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Why do people do this!!!!!
#1
woke up too my alarm going off and this has happened!!!!!!


apparently the wind blow it over put i find it hard to believe as the women has tried to get the bins throw.




[Image: 20130404_103622.jpg]


NOT HAPPY!!!!!!!!!!!!
Learning every day.
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#2
Highly unlikely i reckon, if the wind was strong enough to blow it over on that side then i i'd have thought the bins would've been half way down the road as well. It's not exactly a lightweight bike is it.
Centre stand too, nah, i don't buy that excuse!
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#3
Wind, eh?

Sounds like crap to me,,, some ones had it over.
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#4
(04-04-13, 01:01 PM)darrsi link Wrote: Highly unlikely i reckon, if the wind was strong enough to blow it over on that side then i i'd have thought the bins would've been half way down the road as well. It's not exactly a lightweight bike is it.
Centre stand too, nah, i don't buy that excuse!


thats what i said but i have no prove of them knocking it over so i will have to live with the beautiful scratches and a bent clutch lever it has left  :'(


Learning every day.
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#5
Sorry to see that happen to your pride and joy but a couple of observations....

1. The bins are all up against the wall or each other so if the wind was blowing from behind the direction that the photo was taken then they wouldn't actually go anywhere

2. You've got a cover on in high winds! Basically you've attached a parachute to your bike and believe me, when they catch the wind, they exert a huge force. I know this because I did exactly the same thing and actually SAW my bike get pulled over onto it's side a few years ago in strong winds.

3. The centre stand isn't actually the most stable way to keep the bike especially if on a cross wind. The best way to keep it is on it's side stand with the bike leaning away from the wind direction (ie, the wind pushing it onto the sidestand). The tripod that this creates is wider than the centre stand.

Not having a go (I re-read this and it's seems quite picky soz), just trying to offer up advice for future reference as I know how gutting it is to see your pride and joy on it's side
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#6
Check for damage right rearside. Maybee some paint scuff could give a clue. Bad luck mate.


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#7
(04-04-13, 01:11 PM)Bracechenko link Wrote: Sorry to see that happen to your pride and joy but a couple of observations....

1. The bins are all up against the wall or each other so if the wind was blowing from behind the direction that the photo was taken then they wouldn't actually go anywhere

2. You've got a cover on in high winds! Basically you've attached a parachute to your bike and believe me, when they catch the wind, they exert a huge force. I know this because I did exactly the same thing and actually SAW my bike get pulled over onto it's side a few years ago in strong winds.

3. The centre stand isn't actually the most stable way to keep the bike especially if on a cross wind. The best way to keep it is on it's side stand with the bike leaning away from the wind direction (ie, the wind pushing it onto the sidestand). The tripod that this creates is wider than the centre stand.

Not having a go (I re-read this and it's seems quite picky soz), just trying to offer up advice for future reference as I know how gutting it is to see your pride and joy on it's side


yes i see your point but i've left it like this many of time.


I think whats happened is when they been getting the bins in they rub against it and with the wind it just gone over. 


as i have left many bikes out there and scooter on there center stand it never gone over.
Learning every day.
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#8
(04-04-13, 01:11 PM)Bracechenko link Wrote: Sorry to see that happen to your pride and joy but a couple of observations....

1. The bins are all up against the wall or each other so if the wind was blowing from behind the direction that the photo was taken then they wouldn't actually go anywhere

2. You've got a cover on in high winds! Basically you've attached a parachute to your bike and believe me, when they catch the wind, they exert a huge force. I know this because I did exactly the same thing and actually SAW my bike get pulled over onto it's side a few years ago in strong winds.

3. The centre stand isn't actually the most stable way to keep the bike especially if on a cross wind. The best way to keep it is on it's side stand with the bike leaning away from the wind direction (ie, the wind pushing it onto the sidestand). The tripod that this creates is wider than the centre stand.

Not having a go (I re-read this and it's seems quite picky soz), just trying to offer up advice for future reference as I know how gutting it is to see your pride and joy on it's side

Have you been a CSI for long?  :lol
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#9
Sorry for your troubles, bud.

