Monday, March 29, 2010

Boats.net

I ordered my belt, and two air filter elements for my scooter on boat.net which carries a lot of parts for bikes, scooters, atv, and watercraft.  They were the cheapest.  I got two filters which I thought were for each side of the Majesty.  Apparently there are THREE air filters--one on each side for air intake then a separate one for the variator!  I got online this morning to order and found the right part.  I also ordered the variator weights that I might end up needing, plus four specialized bolts that have rubber washers around them.  Only after I hit the pay button did I get my purchase order via email which said they would ship on the 31st!!  I need to get this work done asap, so I could not wait for the 31st.  I cancelled my order and called Yamaha-Suzuki of Louisville.  They can have the parts for me Thursday or Friday.

I still have to find some way to extract the salt and oxidization-welded bolts and screws from the scooter...needless to say I am not a happy camper.  Still, my friend Jeremy says we should be able to get it done before the rally.  I am concerned...I did not expect nearly as much trouble as this.  It should have been at tops a 2hr job.

Wrenching & Screwed

I have to get the belt and air filters changed on my scooter before WKRP rally. Unfortunately this has turned from a 2 hour job into a week long job. My friend Jeremy and I started working on the scooter at 4pm on Saturday and made very little progress. We did get the new fender on, and ran the wire for the GPS, but every bolt and machine screw was frozen in place for the filters and belt. The phillips heads were getting gouged out pretty quickly. My friend Vince sent me a text message to ask how it was going and I told him it was not. He came over to help, even running to Sears to get a set of Easy-outs which helped get another screw or bolt off. Every one will have to be replaced anyway... Sunday, Jeremy and I ended up getting a few more off using a drill with phillips head atttachment. We did manage to get the right side air box off, only to find that they had sent me the wrong part. At least when I do get the correct part it may be much easier to get the screws off...we are replacing them all with stainless steel. Between Jeremy and myself we have buggered up the heads of all the screws & bolts that have to come out. One has the entire head sheered off. All the phillips heads are rounded out at least somewhat and will have to be replaced. We finally got one of the major bolts out to find it is a specialized bolt with a rubber flange thing. This has quickly become a nightmare. I have less than two weeks before the rally. Jeremy thinks it will be fine, just take more time. Right now my bike is in peices over at his place and cannot be ridden. We had to stop working about 4pm Sunday due to rain and I had to clean up and be ready to get the kids at 730. I am really hoping the penetrating lubricant we got at Autozone will help. Everything else hasn't so far...

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Out riding around.

We are somewhere in Indiana...no clue where. :)

Thursday, March 25, 2010

First guts!

Ah....wonderful! I got the first bug guts of the season on my helmet Tuesday night! That makes me happy!

Monday, March 22, 2010

Hubers Winery and Arni's Pizza

Here are a couple pictures we took from the last weekend ride.  I wanted to post them earlier, but have had no time to download from the camera!!
 
The first by the white building is Hubers Orchard & Winery.  The second is (of course) Arni's Pizza up at the top of the hill on Paoli Pike.

Not optimal. :(

Today is a pretty nasty day. I probably could have scooted, but I just figured I could give my worn V belt a rest...

Friday, March 19, 2010

US-129 / the Dragon Shut down

Apparently rock slides have caused US-129, aka "The Dragon" to be shut down several times recently...
 
 
 
I am thinking fallen rocks might present more hazards there than the crazies who rip thru at 100mph...

The "Bulletproof" (or SWAT style) leather vest

I have seen many motorbike guys wear leather vests.  I never really wanted one until recently.  The reason is not about looking tough, about the protection of leather or really anything about vests...  As my wonderful friend Paula K. (Rest in Peace, darlin') said "I'd do anything as long as there is a badge or patch involved...it's all about the patch!"
 
I have a very modest collection of patches.  I have my Saddle Sore patch which you can only get after completing the certified ride and having it verified by the Iron Butt Association. I have my new Louisville Scooter Group patch that we just got this year.  I have a Yamaha patch that I ordered from ebay and was shipped from Japan.  Then I have five patches from the four scooter rallies I have attended (Gasoline Rally 2008, WKRP Rally 2009, Gasoline Rally 2009, and the Burgman/Dragon Rally 2009)  Also I have one patch with a pinup gal that they were selling at Gasoline Rally this year.  So...I had all these patches on my old worn out Jafrum textile jacket.  They were not sewn on (big mistake) but put on with cloth glue.  I got a new jacket this year (the Power Trip Dakota II) and had it altered to fit me about perfectly.  This was not an unsubstantial cost.  I was reluctant to transfer these patches to my new jacket using the cloth glue...  I decided to remove them from the old worn Jafrum jacket and then decide later.  After removal, the jacket was trashed.  This made me even more reluctant to put them onto the new jacket.  What happens if my new jacket gets trashed, or I get a new jacket in a couple years?  Plus what do I do about displaying my patches when it's too hot to wear that jacket and have to use the mesh?
 
