Sorry I misunderstand the Warning system, Bounce, and sorry to all of you for being so obtuse.Nope. Look closer. You got OLD warning points removed because they expired. Unrelated to anything posted "here" other than time (since the events that lead to the original warning) passing.OK, somehow I got a warning and a point for my two posts here. I have no idea why?
You can see your warning points at any time. If you go from 2 to 0 (zero) that is not "getting a warning and a point" (or even 2).
You should ask this stuff in PMs.
This always works for me. When the bike is cold (first start of the day) it goes into first without any clunk. However, when it warms up it tends to clunk every time, especially after a short stop. Pulling the clutch and 'blipping' the throttle always works. My guess is it breaks the 'drag' between the clutch plates and allows a clunk free shift. Changing gear on the move is butter smooth.............I'm surprised to hear that some of you are not having success with the throttle blip to reduce the 1st gear clunk. Then it occurred to me that perhaps the clutch lever is not being pulled in before blipping the throttle? This is a critical part of the process because only if the clutch lever is pulled in will the sticking clutch plates free up.
This is correct. What also works just as well is have the bike in neutral, pull in the clutch, start the bike, and without blipping the throttle, put in lst. No clunk, easy and simple every time.I'm surprised to hear that some of you are not having success with the throttle blip to reduce the 1st gear clunk. Then it occurred to me that perhaps the clutch lever is not being pulled in before blipping the throttle? This is a critical part of the process because only if the clutch lever is pulled in will the sticking clutch plates free up.
No, not at all. What you are hearing sounds a lot worse than it really is since there are no drive forces involved. Modern transmissions are incredibly tough and basically immune to damage when you are sitting still and just stopping the input shaft with all the friction plates and hub included when shifting into first.Just curious, does that clunk damage the gears over time?
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