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Hurricane! HEP!

Started by gsatterw, August 26, 2012, 04:54:33 PM

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gsatterw

So I'm down here in New Orleans, going to school at Tulane. I've got my bike here with me, and, well a hurricane is gonna hit us.

My question is, if it floods and the water gets to my air filter, am I screwed? I can't get the bike to higher ground unfortunately. What do I do?

Graham
2002 GS500
Progressive Springs|15w oil|Heavy Duty Fork Brace|R6 Rear Shock|Cbr900rr Rear Sets|Reverse Shifting|'89 Factory Clipons|R6 Throttle Tube|K&N Lunchbox|V&H Exhaust|Jets: 22.5/65/147.5|3 turns|Shorai Li/Fe Battery|Iridium Plugs|Blue SS brake line|Blue Levers|Blue Chain

bombsquad83

Good question.  Where are you storing the bike?  Is it out in the open? 

I would get it on top of a row of heavy cinder blocks on the center stand and and strap the bike down hard from the handlebars with a come-along strap.  I would also strap the blocks together.  Does that make sense?

salamander

#2
Raising the bike some, even if it's just on cinder blocks, sounds good if there's no way to move it to higher ground.  If you have the time, you might also remove the air filter, seal plastic bags over the carb intakes (maybe using the air filter to hold the plastic in place), and hope you head intake boots don't leak.  Or, do the plastic seal at the head intakes.

Good luck.

Dizzledan

Find a multi-level parking garage, bike on side stand, blocks on the seat, or put a ratcheting tie-down ontop of your cover around the bike (securing it to a pylon to keep the bike upright). Good luck.

salamander

Oh yeah, don't forget about the exhaust, too.  Maybe a heavy duty garbage bag and some duct tape to seal it as best you can.  If one of your exhaust valves happens to be open, there's another way in to your cylinders, and depending on your air filter, that could happen before water makes its way in through the filter.

DoD#i

Will they be having classes during the hurricane? If not, then ride it to someplace else. Nothing like 200 miles to improve a hurricane, and your personal odds with respect to it.
1990 GS500EL - with moderately-ugly paintjob.
1982 XJ650LJ -  off the road for slow repairs
AGATT - All Gear All The Time
"Ride a motorcycle.  Save Gas, Oil, Rubber, Steel, Aluminum, Parking Spaces, The Environment, and Money.  Plus, you get to wear all the leather you want!"
(from DoD#296)

cbrfxr67

My old sabre got submerged during, tropical storm allison.  oops.  I did open it up and clean it out and it did run again.  Also, my little 250 went swimming before I got it and after cleaning it out thoroughly, ran again.  All hope isn't lost, but I'd do everything I could to get my bikes away from that murky, muddy possibility.
"Its something you take apart in 2-3 days and takes 10 years to go back together."
-buddha


adidasguy

That's better than Seattle Rain for washing your bike.

Funderb

Quotetrap the bike down hard from the handlebars

Careful you don't compress the forks all the way, maintained pressure has a way of blowing out fork seals. I prefer the strong tie to be run through the center of the frame. tie down the front end via the fork brace.

as for the intake: cram a wad of paper towels in the carb mouth/venturi, put a large condom over the inlets, then put the filter/airbox back on. For serious. It works. use a thicker ("safer") condom, or use 2-3.

Fill the tank ALL the way up. Add stabiliser, you might not be riding for a while.

Put duct tape over the exhaust outlet, and plug the crank case (cylinder head) vent. If water covers the bike, you will probably have water intrusion in the tank, just man up and throw all the gas out after the storm.

In this condition, you can submerge the bike and be okay.

Other considerations:
Remove the battery. (pretty important)
Pack the chain with grease
tape over the gas cap
put a plastic tarp under the bike cover, and strap them down together
spray everything with wd40 (meh)

Tie/chain the bike down to something DENSE, not heavy. Concrete blocks are not heavy underwater, and make horrible moorings.
Lock it down to a city bicycle rack that is in the concrete or similar structure away from things that will fall on it.