My friend Jim Owen told me he was getting a vest, so I looked around and gave it some thought.  For a long while I did not see a vest that I like.  They all looked either western, or would make the statement "I wish I owned a Harley instead of this here scooter".  Finally I found one on sale that did not give either impression.  Does it look odd?  Well, that might be because you are used to seeing something like this say "SWAT", "FBI", "ATF", or something like that on the back.  They style is "Bulletproof"...distinctly different than the western or biker vests I had seen previously.  I like how it looks and it is also pretty comfortable.  I may not wear it while riding much because I do like the protection of a fully armored textile jacket.  But it will be the perfect thing to use when I want to be the normal casual me at scooter rallies and meetups.  My girlfriend Kat only worries "I hope nobody shoots at you to test it out!"  My only worry?  I might get a few more patches and have to get these removed and rearranged!!!  By the way, Ms. Chong does a fantastic job applying patches on leather (or anything else).

Vince's spill

My good friend Vince took a bad spill early in the morning one day this week. He is ok, just a little banged up. Some stupid cager in a jeep cut him off and he had to turn sharply which caused his front wheel to contact the concrete median divider. His brand new scooter..the 2009 Suzuki Burgman is not trashed, but banged up a little. While insurance and stuff is being sorted out, he is without a ride. I actually hope for a rainy spring so he wont feel too bad. You should stop over to his blog and tell him hi, and send some good wishes to him. His blog is at http://vince-tid-bits.blogspot.com tell him I sent you...

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Missing the Cheddar Depot

Somehow...again probably a learning curve with the Garmin...I missed our next planned stop-the Cheddar Depot in Salem. I was chatting with Kat the whole day via the Cardo Scala Q2 headsets which worked pretty good with only the occasional "huh?" because my hearing is not as good as hers. We wandered Indiana in a twisty route. At one point, I look back and see that Vince and Ken are gone! Ken's posterior had went to sleep and he needed to stop! We stretched our legs and decided to scoot off to lunch. We ended up at Arni's Pizza up at Highlander Point at the top of Paoli Pike road in Floyds Knobs. There are a few Arni's around as they are a regional chain. I always think they must have the same supplier as Pizza King as the pizza is nearly identical. After a warm lunch, we zipped down Spickert Knob road to New Albany and over into downtown Louisville via the 2nd street bridge. We all split off downtown to go our seperate ways. Kat and I want to Sunergos coffee to warm up before going home to get ready for the John Mayer concert.

It was a good first Louisville Scooter Group ride around Kentuckiana for 2010. And we have lots of leftover cheese!

Hubers Winery & Brewers

Ken, Vince, Kathy and I left Rick, Gina, and JD (who couldn't ride) at Nulu Scooters and we went off into Indiana. I had a few problems with my route which I chalk up to learning curve on the Garmin. Once I got everything straightened out we rode around not as much twisty roads as I'd have liked, ending at Joe Huber Winery where some of us partook of the excellent goodies they have there such as cheese, jams, jellies, dried fruit and nuts, as well as candies.
No wine this time, but we did take a look around their wine shop & tasting facility. I took the opportunity to grab a cup of coffee and also a bathroom break! After this we wheedled around some really good roads to Brewer's General Store in Borden, home of Rat Trap Cheese. They also have all kinds of Amish made goods. It was cold, I didn't wear my Colorado Chaps, and the temps were taking their toll on my legs.

Pegasus Parade

Rick of Nulu scooters has offered several LSG folks a spot in the Pegasus Parade. We are taking him up on the offer! Its a Thursday so I will have to make some arrangements for work, but it should be fun!

The Cheesy Ride

A couple of us folks who braved the temperatures to meet up at Dizzy Whizz for breakfast. It was really tasty, and I will be back! Bacon, eggs, toast and your choice of grits or hashbrowns for right at $4.50!

