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my first bike ever! a '90 GS500e

Started by Mauve, August 18, 2018, 09:30:59 AM

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The Buddha

Anyway a honda VTR250 shock is a direct drop in fit for a GS and gets you that retarded lowered look without having to cut an already anaemic and painfully unpadded for boy bits seat. Sorry I was thinking you had those, I just realized you might not ...

Longer linkage on a GS shock doesn't work because it lets the clevise hit the shock body. That linkage can be removed and shaved ill it fits ... its all a lot of work, and a vtr shock is faster, easier and can be swapped easy if needed.

Cool.
Buddha.
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I run a business based on other people's junk.
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Sarasi

Oh another option! I know that Datona makes crazy nice boots for women that have an internal elevation. The heel is elevated about 6cm and the toe about 2cm. Per boot, that is. The benefit obviously is that there's no actual heel to get caught behind a peg, and they could also definitely pass for unisex boots. ;) They're ridiculously pricey though. I'd love to get my hands on a good second hand pair but even those are still way above my budget. But it's an option worth considering, even if just for the long haul. :)
'02 GS500H ("Duckling")
RVS exhaust system | steel braided front brake line | progressive fork springs | R6 '11 rear shock | adjustable brake & clutch levers | heated grips

Mauve

#22
alright well i'll take everyones thoughts into consideration. Right now, lets focus on other things about this bike: like learning how to ride it.


I've had 2 lessons so far, the second being on a nice lonely street a few blocks away from my house. its about a 2 block stretch of warehouses and last sunday when I was there with my teacher, it was good to go to learn how to shift into second, and to learn how to turn around in the street without putting a foot down.

Shifting is easy once you get the hang of it (and this time out, I didn't kill the engine trying to get it into first.) the first few times I did the U-turn, i put my foot down, and clutch walked it around. But once i got over the fear of possibly dropping the bike as a result of not going fast enough (my thinking being: how fast do i have to go to stay upright on this freakin' thing? come to find out, you don't have to be going that fast) it was easy. Start at one side of this street, and take off, shift into second, and at the end of the block make my U turn, slowing down and shifting into 1st before , and then gving it gas to get back. there was a street halfway through but no stop sign, and no cars, but every few passes i stopped and started again.

On one of my U turn follies, my friend had to push me around the turn to show me just how fast I could be going, and still balance on the bike. "hey listen, if i can push you on this thing and that's fast enough to stay up, then just trolling into 1st is fast enough to balance." Once he put it into that sort of perspective, it was game on.

Yesterday, at one of my several jobs (i'm a bike messenger) i watched motorcycles all day in traffic. it really did re-assure to me how fast you need to be actually going, to balance on a bike. the answer being: not very fast.


a new part came in the mail today, which is the last of the parts I immediately need for this bike: a master cylinder lever. I think the site i got it from was partsgiant.com. for $12 and free shipping i can't complain. It's amazing how cheap some of these parts are, and how similar they are to bicycle parts. The mirrors I got however, are cheap af, and i'll probably have to spring for some better ones over the off season, but for now, having 2 crap mirrors is better than one stock mirror, or no mirror at all. I'll look around this forum to see what others have done.


The off season will include the cleaning of the carbs, the fixing of the fork (minor seal leakage......) as well as the lowering of the seat. Maybe just maybe load the bike up on a pickup truck and drive south to where it's warm and ride around.


I've dropped the bike twice so far, all 3 times in the alley behind my house.  :dunno_black:

i guess it's better to get those out of the way in the privacy of my alley instead of the non privacy of say.......an intersection somewhere.


i'm pretty short dude, and I don't weigh much. I've been looking into videos on how to properly pickup a motorcycle. I may even lay down some carpet in my parking spot and have my roommates help me lay the bike down carfully so i can practice picking it up. might be a dumb idea, so i will have to mull it over.




later.


edit:

also, the earliest I can start showing up to these classes to get in as a stand-by/walk in is next week. If i show up and they have room, I'll have a license by the end of it, and thus will be able to at least legally take my bike on the street. But at the very latest, October 18th is the class i'm enrolled for. but you can show up to any of them to try and get in. a lot of people tend to not show up for whatever reason.

Mauve

bored-date

enrolled in a class for next week at a different location than the one I had originally enrolled in, so instead of mid october, i've pushed up training and license a bunch. which is good, bc it'll give me some time to ride the bike before the snow falls here in Illinois.

The class requires gear obviously, and I found what I needed. First, I had bought a helmet from a guy that was an adult medium. It fit my head snuggly on the inside, but the shell was too big, but I was in a hurry to get one before my first private lesson, it was black, yadda yadda yadda, so i went with it and it made me feel like Rick Moranis in Spaceballs.

So, the other day I went back on Craigslist, and found a youth sized Scorpion EXO-400 for $20. In great shape. no dings or dents. Padding was fine too. Smelled like it had been sitting on a shelf though, but i took care of that with de-odorizer. I wear youth sized New Eras snap backs for the same reason i didn't like the adult sized helmet: yeah the inside fits, but the outside of it was too big- same with new eras.

For gloves, I went to a local shop that sells/makes their own moto-gear. Gloves set me back $40 and they were women's mediums. Fit perfect.

My jacket, is a MotoCentric Force, that I got on closeout for $50. It's msrp was i think 200-something.



I installed the master cylinder lever pictured in the last post, as well as fixed the handlebars, they were a little bit off from when the p.o. dropped the bike and broke the MCL. After much deliberation, I want to turn this bike into a bit of a street fighter, sans the dorky stunt shaZam! because I don't even stunt on my regular bicycle. I'll change the bars to some super-moto ones, and get some funky grips. and i plan to sticker-bomb the gas tank as well as the fenders. All of that being done in the offseason, as the bike in its current cockpit form will work just fine.





