Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ever had that "Oh Sheet" moment?
Collapse
X
-
Forum LongTimerGSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Apr 2005
- 15530
- Murray Kentucky
Ever had that "Oh Sheet" moment?
I had it today! Just at I turned on to Tennessee 232 I went to shift and..................nothing! As in no shifter! I pulled to the side to discover that it wasn't missing, just hanging from the shift rod. The threaded shaft it it attached to had come loose. After searching the area for missing parts I realized everything was still there but needed to be re attached. As I was preparing to remove the seat to get to the tool kit the man who lived there came out and asked what happened. He found an open end wrench in his truck that would work and I tightened the shaft and decided to carefully head home so I could loc Tite the pesky thing. Moral of the story? Give those fasteners a look from time to time and keep a small set of vice grips on your bike.Tags: None
-
81gs1100
I have that same thing happen, but with my clutch. I was coming to a stop sign, pulled the clutch and nothing, bike kept going. Found the pinch bolt to have came loose. Yikes, Im glad I wasn't in traffic.
-
clancey g
once at a garage i was admiring an old Honda that had just rode in for fuel and i noticed the main bolt holding his swing arm had lost its nut and was over halve way out, he was pretty happy i saw it, and i had spare nut that fitted and shifter, he was one lucky guy that night.
Comment
-
FiremanBob
-
A couple times, before I got proper riding boots, I caught a lace on the shifter coming to a stop. Not too bad. I still had enough speed left to get the bike leaned over to put my right foot down.
Those were nothing compared to that moment I had on Chicken Hollow Road. "Hey! Where'd the road go? I guess I'll use this unusually long gravel driveway..." I don't trust blind corners anymore. Especially the ones I thought were just straight pavement laid over a little ridge.
Then there was the time I was tooling through Cleveland on I-90 at dusk, tried to signal a lane change and got nothing. Neither blinker lit, much less blinked. Which meant I was heading into darkness with no tail light either. Fortunately the Droid found me an AutoZone pretty quickly. I don't remember what the actual problem was, but I finally learned to carry spare fuses that time.
I'm not quite so foolish as I used to be.
Then there was the time I followed Al and Adam off to some remote corner of WV before the worst storms in 50 years got between us and the hotel. Two weeks before that, a compression tester broke coming out of the plug hole. An event following which I learned that I should not set cam timing at 3:00 AM.
And there was that time in Kentucky when the bike didn't start on the first day of the rally. An awful lot of people probably remember how that turned out for me.
I must really enjoy riding.Last edited by Dogma; 04-02-2012, 09:52 AM.Dogma
--
O LORD, be gracious to me; heal me, for I have sinned against you! - David
Skeptical scrutiny is the means, in both science and religion, by which deep insights can be winnowed from deep nonsense. - Carl Sagan
--
'80 GS850 GLT
'80 GS1000 GT
'01 ZRX1200R
How to get a "What's New" feed without the Vortex, and without permanently quitting the Vortex
Comment
-
Planecrazy
Originally posted by Dogma View PostA couple times, before I got proper riding boots, I caught a lace on the shifter coming to a stop. Not too bad. I still had enough speed left to get the bike leaned over to put my right foot down.
Those were nothing compared to that moment I had on Chicken Hollow Road. "Hey! Where'd the road go? I guess I'll use this unusually long gravel driveway..." I don't trust blind corners anymore. Especially the ones I thought were just straight pavement laid over a little ridge.
Then there was the time I was tooling through Cleveland on I-90 at dusk, tried to signal a lane change and got nothing. Neither blinker lit, much less blinked. Which meant I was heading into darkness with no tail light either. Fortunately the Droid found me an AutoZone pretty quickly. I don't remember what the actual problem was, but I finally learned to carry spare fuses that time.
I'm not quite so foolish as I used to be.
Then there was the time I followed Al and Adam off to some remote corner of WV before the worst storms in 50 years got between us and the hotel. Two weeks before that, a compression tester broke coming out of the plug hole. An event following which I learned that I should not set cam timing at 3:00 AM.
And there was that time in Kentucky when the bike didn't start on the first day of the rally. An awful lot of people probably remember how that turned out for me.
I must really enjoy riding.
Regards,
Comment
-
Tim Tom
Riding home one night. Did a pre-lane-change shoulder check, look back forwards and in that split second what looked like a pile of sawhorses appeared
At least I knew there wasn't anyone in my blind spots. Fastest lane change ever.
Comment
-
DanTheMan
Originally posted by Planecrazy View Post"...and one time at band camp..."
Regards,
And for the thread topic, yes I have had those moments, and I carry several sizes of vise grips, they work well as emergency shift levers and side stand extensions........
