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Main Area => General GS500 Discussion => Topic started by: deathlucky on September 22, 2006, 12:42:53 AM

Title: cant trust the bike shops
Post by: deathlucky on September 22, 2006, 12:42:53 AM
i rocked up at the bike shop i normaly go to and said my bike has abit of a viabration he had a look over it and said it was my chain and i needed new sprockets and chain so yer ok do it friday (it all looked fine to me) so i rock up there today and he said oh they didnt have the stock size but they had these other ones and i so i asked what size they were and he said 49 on the back 17 on the front so i was abit pissed that he didnt ask me b4 he got them in he got half way though and i worked out how different it would be and i said forget it just to show how this would affect it i will do the math

so stock is 16 front 39 back

16 front 39 back = 1
15 front 39 back = 1.0666666667
14 front 39 back = 1.1428571429
17 front 49 back = 1.1825037707
13 front 39 back = 1.2307692308

i so glad i didnt let him go ahead with it
Title: Re: cant trust the bike shops
Post by: makenzie71 on September 22, 2006, 01:07:29 AM
He probably had those sprockets and couldn't get rid of them...and figured people who go "rocking" from place to place are morons...I would have put those two together, as well.
Title: Re: cant trust the bike shops
Post by: pandy on September 22, 2006, 07:41:01 AM
Quote from: makenzie71 on September 22, 2006, 01:07:29 AM
...and figured people who go "rocking" from place to place are morons...I would have put those two together, as well.

I would have figured that someone who went "rocking" from place to place was from another country. Well....what do you know.... I'm right.

I'm fortunate to have a bike shop I can trust, AND a sweetheart who can do anything.  :kiss3:
Title: Re: cant trust the bike shops
Post by: Chilly Willy on September 22, 2006, 09:13:20 AM
Robert Persig talks about this type of event in his book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.  His narrator describes the moment he began taking the maintenance of his bike into his own hands.  I'm paraphrasing, but the mechanic in the book sheared off cooling fins and punched through the crank-case cover in his attempt to "fix" the bike.  The narrator eventually stops the bike shop guys and fixes the damage himself.  Although I've read the book many times myself, I re-read it this summer while healing up from surgery.  It inspired me to learn to do things myself on my bike.
Title: Re: cant trust the bike shops
Post by: galahs on September 22, 2006, 09:15:20 AM
Us Aussies are the king of rock!

Thats why we built a memorial to it in the middle of our outback and named it Uluru!  :thumb: