It has worked out well, but I was prepared in so much as I knew what Iwas getting into. I found a cool site for discount (read: cheap)motorcycle apparel. I knew my leather jacket would be too hot for allsummer, so I got this textile jacket. Now I can't speak for how wellis protects you in a slide (thank God!) but the quality, while itfirst appeared good, is merely (like the scooter itself) adequate.
Similar to the scooter, a few minor problems have cropped up, but nothing that is just horrendous. The first thing is it had a nylonstrap with plastic cinch strap across one pocket. One side came apartand it was dangling, so I cut off the other side. I think you weresupposed to use it to stow your gloves.
The second thing was a smallrubber tab that came off. They are on each pocket, and there was a bottom strap that went over the zipper at the waist. the tab brokeoff.
The last thing that happened was that the zipper broke. Not sothat it doesn't work (or I WOULD be having a fit)--it was the pullthat broke. I was able to fix this as well to some degree (you can see in the picture.
So overall, it was really cheap--like $50 with free shipping, and it sheds water admirably. It has 600 denier protection, and has hi-vis reflective striping. Also, it has the CE armor at elbow, shoulder, and spine. It clearly will not hold up forever, but I still feel like it was a good deal for someone who needs protection, but doesn't want to pay $200-$500 for it. In my opinion, full body leather just doesn't work out when you're riding around on a scooter. Maybe if I get a Burgman or Silverwing...