Interesting thing happened on my way home from a party a while back. I was riding my 51 Pan home and had to travel through Melbourne to get there. Everything was fine while I was belting along the freeway but as I started to get into the built up areas I would roll off the throttle to decelerate with the traffic and eventually stop at the traffic lights. As soon as I got to a stop the bike would let out a whopping backfire that sounded like a shotgun. I would have to slide out the side stand and kick it into life, which it did on the first kick
This became standard routine for about about 6 sets of traffic lights. After the first couple of shots, I pulled off and had a quick look for loose wires or obvious problems but could see nothing. I got to one intersection where I was part of 4 lanes of traffic. I was keeping near the footpath in case the bike would not start. As I rolled to a stop I heard the engine do that sound of dead engine brake, so I rolled up on the footpath.
I kicked it. Nothing. I kicked it again and it let out a real cracking BOOM and started. I slung my leg over the bike and looked at the traffic to see if it was moving yet. I saw the head of a young teenage girl slowly come up from a crouched position in the car closest to me. She was peeping over the window for the source of the sound and I'm guessing she thought it was a gun shot. Sad sign of the times.
I got home, threw the bike in the shed and thudded the roller door down. I'd had enough of motorcycles for a bit. I got to the search, and destroy, mission a few days later. It turned out to be the brake light sender,shorting from within. I went to my box and got a good one and got rid of the problem.
Been collecting these for a while and need one for the bike I am building so I tested the shooter to see what was happening. I decided on open heart surgery and pried back the tangs holding the bakerlite plate in place.
There was nothing obvious but a little more investigation saw the hole in the bakerlite plate was flogged out. This was allowing the rod to skew sideways and dead short the spring to the back of the electrical connection. Time for some corrective measures.
This became standard routine for about about 6 sets of traffic lights. After the first couple of shots, I pulled off and had a quick look for loose wires or obvious problems but could see nothing. I got to one intersection where I was part of 4 lanes of traffic. I was keeping near the footpath in case the bike would not start. As I rolled to a stop I heard the engine do that sound of dead engine brake, so I rolled up on the footpath.
I kicked it. Nothing. I kicked it again and it let out a real cracking BOOM and started. I slung my leg over the bike and looked at the traffic to see if it was moving yet. I saw the head of a young teenage girl slowly come up from a crouched position in the car closest to me. She was peeping over the window for the source of the sound and I'm guessing she thought it was a gun shot. Sad sign of the times.
I got home, threw the bike in the shed and thudded the roller door down. I'd had enough of motorcycles for a bit. I got to the search, and destroy, mission a few days later. It turned out to be the brake light sender,shorting from within. I went to my box and got a good one and got rid of the problem.
Been collecting these for a while and need one for the bike I am building so I tested the shooter to see what was happening. I decided on open heart surgery and pried back the tangs holding the bakerlite plate in place.
There was nothing obvious but a little more investigation saw the hole in the bakerlite plate was flogged out. This was allowing the rod to skew sideways and dead short the spring to the back of the electrical connection. Time for some corrective measures.
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