DiggerDr.
Well-known member
Wow, you started this thread and after 58 posts you gave yourself the answer. Good job.
I really don't care if you believe me or not, I know what I read. I was flabbergasted to read that this is how they treated brand new motorcycles (all of them) coming off the assembly line. I showed the article to my Dad and he was mystified as well. BTW, this was back in 1979-1980 or so, don't have a copy of the rag.I'm sure that you did see that report in that magazine. It probably did say what you remember. They may have even actually seen that happen, and it may have actually been a zero mile motorcycle. I seriously doubt that they would (or could) do that to a new bike and then still sell it as new.there was a report in one of the moto mags about a visit by the staff to the Yamaha factory. They witnessed brand new XS1100s coming off the assembly line and the first test was to put it on a dyno and run WFO for 30 seconds. If the engine didn't produce power within an acceptable range it went back to a repair station to find what was wrong.
Would also be interested in a link to or photo of an owners manual that has a recommendation to accelerate at full throttle during the initial break-in period. I have never seen such a thing and am always anxious to learn something new.
I am pretty sure you misunderstand what Fred is saying. He is insinuating (I think!) that Yamaha was putting on a show for the motojournalists. It is not unheard of for a company and its engineers to mislead the public, sometimes for good reasons, sometimes for bad. I can picture the engineers laughing at the stupid, know it all writers that make their living telling everyone what the engineers did wrong and what they should have done with a particular motorcycle.I really don't care if you believe me or not, I know what I read. I was flabbergasted to read that this is how they treated brand new motorcycles (all of them) coming off the assembly line. I showed the article to my Dad and he was mystified as well. BTW, this was back in 1979-1980 or so, don't have a copy of the rag.I'm sure that you did see that report in that magazine. It probably did say what you remember. They may have even actually seen that happen, and it may have actually been a zero mile motorcycle. I seriously doubt that they would (or could) do that to a new bike and then still sell it as new.
Would also be interested in a link to or photo of an owners manual that has a recommendation to accelerate at full throttle during the initial break-in period. I have never seen such a thing and am always anxious to learn something new.
Dan
You are going to have to lighten up. This is a rough crowd if you have thin skin. Let it roll off your back and you will be fine.Actually in the beginning of this post you'll see that someone else did. I chose to not point that out but help you in my reply. Thank you for pointing out a good job and in return I'll point out the lack of attention to detail could have saved us both time.
@bergman - Yes, RFH got what I meant.I am pretty sure you misunderstand what Fred is saying. He is insinuating (I think!) that Yamaha was putting on a show for the motojournalists. It is not unheard of for a company and its engineers to mislead the public, sometimes for good reasons, sometimes for bad. I can picture the engineers laughing at the stupid, know it all writers that make their living telling everyone what the engineers did wrong and what they should have done with a particular motorcycle.I really don't care if you believe me or not, I know what I read. I was flabbergasted to read that this is how they treated brand new motorcycles (all of them) coming off the assembly line. I showed the article to my Dad and he was mystified as well. BTW, this was back in 1979-1980 or so, don't have a copy of the rag.I'm sure that you did see that report in that magazine. It probably did say what you remember. They may have even actually seen that happen, and it may have actually been a zero mile motorcycle. I seriously doubt that they would (or could) do that to a new bike and then still sell it as new.
Would also be interested in a link to or photo of an owners manual that has a recommendation to accelerate at full throttle during the initial break-in period. I have never seen such a thing and am always anxious to learn something new.
Dan
Not saying the writers are stupid, just saying that I bet those engineers get pissed reading the articles that only seem to criticize their work.
Okay Mr. Meanness, since you are obviously feeling left out, YOU can kiss my fat, hairy butt.Now that you two clowns are done kissing, maybe we can get back to breaking in engines...Maybe.
I'm a follow the manual kind of guy. I break in my engines, guns, whatever, according to what the manufacturer says, and so far it hasn't hurt me. However, I do wonder about stuff sometimes, specifically, the differences in engines.
My 2007 FJR required the 600 mile service and what...1000 mile break-in before going WFO? It's been so long, I don't remember. However, when we bought our new Yamaha Jet Ski a couple years ago, the break-in period was ONE hour, and then WFO was all grins. One hour on a MC is 60 miles, +/-, so how or why is the jet ski engine ready to run that soon? No idea, but what I do know is I spend a lot of time on that ski thinking about how I could spoon that motor into my FJR. That jet ski pulls like a train...a 180 horse 1800CC power plant in my FJR would make me smile, but the mileage would suck. I guess it's a trade.