I find it hard to believe that the wind did it too. But I also find it hard to believe a woman with a bin or anybody else bumping into it accidently could have done that too. I don't even think a drunk stumbling into your 30st bike will do it, and he probably would come off the worse with the bike still upright. This was malicious IMO.

Try this yourself. Delicatley and carefully force one of those bins against your bike to get a feel if it is easy to tip over.....I bet it will stay put. It takes me (a 16st male) to apply a reasonable bit of force with my hand pulling on both handlebar and grab rail to start to send my bike tipping at an angle. So I would be thinking that this was an intentional two handed "pull or shove" jobbie, either by mindless drunken louts passing by topping it over for a craic, or somebody who has a grudge against you.

Either way, what's done is done and if the truth be know....nobody knows how it happened so be careful at pointing the finger. All you can do now is figure out ways to improve the safety when parked up.
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#10
(04-04-13, 01:11 PM)Bracechenko link Wrote: Sorry to see that happen to your pride and joy but a couple of observations....

1. The bins are all up against the wall or each other so if the wind was blowing from behind the direction that the photo was taken then they wouldn't actually go anywhere

2. You've got a cover on in high winds! Basically you've attached a parachute to your bike and believe me, when they catch the wind, they exert a huge force. I know this because I did exactly the same thing and actually SAW my bike get pulled over onto it's side a few years ago in strong winds.

3. The centre stand isn't actually the most stable way to keep the bike especially if on a cross wind. The best way to keep it is on it's side stand with the bike leaning away from the wind direction (ie, the wind pushing it onto the sidestand). The tripod that this creates is wider than the centre stand.

Not having a go (I re-read this and it's seems quite picky soz), just trying to offer up advice for future reference as I know how gutting it is to see your pride and joy on it's side


I agree with you mate, i used to park my ER5 on centre stand with cover, blew over twice in the wind, now gets parked on side stand and in the high winds the cover comes off as i have seen it blow over on the side stand too.
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#11
Sorry to say before the CSI stuff starts a big enough wind will blow over a bike as Bracechenko says (mines been over too)
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#12
I have to agree it could just be bad luck and a freak gust of wind. my Mrs has a Suzuki GS125 (ok I know not as heavy as the fazer) in our back garden on its centre stand with a cover over it. More than once I have gone out to find it propped up against the fence after a windy night.
I can also see it out the kitchen window and have seen it rocking in the wind. crazy things can happen.
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Grant me the WD-40 to move those things that are stuck, the Duck tape to fasten those things that are loose, And the wisdom to know the difference.
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#13
Well if it has been blown over then maybe it'd be worth putting the bike on the side stand but facing in to the direction of the wind.
It may look a bit out of place but if it prevents it happening again then it'll be worth it.

Or is that concrete a large step? I can't tell for sure from the photo'?
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#14
(04-04-13, 05:09 PM)darrsi link Wrote: Well if it has been blown over then maybe it'd be worth putting the bike on the side stand but facing in to the direction of the wind.
It may look a bit out of place but if it prevents it happening again then it'll be worth it.

Or is that concrete a large step? I can't tell for sure from the photo'?

It's a concrete step I'm just gonna set up a cctv then we will know who has done it.
Learning every day.
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#15
(04-04-13, 06:18 PM)Young rider link Wrote: It's a concrete step I'm just gonna set up a cctv then we will know who has done it.

Only if it happens again! Hopefully it won't.
If it was windy at the time I tend to go for the wind being the culprit.
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#16
Wind has blown mine over in front of my eyes...  But parked up on a gravel drive.
I ditch the cover when the weather looks grim now - which kinda defeats the point...
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#17
Ok so, what's a CSI?
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#18
Crime scene investigator....got it  Big Grin
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#19
Ha ha  :lol
More people are born because of alcohol than will ever die from it.
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#20
Yes maybe it was the wind.


just think i can lucky with the damage as its only scratch the engine case, indicator, mirror, belly pan is cracked, clutch lever bent and ripped grip which now my heated grips don't work  :'(


Also the crash bobbin took most of the damage
Learning every day.
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