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That's it... I give up!
#21
darssi, you stole the words outta my gob while I was typing, yer git
fire never sleeps
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#22
(22-04-15, 11:35 AM)maddog04 link Wrote: fazersharp....you're a genius....................a machine gun disguised as an exhaust :evil


if you're after a loud horn....I got one of these for the bandit......its a big old fella and you may have to root around to fit it but my mechanic got it tucked in just inside the nose fairing near the left fork

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Stebel-Nautilu...43db21c227


ref the hi viz... I wear a builders waistcoat but I think the long sleeved ones offer better visibility as the "body" can be "lost" behind the screen whereas the sleeves tend to be noticeable due to your arms sticking out a bit more

having said all this.....I've had dozy cnuts pull out on roundabouts in front of our fire engine en route to a job.....two tones going/blues on/white flashing headlamps on.........sometimes you just gotta admit that no matter what you do.......there's always some clown who won't see you :'(

with others on this.....take a break, don't sell her yet

That's exactly the same air horn I have, fitted under the left fairing infill, with a bit of jiggery pokery.
Worth every penny.  :thumbup
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#23
Ive got the one down from that the magnum smaller but still louder than OEM
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
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#24
(22-04-15, 12:50 PM)fazersharp link Wrote: Ive got the one down from that the magnum smaller but still louder than OEM

My OEM one sometimes works; when it hasn't fallen off somewhere  :lol
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#25
Of course ride defencely,,,but also ride Aggressive, :eek,, get out there,headlights on,,plenty of revving,,look menacing,,stay out by the whirte line, not by the kerb,,be seen,,be seen to be menacing,,frighten the fucktards :lol :lol

oh and hob nail boots,,,so anyone who tries it gets a boot in the passenger door,,i did it once,,guy cut me up on a roundabout, I followed him to the next roundabout and went up the inside a "BOOT" in his door :lol :lol :lol :lol
An ageing test pilot for home grown widgets that may fail at anytime.
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#26
There's a BLOKE who rides a bike around in summer a few miles from me, and he wears a skirt, blouse and a German army helmet for a lid.

He seems to get noticed, and people always stop as well, to look at him in amazement.  :eek :rollin :rollin :rollin
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#27
feck---------------ive been spotted
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
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#28
How short's that skirt darrsi? :b  A skirt should be just like the ideal PowerPoint presentation, short enough to keep you interested yet long enough to cover the essentials . . . 
Anyway having a family is no reason to quit riding, I started my family a bit late in life, (mid 30's) and I've came back to biking as I want my kids to take the occasional risk in life and to see me as someone other than an old middle aged man which is what I am!
I commute daily and I've found that leaving a bit earlier makes all the difference to the amount of traffic on the road. Also, I tend to see the same cars and you get to know who the cnuts are and avoid them. Giving a driver a nod of the head or an occasional wave if they do me a favour or move in to let me by goes a long way, makes for a pleasant journey and they tend to let you in at junctions, etc. :rollin
Treat everything in life the way a dog would- if you can't eat it or foc it, forget it.
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#29
(22-04-15, 04:55 PM)celticdog link Wrote: How short's that skirt darrsi? :b  A skirt should be just like the ideal PowerPoint presentation, short enough to keep you interested yet long enough to cover the essentials . . . 
Anyway having a family is no reason to quit riding, I started my family a bit late in life, (mid 30's) and I've came back to biking as I want my kids to take the occasional risk in life and to see me as someone other than an old middle aged man which is what I am!
I commute daily and I've found that leaving a bit earlier makes all the difference to the amount of traffic on the road. Also, I tend to see the same cars and you get to know who the cnuts are and avoid them. Giving a driver a nod of the head or an occasional wave if they do me a favour or move in to let me by goes a long way, makes for a pleasant journey and they tend to let you in at junctions, etc. :rollin

I ain't talking about a young fella, apparently his grandkids call him 'Nandaddy'.  :lol
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#30
Sounds like most of yous gave up years ago :lol




Anyway....i cant talk....ive done the grand sum of zilch miles this year so far...but i dont feel too bad about it.....i cant get 20 minutes to myself never mind a whole day of riding my bike....so ive fettled...& dismantled...destroyed stuff & spent a shit load on ebay....still bike stuff...still fun in a strange way...........actually i wonder whether it's worth me getting my bike on the road this year coz ill have to get tax,i surance & mot....for what....1000 miles that i might be lucky to grab hold of.


