I have a dremel...and a tiny bit of sense...i may go for it!
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What's the worst that can happen? (Famous last words...) :p[/QUOTE]
WELL....as a long time ER and acute care RN, I can say this...here in Mississippi, many ER visits began with the phrase, "Hey ya'll, watch this!" |
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Hummm, I seem to recall some exciting events that started with the words "Hold my beer and watch this!"
Peter Y. |
Ahhh yes, the final "weight removal" step to every KLR 650 (fire always makes things lighter)
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Passing gas.
Katflap is quite right here: http://www.chinariders.net/showpost....7&postcount=42
I'd like to expand on that by pointing out that burning off the fumes from the crankcase is best for the environment since the spent gasses are processed by the cat-converter. That doesn't include the vapors/liquids that can also be included in the mixture emitted from the breather. I don't know if the OCS would be more effective if placed further downstream towards the air filter, or if pyoungbl's catch can (after the OCS) stuffed with metal mesh would trap nearly all the liquid and allow only the fumes (gasses) to enter the filter housing and thus cleanly burn away. Proper operating temp is key to getting the water boiled out and turning gasoline/petrol back in to usable energy. Eagerly watching to see what grows out of the collective experiments. |
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I have had 5 oil analyses with the stock 70C thermostat in place. Even when there was a high percentage of fuel in the crankcase oil, the % of water in the oil was zero. jb |
LOL - yeah, I hope that things don't go quite so pear-shaped when I work on things.
The trouble with me is that I tend to go overboard (probably my OCD kicking in), like using the Dremel to modify the thermostat housing, but only to discover a "pocket" in the casting, so I had to Dremel further to remove the pocket. And I polished the interior of the thermostat while I was there. Yeah... OCD. Too late to ride, so it'll have to wait to the weekend, but looking forward to seeing the results from installing the 90* Celsius thermostat. [IMG]http://i1060.photobucket.com/albums/...8/IMG_5120.jpg[/IMG] |
I've put about 100 miles on the RX3 with the 90C.
The only difference I could tell was the engine temperature gauge went to 3 bars and stayed there. jb |
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http://i248.photobucket.com/albums/g...psbpnmxaih.jpg |
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jb, I think you and I are seeing the same thing on the instrument panel but describing it differently. My bike displays 4 bars...counting the one that is always on. As you know I'm using the 90C thermostat too. A couple days ago it was about 40F outside and it did not take long to get the left radiator up to 195F and the oil up to about 180F. That's exactly what I was hoping for. What temps are you seeing at, say, left radiator input, right radiator output, and the sightglass? So far I'm very happy with my higher temp thermostat.
Peter Y. |
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jb |
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I'm relying on the next oil analysis to tell me if the higher temp thermostat helps or not. jb |
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