Subject: Re: Brake Woes/ Center Stand Technique/Wire loom
Author: Greg Field
Date: Jun 1, 2005, 10:12 AM
Post ID: 1718956778
If the centerstand wants to come up before you can get your toe on the
centerstand pad, tighten the bolts that fasten the stand to the frame
a little bit.
As for the rear brake, check that the actuating arm points up, rather
than down (it can be put on either way). I recently worked on an Eldo
on which the arm was put on pointing down, and braking dramatically
improved when I turned it around.
Footpegs or boards? Boards use more cranks in the system, and it's
vital that they are positioned for maximum mechanical advantage. The
means that when the shoes contact the drum the linkage rods are pulling
at 90 degrees to the arm.
GF
On Wednesday, June 1, 2005, at 07:27 AM, Ted Ward wrote:
========================================================== Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Get the latest weather, sports, and lifestyle news you can't afford to miss, all at a price you can afford to pay! Click now! http://click.topica.com/caaa9eYb1dfltb6KFeCa/TopOffers ========================================================== I had the same problem with gettin the bike up on its stand. I finally realized that you have to push the centerstand down, then kind of quickly shuffle your foot to the tip of the stand up under the bike before the stand can pull itself back up. Then push on that end point while lifting and you'll be amazed at how easily it rolls itself back up on the stand. Ted Ward Hans Rosenstein wrote:
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