If im honest the bigget thing driving me to get my bike running this year is that i got a brand new Mottobat battery for it last year thats been used 1 season & been sat in the under stairs cupboard ever since & im so tight i cant bare to waste it by not using it soon incase it loses its charge :b


Risti you could sack riding for a wee bit but take apart the fazer bit by bit & service it all and grease & polish & stuff...gotta be better than just giving up biking hasnt it?
Easiest way to go fast........don't buy a blue bike
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#31
You're not wrong Noggy, I've considered stripping it down and servicing in fully. The downpipes could do with welding and painting,  and the engine needs a clean/degrease and repainting In parts.

Think I'm going to leave off for a bit and save up for a rear shock and the various bits that need doing. Already had new PR3's and chain and sprockets. It'll be a real shame to see it go.

Decided then. It stays for the time being.
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#32
(22-04-15, 11:35 AM)maddog04 link Wrote: fazersharp....you're a genius....................a machine gun disguised as an exhaust :evil


if you're after a loud horn....I got one of these for the bandit......its a big old fella and you may have to root around to fit it but my mechanic got it tucked in just inside the nose fairing near the left fork

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Stebel-Nautilu...43db21c227


ref the hi viz... I wear a builders waistcoat but I think the long sleeved ones offer better visibility as the "body" can be "lost" behind the screen whereas the sleeves tend to be noticeable due to your arms sticking out a bit more

having said all this.....I've had dozy cnuts pull out on roundabouts in front of our fire engine en route to a job.....two tones going/blues on/white flashing headlamps on.........sometimes you just gotta admit that no matter what you do.......there's always some clown who won't see you :'(

with others on this.....take a break, don't sell her yet


I love you just bought one!
Red Heads - Slowly taking over the world!!!
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#33
(22-04-15, 12:37 PM)darrsi link Wrote: [quote author=maddog04 link=topic=16700.msg192431#msg192431 date=1429698951]
fazersharp....you're a genius....................a machine gun disguised as an exhaust :evil


if you're after a loud horn....I got one of these for the bandit......its a big old fella and you may have to root around to fit it but my mechanic got it tucked in just inside the nose fairing near the left fork

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Stebel-Nautilu...43db21c227


ref the hi viz... I wear a builders waistcoat but I think the long sleeved ones offer better visibility as the "body" can be "lost" behind the screen whereas the sleeves tend to be noticeable due to your arms sticking out a bit more

having said all this.....I've had dozy cnuts pull out on roundabouts in front of our fire engine en route to a job.....two tones going/blues on/white flashing headlamps on.........sometimes you just gotta admit that no matter what you do.......there's always some clown who won't see you :'(

with others on this.....take a break, don't sell her yet

That's exactly the same air horn I have, fitted under the left fairing infill, with a bit of jiggery pokery.
Worth every penny.  :thumbup
[/quote]


Darrsi


when the time comes will you tell me how to wire this up.


Cheers Nick
Red Heads - Slowly taking over the world!!!
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#34
risticuss......... may have found the solution to your problem fella  :lol


Attached Files
.png   cager solution.png (Size: 77.62 KB / Downloads: 91)
Those are my principles...if you don't like them I have others.
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#35
Risti, the side effect of having children is that you become far more aware of you own safety. I have 2 and even though they are now 24 and 30, I still worry about them.
If you look back over the past years the idiots trying to kill you were still there everyday, but you were more inclined to take it in you stride and not think about it to much. Suddenly how important your life is to a small child is takes over and all the dangers suddenly become much larger.

What woke me up to reality was coming on an accident in which 6 people including 2 children were killed in two cars stopped at a set of traffic lights in Dublin many years ago, a truck turning at the lights overturned and tipped its load onto them. The driver of the 3rd car suffered serious crush injuries.
These people would have considered themselves relatively safe in relatively safe surroundings and yet were wiped out in a split second.

It might be good to take a few weeks break if it is possible, but as to selling the bike I would say no.
We had a dilemma the month after the 9/11 disaster in; do we allow our eldest to go on the student exchange to the US or not. All the  parents met and the majority of parents allowed the kids to go including us. The reason was simple, what would we do if something happened to the school bus on the busy road to school when he should have been in the US, we would never forgive ourselves for not letting him go.
I had a serious bike crash in 2002 with a lorry and for 3 weeks after it was touch and go if I survived. 9 operations and 3 months later I left the hospital The thought of giving up the bike crossed my mind more than once yet the day I went back on it 6 weeks after coming out of hospital, I had 3 volunteers for the pillion seat.  Smile

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#36
(22-04-15, 07:37 PM)noggythenog link Wrote: Sounds like most of yous gave up years ago :lol




Anyway....i cant talk....ive done the grand sum of zilch miles this year so far...but i dont feel too bad about it.....i cant get 20 minutes to myself never mind a whole day of riding my bike....so ive fettled...& dismantled...destroyed stuff & spent a shit load on ebay....still bike stuff...still fun in a strange way...........actually i wonder whether it's worth me getting my bike on the road this year coz ill have to get tax,i surance & mot....for what....1000 miles that i might be lucky to grab hold of.