Comment
-
Forum LongTimerBard Award Winner
GSResource Superstar
Past Site Supporter
Super Site Supporter- Oct 2003
- 17439
- Indianapolis
Once, in the wilds of Wisconsin at a GS rally lunch stop, I somehow noticed that one of the front brake caliper bolts was missing from some guy's GS (I'm like Rain Man with bolts, but abysmally bad with names, so I can't remember who it was).
As the "oh shoot" look entered his face, and he started feverishly trying to figure out how to get home, I rummaged around in my tool roll and came up with the correct 8mm bolt. In stainless, of course.
We had everything snugged up in about 60 seconds, and the bike owner's MIND = BLOWN.
This kind of stuff happens all the time -- I hear at last year's Wisconsin hooraw the GS collective pulled an 1100G stator out if its ass and changed it in the parking lot before the owner could even begin to make a plan.1983 GS850G, Cosmos Blue.
2005 KLR685, Aztec Pink - Turd II.3, the ReReReTurdening
2015 Yamaha FJ-09, Magma Red Power Corrupts...
Eat more venison.
Please provide details. The GSR Hive Mind is nearly omniscient, but not yet clairvoyant.
Celeriter equita, converteque saepe.
SUPPORT THIS SITE! DONATE TODAY!
Co-host of "The Riding Obsession" sport-touring motorcycling podcast at tro.bike!
Comment
-
I was about 3 blocks away from the dealership with my first bike (non-scooter) Suzi X6, and the shift lever fell off, set-up guy hadn't tightened it. I suppose I could have been irate, but I was so happy and excited to have this little red rocket smoker, I didn't really care!!sigpicSome of the totally committed probably should be.
'58 + '63 Vespa 150's' (London, GB/RI, US)
'67 X6 T20 ('67 Long Beach, Ca.- misty-eyed)
'71 Kaw. A1-ugh ('71 SF, CA- worked @ Kaw dlr)
'66 Yam. YL1('72 SF-commuter beater)
'73 Kaw. S2A-2Xugh ('73 SF-still parts slave)
'78 GS 750C ('77 SF-old faithful-killed by son)
'81 KZ 750E ('81 SF-back to Kaw. dlr)
'81 GS 650G ('08 back to NE&ME- (project)
'82 GS '82 (2) GS650GZ, L, Middlebury, G current
Comment
-
Anyone that's been around bikes long enough probably knows to keep those shifter pinch bolts tight. Even if they loosen some and still grab, they'll evenually wear out the splines on the shaft.
An old 450 I had I wore out the splines, and I tightened the shifter as tight as it would go, still wouldn't clamp, so I cut out a section of the shifter so it could tighten down even further, but it still slipped.
So, I drilled a small hole though the shifter and shift shaft and put a pin in it. Hated to do it, but I now keep a watchful eye on the shifter for looseness, really don't want to do that again.sigpic
Steve
"The world is a book, and those who do not travel read only one page." :cool:
_________________
'79 GS1000EN
'82 GS1100EZ
Comment
-
I had a shifter come off the splines at a track day at Loudon, come out of turn 12 , 2nd gear,3rd,4th, 5th, down front stretch about 130mph went to down shift for turn 1 Ho sheet no shifter It's PUCKER TIME off through the barriers I go get stopped at the wall , thank god for safety wire all parts present and accounted for now just wait for session to end and go back to pits and repair the bike.1984 GS1100GK newest addition to the heard
80 GS 1000gt- most favorite ride love this bike
1978 GS1000E- Known as "RoadKill" , Finished :D
83 gs750ed- first new purchase
85 EX500- vintage track weapon
1958Ducati 98 Tourismo
“Remember When in doubt use full throttle, It may not improve the situation ,but it will end the suspense ,
If it isn't going to make it faster or safer it isn't worth doing
Comment
-
Skateguy50
I need to ask my surgeon if she used the red or blue loctite on my bolts... don't want them coming out during a ride.
Comment
-
Comeing out of Hood River Or. on my 79 850 with son on the back, doin around 70, black as the ace of spades out, just toped a rise and.......out go the lights....it is amazeing how fast one can stop and pull over in the dark. It took about a half hour to identify the fuse and change it. But that's another story.
VGustov
80 GS 1100 LT, 83 1100 G "Scruffy"
81 GS 1000 G
79 GS 850 G
81 GS 850 L
83 GS 550 ES, 85 GS 550 ES
80 GS 550 L
86 450 Rebel, 70CL 70, Yamaha TTR125
2002 Honda 919
2004 Ural Gear up
Comment
-
1_v8_merc
Came flyin around a corner one night, went to click off my turn signal, and unknowningly flipped Off my Lights. I freaked out, thinking my bike shut down...but I was still accelerating fast! Then I figured that I blew a fuse, and there's NOWHERE to pull over...so I just kept going in the dark since I was barely a mile from home.
Then halfway down the road, I realized the lights got bumped off...Woowww what a relief, just in time as a car in the opposing lane was coming around the bend.
Comment
Comment