Yep, quite normal. When you burn petrol, one of the by products is water vapour. This turns into condensation and settles in your pipework once the engine is switched off. This water stays there until it either evaporates, or you fire the engine up.Sent from my AT300 using Tapatalk 2
Quote from: stevierst on 02 May 2013, 09:42:24 pmYep, quite normal. When you burn petrol, one of the by products is water vapour. This turns into condensation and settles in your pipework once the engine is switched off. This water stays there until it either evaporates, or you fire the engine up.Sent from my AT300 using Tapatalk 2Or it rusts through your downpipes.
Quote from: Skippernick on 02 May 2013, 09:57:10 pmQuote from: stevierst on 02 May 2013, 09:42:24 pmYep, quite normal. When you burn petrol, one of the by products is water vapour. This turns into condensation and settles in your pipework once the engine is switched off. This water stays there until it either evaporates, or you fire the engine up.Sent from my AT300 using Tapatalk 2Or it rusts through your downpipes. I guess there's no way to prevent this ? A blast on the throttle in neutral at the end of a ride ?