If im honest the bigget thing driving me to get my bike running this year is that i got a brand new Mottobat battery for it last year thats been used 1 season & been sat in the under stairs cupboard ever since & im so tight i cant bare to waste it[size=0.7em] by not using it soon incase it loses its charge[/size] :b


Risti you could sack riding for a wee bit but take apart the fazer bit by bit & service it all and grease & polish & stuff...gotta be better than just giving up biking hasnt it?


Trickle charge the battery every now and again, that's how they're designed to function anyway, being charged daily via the bike.
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#37
(22-04-15, 08:26 PM)risticuss link Wrote: You're not wrong Noggy, I've considered stripping it down and servicing in fully. The downpipes could do with welding and painting,  and the engine needs a clean/degrease and repainting In parts.

Think I'm going to leave off for a bit and save up for a rear shock and the various bits that need doing. Already had new PR3's and chain and sprockets. It'll be a real shame to see it go.

Decided then. It stays for the time being.


:woot :thumbup
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#38
(22-04-15, 09:15 PM)Skippernick link Wrote: [quote author=darrsi link=topic=16700.msg192434#msg192434 date=1429702667]
[quote author=maddog04 link=topic=16700.msg192431#msg192431 date=1429698951]
fazersharp....you're a genius....................a machine gun disguised as an exhaust :evil


if you're after a loud horn....I got one of these for the bandit......its a big old fella and you may have to root around to fit it but my mechanic got it tucked in just inside the nose fairing near the left fork

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Stebel-Nautilu...43db21c227


ref the hi viz... I wear a builders waistcoat but I think the long sleeved ones offer better visibility as the "body" can be "lost" behind the screen whereas the sleeves tend to be noticeable due to your arms sticking out a bit more

having said all this.....I've had dozy cnuts pull out on roundabouts in front of our fire engine en route to a job.....two tones going/blues on/white flashing headlamps on.........sometimes you just gotta admit that no matter what you do.......there's always some clown who won't see you :'(

with others on this.....take a break, don't sell her yet

That's exactly the same air horn I have, fitted under the left fairing infill, with a bit of jiggery pokery.
Worth every penny.  :thumbup
[/quote]


Darrsi


when the time comes will you tell me how to wire this up.


Cheers Nick
[/quote]



Attached Files
.png   Capture.PNG (Size: 294.95 KB / Downloads: 90)
.gif   HornWiringDiagram.gif (Size: 13.3 KB / Downloads: 88)
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#39
That 2nd drawing is much easier to understand.
But my stebel magnum was a straight swap - no relay bu I just had to bend a peice of metal into a "L" shape bracket and used the origional horn mounting holes and it is all tucked under the fairing, not air horn loud but much louder than the OEM
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
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#40
I kinda know where you're coming from. Got two kids myself (age 8 & 6) and I ride through East & Central London every day, and yes, it's a stressful ride at times. Admittedly I only started riding when the kids were toddlers and sleeping through the night, so not as bad as having a babbie. I'm going to echo most of the tips already said, but in my experience I found these help:

Don't ride after a sleepless night or when run down, you just make stupid mistakes and don't spot obvious things idiots are about to do. Take alternative transport or work from home if you can.

High viz certainly isn't going to make things worse. Although there are arguments for wearing as much solid colour as possible, rather than breaking silhouette into many coloured areas. I currently have a Fluro helmet which I think helps.

A loud air horn like the Nautilus really is useful. I use this a lot and really makes a difference!  Loud cans also really work too.

When I first began riding, I was always opting for too high a gear. Especially in heavy traffic ride in lower gears, keep revs in mid range: 4-8k odd. Then you make more noise so more noticeable and you've got more acceleration and engine braking on hand if you need it. 

Gear up. Wear as much blinking armour and protection as you can. Get decent waterproofs, layers, heated gear for the shit weather days. If you're cold or wet, your concentration lapses, which you can't afford to let happen.

Consider a helmet cam. So when you do have an incident, there's no messing about with liability, made up witness and other such shite that just causes on going stress for months, years afterwards.

I've no idea how much riding experience you have, but consider a BikeSafe or IAM course to bone up further on riding defensively and safely. It may not be super exciting, but it all helps and makes you think more about how you can possibly ride better.

Don't give up on the bike entirely, when you're little 'uns get a bit older then bike really helps get you around quick enough to work around childcare arrangements. It's only with my works flexi working hours and the bike that I can get to/from childcare in time to make it doable to have both of us working. Just wouldn't be possible via tube/car.
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