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25-05-21, 09:14 AM | #9641 | |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
Quote:
To be honest I dislike textiles because they are never as well fitting as leathers, can ride up in a crash exposing skin and primarily; the armour moves - so you might find your knee armour is wrapped around your calf or on top of your knee cap at the point a car bumper slams into your unprotected, lower knee. Paired with the fact you never really want to be wearing them when it's sunny and you don't intentionally ride in driving rain my best combo is good leathers and a cheap non breathable boil in the bag suit under the seat I can chuck on when it rains. Leathers are not good for a commute though so I mainly use textiles for that. When I commuted daily and I knew it was definitely going to rain/heavily I'd shelve the textiles and put on good quality plasticy over trousers that walkers/snowboarders use. If your helmet doesn't have a 'pinlock' add it to your helmet shopping list. Transformed my riding world (you can see when it rains).
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Last edited by Dave20046; 25-05-21 at 09:15 AM. |
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25-05-21, 11:02 AM | #9642 |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
Well, I don't know what that particular lurgy was, but it was really unpleasant.
Started last wednesday with a feeling of slight feverishness, headache. and aching joints It just built until this morning at around 5am, when the fever broke. Couldn't sleep properly, slightly delirious. Got up and 4am, went down stairs, and drank a pint of orange juice and water, and swallowed two paracetamol. Got back into bed, and within 20 minutes the sweat was just pouring out of me. Finally got up at around 8.15 and my joints had pretty much stopped aching. Head still ached a bit, but that could be dehydration. Feeling fragile but on the road to recovery. I lay in bed last night wondering if I was going to have to talk to Steph, and see if she had a plan B regarding my tour this weekend, but it looks like all I need is two or three days of recovery time. I really hope nobody else gets that bug. Adam, you have my sympathy! |
25-05-21, 11:06 AM | #9643 |
John T
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
Glad you're feeling better Gary
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25-05-21, 12:09 PM | #9644 |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
But you shouldn't have to pay £2,000 for good gear ! Anyway, some good comments on clothing. I have a pinlock visor fitted by the way, but I also wear spectacles which don't help !
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25-05-21, 12:21 PM | #9645 | |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
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Backing has gone as have the seams on the waterproof liner. I'm now in Screwfix hi-wiz over-trouser on top if it looks like rain as a new bike and cellar conversion have supped up the funds.
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Had an SV or three. Street triple R - gone but not forgotten. Now trying the lunacy that is KTM with a Superduke GT. for the pillion capability of course. |
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25-05-21, 12:28 PM | #9646 |
John T
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
When I lived and worked in London during the 80's, I studied what despatch riders wore. It boiled down to two extremes, yellow plastic jacket and trousers that firemen used to wear or the plastic Rukka gear. So in short, buy cheap and replace often, or buy expensive and replace rarely.
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25-05-21, 12:52 PM | #9647 | |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
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glad to hear your ok now Gary xx |
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25-05-21, 01:42 PM | #9648 | |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
Quote:
Some DC systems have both say a +24v rail and -24v rail, with a common or 0 volt rail, referred to as ground ( often grounded to a metal chassis in the system ). Grounding one leg of the DC also means the circuit is more resistant to interference.
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2016 SV650 AL7 Courage is resistance to fear, mastery of fear, not absence of fear - Mark Twain Last edited by SV650rules; 25-05-21 at 01:53 PM. |
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25-05-21, 02:15 PM | #9649 |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
My Cub is +ve earth, Suzy -ve earth, never heard either way described as ground or common! (But I do understand were Bilbo is coming from)
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25-05-21, 02:35 PM | #9650 |
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Re: Gripe of the day - What is yours?
I used to work on, amongst other things, a platesetter. A laser device used for writing direct to an aluminium printing plate (which would then go on the press). I was in the US and all reference points were to "ground" (which we call "earth" in the UK) so we would measure from the device chassis to the building's ground to ensure we were "grounded" and then check the +5V, +/- 12V etc. to chassis (which was ground). The drum drive motor was 80V dc floating, so you measured between the + and - terminals of its driver, not between + and ground (or else you'd get a spark and a dead drive unit).
I also got into the habit of measuring between ground and neutral because, in the US, it would frequently not be 0V and any time it went over 0.6Vac weird faults would develop. If we wanted 220Vac, we would take 2 phases but I had one customer with an imagesetter (writes to film) that kept blowing boards and I found that one phase was 180Vac and the other phase was 60Vac so we got 220Vac but with horrendous distortion and noise. Didn't older Brit bikes used to have separate wires going to each device - ie a positive and a negative wire instead of one wire and a chassis reference?
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