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Srinath wrote:Linegeist: - This part - AND had dodgy oil pressure and dreadful oil (by today's standards) - I dont think that is quite true. Yes modern synthetics are better than old conventional. However modern non syntehtic oil - anything newer than SF rating, isn't as good as the older - Pre SE rating oils.
Can I ask on what you base this statement?
Otherwise - carry on, I am just watching this thread.
Thank you. That's very kind.
Cool.
Srinath.
Linegeist wrote:Srinath wrote:Linegeist: - This part - AND had dodgy oil pressure and dreadful oil (by today's standards) - I dont think that is quite true. Yes modern synthetics are better than old conventional. However modern non syntehtic oil - anything newer than SF rating, isn't as good as the older - Pre SE rating oils.
Can I ask on what you base this statement?
Otherwise - carry on, I am just watching this thread.
Thank you. That's very kind.
Cool.
Srinath.
Linegeist wrote:There are some of us - old gits like me for example - who think that a large single ticking over at 1300rpm sounds a little too much like a (Japanese) lawnmower, or an angry bee trapped in a bean can. We hanker for the days when one-lung motorcycles had a firing stroke at every other lamp post and you walked behind one ticking over on its stand with care, as the exhaust pulse hit you in the face like a slap from a gay hairdresser on a bad day.
I bought a Skorpion because I heard one being ridden hard several years ago and, to my 1950's-model ears, it sounded exactly like my old Manx Norton, especially on the overrun. It's called 'Nostalgia', and it's why I have resprayed my own Skorpion in 1950's black, polished all the alloy I could find, fitted a cable-driven rev counter and regularly try and position it over oil stains I find in parking bays (as the Skorp' doesn't have any nice nostalgic oil leaks of its own). I also wear an open-face (black) helmet with WWII goggles and a black leather jacket with Levis, plus put I newspaper inside my jacket to keep warm in the winter and smear pork fat on my lips to prevent them chapping in the wind
I can't see why a low tickover should cause engine damage (as long as the machine doesn't spend hours at it, natch') as the motor's not under any appreciable load. The only bearing that's copping any stress at idle is the big end bearing, and oil pressure there is more the product of centrifugal force than the meagre dribblings of the oil pump. The cams can look after themselves with modern lubricants and I suspect the cop cars referred to above clap out because they're driven by gay hairdressers on bad days.
basser23 wrote:Aha! I stand corrected...when morbidelli17 made his,he used a custom made adapter on the head,then a Grizzly manifold bolted to that.FCR carb mounted on a spigot..
So I was assuming that was what we were talking about
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