New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
Harvey , is this limited to Moto Guzzi ? Are Lucas failures allowed , that might produce a never ending thread ;D Dusty
Goodness no...... NO LUCAS failures allowed ever in any thread!!! ;D ;D ;D ; Really Dusty, Lucas has their own Pandora's box.
Started noticing a little feedback in my right heel as I was headed East out of Wyoming toward Minneapolis. By the time I headed for Moorhead from Money Creek, it was a throb. Headed over the border from Washington with the throb changing whenever the road did. Pulled over at BELL II on the Kassiar with the u-joint smoking and the boot melted so it was dripping onto the ground. 500 miles to the ferry home. I traded salmon jerky for a can of spray grease (the white stuff) that burst into flame when I shot it at the u-joint.200 miles closer to Whitehorse I no longer dared ease up on the throttle -- the tension was the only thing holding the drive shaft together. It was so cobb-rough that I could almost count the shaft revs as it clacked through its broken circle. Outside Teslin, I saw a lodge on the left -- "TWIN PEAKS". Also a huge, MOTORCYCLE FRIENDLY sign on the front wall. I needed me some of that motorcycle friendly, so I made for the driveway.Dude, you need a big dose of good luck. That is one hell og a story. Sure enough, as soon as I backed off the noise control and started down the gravel driveway the rear wheel locked up. I did a somewhat controlled slide to a crooked stop at the porch. At least I was safe. The owner, David Bell, watched me 'park' and came over, both amused and concerned. The u-joint was on fire again. I swatted at it with a glove, but it kept re-igniting for about 15 minutes as we discussed the situation.The lodge was closed. The staff was gone, as was Mrs Bell. David was just securing the property for the winter. But he was also a rider and understood the situation. He hooked the bike up to his 4-wheeler and dragged it to a garage some distance from the lodge. He said "I can let you hide it here, but I've got nothing to fix it with." I replied that I had all the tools I needed with me -- I was just short one drive shaft. If I could do a quick disassembly, I could hitch hike to Skagway, ferry home, get the part, and return in about a week. He said he'd allow it, but if I wasn't back in a week the bike would be locked down for the winter and I could come get it in May.Long story longer, I got the swing arm out, finally managed to pry out the carrier bearing (inner race and rollers came right out -- outer race was a challenge). There wasn't enough left to use. I left most of my gear with the bike and high-tailed it for the ferry. Along the way I was picked up by two men who helped themselves to my backpack, thumped me thoroughly, and tossed me over an embankment, breaking my neck (just got that fixed, thanks for asking). I looked so bad after that I couldn't even flag down a Mountie to report the robbery.In Skagway things weren't much better. I looked like 500 miles of bad road. It had been low 40s and raining all day and I was rummy with cold. I took another beating at the ferry dock from a guy who thought I was a thief. He called the skagway cops, who never even asked what my story was. They just accepted the other guy's report that I was going through his goods. The cops told me to turn out my pockets so the complaintant could poinnt out his property. I said "No, he'll tell you what he's missing and then you can see if it's in my pockets." Naturally, the guy couldn't name anything he was missing, so I got to keep whatever I had left from the robbery.I got back to Sitka after a further delay caused by the ferry running over a drift net. It limped into Juneau on one shaft and I caught a flight home from there. In Sitka I was a day late getting started on a computer job and the customer had his front desk girl flip a coin to see if I got to keep the job. I lost. But I was able to piece together another Convert driveshaft and was headed back to the bike by (literally) plane, train, bus, boat, and car.When I arrived in the late evening, David was still there and charged a nominal fee for messing up a sleeping room. His truck was already packed and ready to leave. The kitchen was shut down. The next morning I got the bike reassembled in a couple of hours (broken neck and all) and was on the road again -- no more drama for the trip except that I stopped off at the mountie station and bitched them out for not stopping when I tried to flag them down. Like most Canadians I've met they were apologetic and polite.I got more stories. Getting stranded is what I do. ::)Dude I hope you have good stories because these experiences are terrible.
Daniel,You need to buy a Yamaha!! :BEER:Bill
Left my H2 on an exit one afternoon when the clutch cable broke, came back to find it vandalized and minus the tank, side covers, instruments. Hauled that one in a van. Next time I'll drive home without a clutch.
Doubt if I'll take the prize, but my '12 Griso had only about 7k miles on it when I took off on a 1,400 mile trip. Stopped for a burger in a tiny W.Va. town, and it wouldn't restart -- prompting me for a user code Icouldn't remember setting. Got the dealer on the phone, no advice and they were many hours away and closing for the weekend.It was getting dark, no motel in sight. In desperation, I posted on this forum. A few minutes later, master mechanic GuzziSteve rang my cell from his truck on the way to a rally.He walked me through through disconnecting the battery, resetting the dash, and gave me the shop code. That still didn't do it, so he diagnosed it as a bad transponder in the key.I spent some time guessing the code I'd given the dealer months earlier and didn't write down. Finally got her fired, and for the rest of the trip had to manually punch in the code after every stopMeanwhile when I set up camp that night, I checked the forum and found several kind souls offering trucks and places to stay.The spare key at home worked, and the dealer eventually replaced the bad one under warranty, but I got a good lesson in how great the denizens of this forum can be in saving me from my own stupidity.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Dash failed on 2006 Griso 1100. Still down after installing a new dash. The dash reads, Dash.How I got back, initially a lot of fussing around disconnecting the battery installing the shop code & personal code & she finally started. But since then, the dash cut out less than quarter mile from the house bike shut down & between coasting & pushing made it. Ordered new dash installed new dash, new dash says DASH. So, I quit for the past 6 years. Still sitting.