Either way, all this engine stuff is why I prefer to buy my vehicles new. That way, I know how they have been broken in and know they were cared for, according to what makes me feel better from day one.
Ok RFH...You two can go back to kissing.
You could very well be correct (my misunderstanding what Fred said). As I recall, the visit by the authors to the major Japanese motorcycle manufacturers was a rare (if not unprecedented) event. Up to that point, the major assembly lines were behind closed doors and not open to anyone outside the respective companies. I believe they may have visited each of the "Big Four" but I only remember the details of the Yamaha assembly line visit since I was a new owner of a 1979 XS11 at the time. I can't remember which magazine published the report since I subscribed to at least five monthly magazines at the time (Motorcyclist, Cycle, Cycle World and I forget the rest).I am pretty sure you misunderstand what Fred is saying. He is insinuating (I think!) that Yamaha was putting on a show for the motojournalists. It is not unheard of for a company and its engineers to mislead the public, sometimes for good reasons, sometimes for bad. I can picture the engineers laughing at the stupid, know it all writers that make their living telling everyone what the engineers did wrong and what they should have done with a particular motorcycle.
Not saying the writers are stupid, just saying that I bet those engineers get pissed reading the articles that only seem to criticize their work.
Way back in the day (late 60s) we did a garage ring & valve job on our Ford V-8 pickup truck engine (the old "Y" block). Instructions that came with the new set of rings said in order to seat the rings properly to accelerate from 50mph to 70mph at wide open throttle ten times in high (three speed column shift transmission).Thanks for the link C&C. So it does appear that Chrysler believes it is a good idea to go full throttle on at least their Dodge Caravan engines, which does give some support to Motoman's theories. That is the first I've seen of a manufacturer recommending such a thing.
I wonder why it is not more universally supported? Maybe what it comes down to is that: nothing you do will make much of a difference?
My recollection is that, as a specified step of the test at the conclusion of final assembly, each XS11 was run WFO on a dyno for 30 seconds to measure and record power output levels. It is just as easily possible that this was just a demonstration for the visiting "round eyes" and not a regular procedure. I can't be sure. It would be nice to find a copy of the mag with the article just for old time's sake.
Dan
...My recollection is that, as a specified step of the test at the conclusion of final assembly, each XS11 was run WFO on a dyno for 30 seconds to measure and record power output levels...
OMG, to a carpenter the whole world looks like nails, right down to the analogies...I think they might grab a bike from a lot of production for Quality Control. If the bike meets specs, then the whole lot is approved...To me this is completely normal for manufacturing, but I work in food so not apples to apples.
Yeah, it's not the same industries so the criteria are much much different. Since I have exactly zero experience in motorcycle manufacture (or vehicle manufacture for that matter), I have no idea if this is a legitimate test, but it makes sense to me that you would test a representative sample of your finished good to make sure it performs adequately along it's entire performance curve against specifications....My recollection is that, as a specified step of the test at the conclusion of final assembly, each XS11 was run WFO on a dyno for 30 seconds to measure and record power output levels...OMG, to a carpenter the whole world looks like nails, right down to the analogies...I think they might grab a bike from a lot of production for Quality Control. If the bike meets specs, then the whole lot is approved...To me this is completely normal for manufacturing, but I work in food so not apples to apples.
In volume manufacturing of parts and equipment there is lot sampling with the lot sample size in part determined by production volume. This is generally called AQL sampling -- Acceptable Quality Limits, by random sampling of a certain number within the lot they can determine the general quality of the whole lot. I would hope this was done by the engine manufacturer before a very expensive and difficult to install and replace part like the engine is already installed in a frame. A motorcycle that is fully assembled would make more sense to test drive the system as a whole instead of torturing just the power train on the dynamometer.
There used to be oil commercials where they would run an engine with the oil companies fantabulous oil product, then drain the engine and run it without oil to demonstrate that even a slight residual film of their oil would allow the engine to run ok. After running the engine without oil engineers would test the engine and declare that it works and runs like new. What they don't say is after actually tearing the engine down there was extensive damage to bearings and other internal parts -- but it ran just fine. How much longer it would run just fine was never mentioned. Whipping a green engine on a dyno without any break-in first certainly has the possibility of doing hidden damage that would endanger long term reliability even though it 'ran just fine' after the dyno test.
Yes it did. And since it is now on the internet...well it must be true.As a machinist I break in easy.There's a lot of metal parts in the whole assembly getting rubbed together for the first time.
I think the old days of needing to "seat the rings" are gone.
*edit*
That sounded authoritative didn't it?
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