After that hearty start, we swung by the grand opening of Nulu Scooters on Barret Avenue. They have a good amount of opening stock in both scooters and gear. I saw almost a dozen scooters from 50cc to 250cc ready to ride. The owners, Rick and Gina showed us around. They also have a shop with several other bikes that they appear to be going over with a fine tooth comb before putting out into their showroom. They have Lance, Motofino, Propel, Peirspeed and Peace brands. All these are mainland Chinese scooters in origin, but Gina tells me they have the parts availability and maintenance to keep the Nulu customers happy.

Parts are in

The parts I ordered for the Majesty are in. There are two air filters, a belt, and a new front fender. Oddly, the fender, which has broken mounting tabs from some unplanned offroad I did last fall (dirt bike roads which showed up as viable gravel on the damn Tomtom GPS). Now I can at least plan to get the regular maintenance done on the scoot!

Friday, March 12, 2010

I think we're done...

I believe that we are truly done with the ugly white stuff. Now? Bring on the rain!!!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

All talk, no action...

We got started talking about every manner of subject from WKRP Jump The Shark Rally in Cincinnati, to the embroidered patches I handed out, to routes, mechanics, and weather. One friend handed out small super bright 9-LED flashlights that had "Louisville Scooter Group" and the LSG logo on them! I think the official Group patches (2 years in the making!) were well received, even at the price I charged them of 1000 miles ridden with me this year.

LSG Tuesday Night Meetup

For old time's sake, we met at Flanagan's, what used to just about be our regular haunt. We were nine strong which was great for a night when we were getting scattered drizzle.

Six, count them--six...

Breakfast of champions, or compensation for taking the cage? You decide...

Monday, March 8, 2010

The Louisville Scooter Group patches in!

The patches I ordered for the Louisville Scooter Group came in today. I was amazed they arrived unharmed by my postal carrier Who has a penchant for destroying packages that come for me. The patches look great, and I want every one of our riders to have one. I just hope everyone wears them, but I doubt they will. I think I am the only one enthusiastic enough about the scooter club to wear a hat, tshirt or patch. *sigh* Its a labor of love I guess. I'm just happy to have friends to ride with. :)

Garmin Scooter Mount Followup

I really do not believe that the Garmin scooter mount is gonna work
perfectly with my Yamaha Majesty, despite the suggestion from Garmin
that it would be fine. I might try and pick this bone with 'em to see
what they say... The ball joint is just loose enough so that
vibration affects it adversely causing it to swing down out of good
view.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Please…don’t kill me…

Blackburg sent this to the Louisville Scooter Group, and I’d appreciate you taking a gander. Forward this on to other people you know. The life you could be saving might be mine.

Monday, March 1, 2010

New Scooter Mount

My new scooter mount from Garmin came on Friday but I had no time this weekend to put it on. I will update again when I install it and see how it does.

Meetup at Moby Dick Seafood

Yesterday a couple of the Louisville Scooter Group folks met me for lunch. It was a very cold day for our Kencuckiana scooter club, so we decided not to ride. The fish is surprisingly good, and a regular fish sandwich comes with two large crispy peices of fried goodness. They have a lot of other goodies there too like deep fried mushrooms, fried green tomatoes, and even chicken livers! After lunch Ralph had to split on his Piaggio MP3, but Vince (Burgman 650 Executive) and I (Yamaha Majesty) took our maxi-scooters and rode down to Harbor Freight Tools to look around. They have a surprising amount of cool stuff. They also had a couple motorcycle stands and a m/c lift, as well as $7.99 battery tenders for those folks who don't do cold. ;) Afterwards he went off to run his errands and I rode over to my sister's to hook up her DVD player. It was plenty warm for the amount of time I was out riding in it. I took a call from my girlfriend on the Scala Rider Q2 teamset and it works pretty goos, but I think I have a short. When I wiggle the unit, it gets louder... I am going to call Cardo Systems today. I am starting to break in and get used to the new gear...

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Chong Alterations

I highly recommend this lady for anything you need worked on. I think she did a pretty good job on my jacket.

Ms. Chong & her husband

This is the seamstress/tailor who altered my jacket for me.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Dakota II Altered

I think the jacket still looks pretty professional. It IS short, but doesn't look abnormally short on me (I don't think) and also if it is any longer, it srunches up on me when I sit on the scoot. What do YOU think?

Front

Back - I may need her to put in belt loops for the back side. The strap keeps coming down.