Take this from a lifelong sailor, that has experience weathering storms.
Black '98 gs500 k&n Lbox, akrapovic slip-on, kat600 shock, progressive sproings, superbike handlebars, 40/147.5/3.5washers

"I'd rather ride then spend all my time fiddling trying to make it run perfectly." -Bombsquad

"Never let the destination cast a shadow over your journey towards it- live life"

burnchassis

#10
If it is going to get wet  DO NOT PUT PAPER TOWELS IN THE CARBS INTAKE OR ANYWHERE NEAR IT!!!! completely worthless,and will cause more harm than good.
If the bike is going to be sitting underwater?
REMOVE THE BATTERY! the rest can be undone.
-CS
94 Suzuki GS500E #14
04 Yamaha Warrior XV1700 #13

GI_JO_NATHAN

Scribed to see what happens.
Sorry got nothing to add other than find some place to put it..
Jonathan
'04 GS500
Quote from: POLLOCK28 (XDTALK.com)From what I understand from frequenting various forums you are handling this critisim completely wrong. You are supposed to get bent out of shape and start turning towards personal attacks.
Get with the program!

gsatterw

Sooo...thanks for ya'llz replies, but I tricked my university into letting me park the bike in the garage on campus. Way less of a hassle. Now just worried about my truck...
2002 GS500
Progressive Springs|15w oil|Heavy Duty Fork Brace|R6 Rear Shock|Cbr900rr Rear Sets|Reverse Shifting|'89 Factory Clipons|R6 Throttle Tube|K&N Lunchbox|V&H Exhaust|Jets: 22.5/65/147.5|3 turns|Shorai Li/Fe Battery|Iridium Plugs|Blue SS brake line|Blue Levers|Blue Chain

yamahonkawazuki

Quote from: gsatterw on August 26, 2012, 04:54:33 PM
So I'm down here in New Orleans, going to school at Tulane. I've got my bike here with me, and, well a hurricane is gonna hit us.

My question is, if it floods and the water gets to my air filter, am I screwed? I can't get the bike to higher ground unfortunately. What do I do?

Graham
wrqap bike in plastic. especially tail pipe, air filter and all electrics, and carbs.  trust me. may be difficult to start @ first, but you will be the first on the road after the storm. now lets hpe and pray that hte storm does some weird shaZam! and jut hits where theres no one to hurt
Jan 14 2010 0310 I miss you mom
Vielen dank Patrick. Vielen dank
".
A proud Mormon
"if you come in with the bottom of your cast black,
neither one of us will be happy"- Alan Silverman MD

Alphad0g

The carpark a little off Canal St, turn by Harrahs casino. It's attatched to a mall? Anyways, it's like 8 stories, and $30 maximum parking cost. Its almost directly across from Coyote Ugly. Only place I trust my vehicle to when I'm in the city.
Something about a boxen of donuts.

doop500

My bike is just going to be sitting under my open garage. Hope the wind doesnt knock it over!! Lafayette here


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GI_JO_NATHAN

Quote from: gsatterw on August 27, 2012, 05:23:27 PM
Sooo...thanks for ya'llz replies, but I tricked my university into letting me park the bike in the garage on campus. Way less of a hassle. Now just worried about my truck...
That's great to hear about the bike. Good luck with the truck.
Jonathan
'04 GS500
Quote from: POLLOCK28 (XDTALK.com)From what I understand from frequenting various forums you are handling this critisim completely wrong. You are supposed to get bent out of shape and start turning towards personal attacks.
Get with the program!

doop500

#17
What would be better for me? Bike on side stand or center stand?? Center stand feel more stable. Any input tonight would be helpful. Thanks


Also my garage has no walls but it does have a roof. I have no other place to store it.   :((

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adidasguy

I feel side stand is more stable. 3 points farther apart. Center stand also lets bike rock forward and back. Rock forward and down it goes off the center stand.

Either way, tie the center or side stand from the front of bike so it can't fold up if it moves.
If you have a post, tie it up.

Take inside through the door?  :icon_lol:

doop500

Haha i cant take it inside my house. I live in a modular home which is on pillars. Fancy way of saying trailer i guess. But its really nice!!

Ill try and find something to strap it to. Not much else i can do. I hope insurance covers it if anything were to happen!!

Thanks for the advice


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