Watcher

#24
Quote from: Mauve on September 01, 2018, 01:39:23 PM
I had bought a helmet from a guy that was an adult medium. It fit my head snuggly on the inside, but the shell was too big, but I was in a hurry to get one before my first private lesson, it was black, yadda yadda yadda, so i went with it and it made me feel like Rick Moranis in Spaceballs.

So, the other day I went back on Craigslist, and found a youth sized Scorpion EXO-400 for $20. In great shape. no dings or dents. Padding was fine too. Smelled like it had been sitting on a shelf though, but i took care of that with de-odorizer. I wear youth sized New Eras snap backs for the same reason i didn't like the adult sized helmet: yeah the inside fits, but the outside of it was too big- same with new eras.

I feel like I have to say something here.  Well, a couple somethings.

You should NEVER buy a used helmet.  Helmets are a "one and done" sort of safety device, and often there is no visible damage while a helmet can still be compromised.  Someone dropping their helmet on the floor can be enough to compromise it, and there is no gaurantee the previous owner hasn't done that or worse.

The second thing is helmets have a shelf life.  Longer than 5 years and the impact absorbing EPS liner can harden beyond acceptable levels increasing the risk of cranial injury.  I've lost track of how many helmets I see on Craigslist that I can identify as 10+ years old just from seeing what model it is, those helmets are shelf decorations at best.  Most people aren't selling a helmet they bought last month...

The third thing is helmets are designed to break in to YOU for the most comfortable fit, and the internals are rarely maintained by their owners.
So not only are the pads probably smashed flat by a face that isn't yours ensureing the fit isn't ideal, but they've absorbed someone else's skin and sweat, and even with a good cleaning that would just make me uncomfortable.  Ideally you get all new pads, but at that cost why not just get a new helmet?

It's like, would you buy some well used gym-shoes from a thrift store?  Shirts and jeans and stuff, why not, just toss them in the washing machine and they're sanitized, but shoes?
*Nobody* washes shoes, they're permeated with someone else's nasty foot fluids and I ain't about surrounding my feet in that, no sir, even despite the fact I wear socks.


But the BIGGER issue is you bought a youth helmet.  The shells and EPS liners on youth helmets are designed purposely for CHILDREN. Even if your head is physically small enough to fit in a youth helmet, your head is going to be heavier than a child's and as such needs a thicker EPS, and a thicker EPS requires a larger shell.
Like it or not, the Darth Helmet look is the one that is the most protective.  The kids helmet might be lighter and smaller profiled, but go down in that and I can almost guarantee you'll get up with at best a concussion and at worst you just won't get up at all.

Go to a local motorcycle shop and get a NEW, ADULT helmet so you can actually be protected.  Look up CycleGear and if one is within driving distance make the trip.  If price is an issue they have some helmets as low as $50, or they offer 3/6/12mo payment plans if you want something more premium like a Shoei.

Do yourself a favor!  Your safety IS worth the investment!
"The point of a journey is not to arrive..."

-Neil Peart

Mauve

what is this? you just coming to my threads to make walls of text about stuff you assume I don't know about?


granted,thanks for the information about a kids helmet not being the right one (i think it's failed logic but ok, i'll give you a hint: i'm 5'3, 110 lbs. i think it'll be OK, Dad.)

do you regularly go around and give a bob villa impersonation?


I just find it super annoying that I logged into this dead board to find a freaking saftey lesson in one thread, and then you yammering on about how the MST class I took made the right call (you weren't even there.)


Mauve

leave the saftey school schitck to your students homie. I'm not here to learn how to ride or get tips on riding, i'm here to show off the bike I'm building.



Watcher

#27
Quote from: Mauve on September 09, 2018, 07:33:12 AM
what is this? you just coming to my threads to make walls of text about stuff you assume I don't know about?
thanks for the information about a kids helmet not being the right one (i think it's failed logic but ok, i'll give you a hint: i'm 5'3, 110 lbs. i think it'll be OK, Dad.)

If you did know about it I don't think you would have made that choice to begin with, but I won't lose sleep at night if you keep on doing you.

Quote from: Mauve on September 09, 2018, 07:33:12 AM
I just find it super annoying that I logged into this dead board to find a freaking saftey lesson in one thread, and then you yammering on about how the MST class I took made the right call (you weren't even there.)

You do know what a forum IS, right?
"The point of a journey is not to arrive..."

-Neil Peart

qcbaker

#28
Quote from: Mauve on September 09, 2018, 07:34:36 AM
I'm not here to learn how to ride or get tips on riding, i'm here to show off the bike I'm building.

You barely even know how to operate a motorcycle and you're rejecting good advice from people with much more experience than yourself... Even if you didn't ask for advice, you're needlessly endangering yourself by wearing a helmet that won't provide sufficient protection. If you're aware of that fact and don't care, fine, I won't try to convince you any further. But we're just trying to help you avoid getting hurt.

Kilted1

You may find that life gets easier when you get over your Napoleon complex and learn to take some constructive criticism.  Everyone here is just trying to be helpful.  You want to show off your bike, great!  I look forward to the pics.  You just want to rant and not have to deal with anyone's opinion but your own?  There's a section on Craigslist for that.  But if you post here or in any open forum, there's a good chance that someone is going to have an opinion, whether concurring or dissenting, and post it.  That's just the way things are.

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