Re: Why is it so hard to find neutral?On Fri, 25 Apr 2008 11:38:34 -0400, "Blattus Slafaly ? (3) ¼
:)" <boobooililililil@roadrunner,com > wrote:
>bsr3997@my-deja,com wrote:
>> On Apr 24, 9:25 am, "Blattus Slafaly ? (3) ¼ :)"
>> <boobooililili...@roadrunner,com > wrote:
>>> Eat Dirt wrote:
>>>> When shifting from 2nd into neutral, it usually ends up in 1st. Then
>>>> when going from 1st into neutral, it ends up in 2nd. It seems that no
>>>> matter how gentle I try to shift, it goes right past neutral. Why is
>>>> this and what can I do to rectify the problem?
>>>> I'm using 10-40 oil and just got the oil replaced, so i don't suppose
>>>> it's slipping due to bad oil.
>>>> The bike is a 83 Kawi GPz305 with 23,000 km that I'm restoring. Aside
>>>> from this problem all gears seems to shift OK, although the clutch is
>>>> nearing its end but still has some life left. Since this is a bike for
>>>> the wife to learn to ride on, this is sure to prove to be a problem
>>>> for her. Even I have a tough time finding neutral when coming to a
>>>> stop, so I can just imagine the difficulty and frustration she'll have
>>>> while learning to ride the thing. On a side note (and I'm not sure if
>>>> this is relevant or just how the bike was designed) it doesn't shift
>>>> into 2nd while stopped. It shifts fine when moving but never while the
>>>> rear wheel isn't moving.
>>>> If this is an easy fix (the neutral issue), can someone please post
>>>> detailed instructions on what needs to be done? I have a service
>>>> manual that I can refer to, if the work isn't too complicated and is
>>>> something I can do on my own.
>>>> Thanks
>>> Because there is no neutral stop. You have to pull from 1st and stop
>>> half way between 1st and 2nd. It's a pisser sometimes. It's the mickey
>>> mouse part of a bike. They should have put neutral at the bottom, then
>>> 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th. It would be easy to go all the way
>>> down and up one at a stop light for 1st.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Blattus Slafaly ? 3 :) 7/8- Hide quoted text -
>>>
>>> - Show quoted text -
>>
>> Kawasaki used to have it that way. The feds told them they had to put
>> it between 1st and 2nd as would everyone else. I still have an old
>> Kawsaki tripple that I ride occasionally and can tell you that with
>> neutral all the way down you must pay attention to what gear you are
>> in or you will get a wakeup call when you downshift into neutral
>> thinking you were going to get 1st.
>>
>> Bruce
>I don't see the big deal, you have brakes don't you? I sometimes shift
>into neutral at a red light so I can take my hand off the clutch. It's
>no big deal to shift into first to take off. Don't matter if neutral is
>between 1st and 2nd or at the bottom to me. Just handier at the bottom.
>Some bureaucratic dumb retard must have come up with that standard.
It's not a big deal for me either. Nowadays, it is less
trouble than it was on one of my old Triumph Bonnies that
had a neutral between every gear when I didn't want it and
neber could find neutral when stopped in traffic. The
standard did not eliminate some machines having that odd
neutral between gears but, it does make it easier to find it
every time if you are stopped. No big deal; the engineers
figured out a way to comply with the standards and make it
work pretty much every time to just let the machine handle
the details. It works too well for the politicians or
bureaucrats to have come up with it.
Lugnut