With "Big Air" vent open

Closeup of bottom--you can see she re-attached the logos as patches.

This is the only part that doesn't look 100% It's the front open with the mesh section zipped.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Power Trip Dakota II Jacket

As I mentioned last month, I have needed a new 3-season jacket for a while to replace the red and black jacket.  I ended up with the Power Trip Dakota 2 Jacket.  First things first.  I ordered the 5XL because of the thought "I need it a little big to go over regular clothes and maybe a hooded sweatshirt." which was the wrong attitude to take in the beginning.  A good jacket should fit close to you and keep you warm without other layers of stuff.  The Dakota II was supposed to fit at "waist length".  Well, the 5XL hung down not to my knees, but over my arse easily.  When I sat down in the jacket, I knew immediately it was too big.  I returned it (free of charge) for the 4XL.  The 4XL came last week and I tried it on.  The good news is it fit around my chest, stomach, arms & neck very well.  The bad news is it hung down almost as low and bunched up so bad when I sat that it was unworkable.
 
My options were three:
 
1.  I could return this jacket and keep getting other 4XL jackets from newenough.com until I got just the right one.
2.  I could ask newenough for a refund to apply toward another much more expensive jacket that would be made to order (read: a $700 motoport jacket where they get your measurements and take 8 weeks to build your jacket from scratch.  This $700 becomes $100 if you want a waterproof or thermal liner!!)
3.  I could have the Dakota II altered.  This is something I truly dreaded because of the fiasco that turned my nice Power Trip summer mesh into a POS.
 
I had read that one fellow on the Suzuki Burgman forum got his jacket alterated for around $80.  This wasn't too bad, so I took it for an estimate to British Custom Tailors on Bardstown road.  They quoted me $280 - $320!!!  I just about crapped!!  I decided it was time to return the jacket and see if motoport had any slightly less expensive options.
 
Newenough would only give me another "gift certificate", or what is commonly known as store credit.  I was about ready to call bullsh*t on this when the Motoport people called back and confirmed that to get a jacket with all the same functions as the $170 Power Trip but made to fit, it would be really really close to $1000!!  My second stroke in as many days!!!  So now I was stuck with a jacket that was too long, and a $300 alteration bill.  I did the only thing I could do.  I gritted my teeth, called around to other tailors/alterations people, and prayed I would not get screwed.
 
What I found was Chong Alteration, Dry Cleaning & Repairs.  I spoke to the asian lady over the phone and she seemed really down-to-earth.  She wanted to see the jacket before she would give me a price.  She told me she absolutely could do it and had worked on this kind of jacket before.
 
Thursday I took it in.  The next stroke was not mine, but Ms. Chong's!  She looked at the intracacies of the jacket and how many zippers it had.  She said at first that the original quote would be very close to correct.  I was dejected and I guess she could see that, so some compromises were made.  I told her she could make the pockets smaller, remove the lumbar pad, and not to worry about the cinch straps along the sides, or the "Power Trip" logos.  She said she could do it for $200.  I wasn't thrilled, but I got the sense that she would do a good job.  She said it would take a while, but agreed she could have it done before April.  I was resigned to worry.
 
Sunday I got a call.  She said "I put off other work.  Jacket is done."  I asked, bewildered, if I could pick it up Monday.  I went in after work yesterday.  She let me try it on.  It was short---way short, but I reminded myself (and Ms. Chong) that if it was any longer, it would bunch up when I sat on the motorbike.  I saw that, even though I told her I would like to save some money by not worrying with the Power Trip logos, she made neat patches of them and reattached them, including the label!  I was worried she would ask for more money but she did not.  The only problem was this: once the jacket was shortened, it skewed the bottom a bit.  There was a true need for the cinch straps because where the spine CE armor was in the back of the jacket, it caused the back bottom to jut out like a tent!  I was not happy with the looks.  She started going back through the peices that she'd removed, and designed a back cinch strap that would allow me to take up some of the slack.  It now looks very professional and you can only really tell it's been altered if you look closely.
 
Chong Alteration, Dry Cleaning & Repairs for the win!
 
I wore the jacket home and was fairly comfortable.  It is NOT my old jacket and will take some breaking in.  It also fits differently, but I knew it would.  One minor mishap--the back cinch strap on one side busted a seam loose and needs fixed, but it is still attached and works.  I am sure she will not charge me to fix it.  It has a waterproof liner, and a thermal liner which zips out.  There is also the partial Big Air section in the front that is mesh and will allow you to leave the main zipper undone and get max air flow through the chest and out the back vents.  I wore the jacket to work today, and my upper body was perfectly comfortable in 34 degrees and I felt no chill.  I did not have on any other liners or clothing besides a polo shirt.

Garmin Scooter Mount

The Garmin Scooter Mount for my Nuvi 550 seems loose.  When the scoot vibrates, the ball socket slowly moves to the lowest position.  It's not horrible, and I think I might be able to tighten it, but I asked Garmin about it anyway.  Here's a transcript:
ME:  I note that after a short period of riding on my scooter with the Nuvi 550 on the Garmin Scooter Mount, it will slowly swivel down to it's lowest position. Is there a way to tighten the scooter mount so it does not swivel as easy?
 
GARMIN:  Have you tried tightening the mount to the bar? Is the mount too big for the scooter? Unfortunately, the mount may not fit all scooters so it might be loose. You may want to try searching for a third-party dealer that sells a mount that mounts tighter to your scooter.
 
ME:  It is not the entire mount that slips, but the swivel so you can adjust the unit up or down.  The mount itself stays perfectly in place.  It is the ball-joint swivel that is loose.  Is there a way to tighten that?
 
GARMIN:  If you can not find a way to tighten it, you may not be able to. I went ahead and ordered you a replacement scooter mount. The order number is: 19106204 and you should receive this in 5-12 business days. You may have the same problem due to the way the mount is made, however, let's give this one a try.
It is nice to see that they are willing to send out free crap in the cause of customer satisfaction.  I just hope that the scooter mount can either be tightened, or my current one is defective and the new one will work well.  I still have to get the power wire mounted.  That is like the 3rd or 4th thing on my list of scooter related tasks to get done before April and the WKRP rally...

Parts & Service on the Yamaha

A while back, my V-BELT light came on. It's set to do this at 12K
miles. I need to get it replaced pretty soon, so I have been calling
to get the best price on parts, and also to check the cost of labor.

Derby Cycle seems the most fair. They want $163.99 for the belt,
$5.99 each for the 8 weights, and they quoted me 1-2 hours of labor at
$65 per hour. This gives us a grand total of $276.91-$341.91.
Yamaha/Suzuki of Louisville ran in the middle of the pack. They
quoted about the same price for parts ($163.47 for belt and $5.54 each
for weights) but charge 2 - 2.5 hours labor at $75 per hour. This is
a grand total of $357.79-$395-29 for the job. Lastly, I called S & S
Powersports in Clarksville. They did a good job with my rear tire.
The fellow in parts could not figure out exactly what belt to order,
but guessed the price would be around $179. The weights--he said that
they come only as a whole set with the clutch and could not quote me a
price on weights only. He also could not state how much they charged
per hour for the work, or how long it would take. I gave up on them
and called the new S & S location in Brooks, KY. They quoted me
$163.49 for the belt, and $5.99 each for the weights. The sticker is
the labor. He said it would be $190 and take about 2.5 hours. This
would bring their grand total to $401.41.

Any way I go about it, the labor is gonna be crazy unless Derby Cycle
can get it done in an hour. Then not too bad. I'm going to run down
there this weekend if at all possible and order the parts and pay for
them. Then when they get the parts in, I can either choose to put
them in myself, or have them do it. I also need to get the v-belt air
filter elements replaced, or at the very least blown out. I may wait
on the roller weights. I kinda want to put in Dr. Pulley sliders
anyway. My friend Jeremy says we can do the work in his garage, and
he's the one that helped me change the belt and weights on my 250cc a
couple years ago. He's brilliant with mechanical (among other stuff).

Friday, February 19, 2010

Riding with Mushu

The dragon decals I got from streetglo are not exactly what i wanted, but they are highly reflective and will add visibility to my solid black helmet. They look a little like Mushu from the Disney cartoon Mulan. Ugh.

The road to work this morning was cold as hell. 15 degrees is quite cold enough. You might wonder why I rode to work if you have not been following long. That is because I am not one of these people who stores their bike for the winter putting it on a battery tender in the garage. I like to ride year round, but getting caught out in snow and ice is something I am not quite ready for. Even though we had sun and a little warmpth yesterday which melted off most of the road ice, there were still some dangerous slick spots.

There are 49 days until The WKRP "Jump the Shark" rally in Cincinnati, Ohio. I really hope its a bit warmer then!