3dogs
Well-known member
Check the casting that partially surrounds the oil drain bolt. I broke a piece off when loosened the oil drain bolt and it fell into the drain pan. The casting is there supposedly to protect the drain bolt from road debris.
Had the same thing happen to me and the engine hasn't exploded, the forks didn't collapse, the sky is still blue and the grass is still green.Check the casting that partially surrounds the oil drain bolt. I broke a piece off when loosened the oil drain bolt and it fell into the drain pan. The casting is there supposedly to protect the drain bolt from road debris.
That seems way too high. My '04 has never seen a "5" though 4 is fairly common on a hot day in stop-and-go traffic. A 4 on a cold day like you mentioned would be extremely rare unless major extended traffic stoppage. I think the Gen II bikes like yours have improved air flow, so should be better (?). Did it hit 4 while you were moving at all? I would get it out on the highway and see if you could get it to cycle down to 2, which should be easy to do on a cold day. (Other Gen II-ers chime in if I'm wrong.)-Before the oil change, temperature was 4-5 bars. This morning it was 3-4. However, it's 35F outside this morning.
As a "Gen II-er", I'm chiming in. We have twice as many bars on our temperature gauges. 4 bar is normal, still below half scale, equivalent to 2 bars on a Gen I.That seems way too high. My '04 has never seen a "5" though 4 is fairly common on a hot day in stop-and-go traffic. A 4 on a cold day like you mentioned would be extremely rare unless major extended traffic stoppage. I think the Gen II bikes like yours have improved air flow, so should be better (?). Did it hit 4 while you were moving at all? I would get it out on the highway and see if you could get it to cycle down to 2, which should be easy to do on a cold day. (Other Gen II-ers chime in if I'm wrong.)-Before the oil change, temperature was 4-5 bars. This morning it was 3-4. However, it's 35F outside this morning.
Glad you got the oil swapped--I'd do like some suggest and change it again for grins and forum posting fodder. :clapping:
my '04 cans are not yellowed @ 52,000. I'd guess discoloring was prolonged heavy throttle application; an Iron Butt guy would know.Can any of you confirm whether or not your exhaust is discolored? ...
Trust me, I have no regrets about this bike. $6000.00 for an 07 with 16000 miles. Just trying to figure out how the previous owner treated her. He was an older man who lived out in the sticks. I'm beginning to think he didn't take the greatest care of her. That's where I come in. I'm going to treat her right.my '04 cans are not yellowed @ 52,000. I'd guess discoloring was prolonged heavy throttle application; an Iron Butt guy would know.Can any of you confirm whether or not your exhaust is discolored? ...
At some point you're just going to want to accept and enjoy riding the bike rather than worrying about prior use.
good you've got fresh oil in it. Strong motor.
my '04 cans are not yellowed @ 52,000. I'd guess discoloring was prolonged heavy throttle application; an Iron Butt guy would know.Can any of you confirm whether or not your exhaust is discolored? ...
At some point you're just going to want to accept and enjoy riding the bike rather than worrying about prior use.
good you've got fresh oil in it. Strong motor.
Eeeeeeeek :dribble: :dribble: That's terrible. There's definitely no slipping. I've ran the piss out of her a couple of times now, and she pulls hard and fast. However, I will try again tomorrow, just for giggles.Just a newbee here but I am replacing my clutch. 16000 mi apxt. One of the friction plates exploded and was in 20 pieces when I removed it. Because not all the pieces were recovered I pulled the oil pan where I found the missing piece and a lot of friction material. If I were you I would put the engine under heavy load, full throttle in 4th gear from 3500 rpm and see if there is some slippage. Engine spinning faster than accelerating. If so have your clutch inspected. my 2 cents.
I'm almost positive the bike wasn't rode hard. The owner was the original owner, and was probably 68-70 years old. He was very easy going, and told me that he just rode the bike on the weekends, usually 300 mile rides.my '04 cans are not yellowed @ 52,000. I'd guess discoloring was prolonged heavy throttle application; an Iron Butt guy would know.Can any of you confirm whether or not your exhaust is discolored? ...
At some point you're just going to want to accept and enjoy riding the bike rather than worrying about prior use.
good you've got fresh oil in it. Strong motor.
Sounds like the oil could have been either regular car oil with friction modifiers (dodgy clutch operation) or it was just beat to hell. I assume he gave you no service records at all? If not, call the shop he used that you mentioned and get the invoices for the work performed.
Also, while you're at it might as well flush everything. I mean the rear drive, the coolant, and all the hydraulics. That way you know what, when, and where from now on.
The Gen II bikes also have a more "ticks" on the temp. gauge than those of us with Gen I's. Apples and oranges my friend.That seems way too high. My '04 has never seen a "5" though 4 is fairly common on a hot day in stop-and-go traffic. A 4 on a cold day like you mentioned would be extremely rare unless major extended traffic stoppage. I think the Gen II bikes like yours have improved air flow, so should be better (?). Did it hit 4 while you were moving at all? I would get it out on the highway and see if you could get it to cycle down to 2, which should be easy to do on a cold day. (Other Gen II-ers chime in if I'm wrong.)-Before the oil change, temperature was 4-5 bars. This morning it was 3-4. However, it's 35F outside this morning.
Glad you got the oil swapped--I'd do like some suggest and change it again for grins and forum posting fodder. :clapping:
DOH!! Thanks for the correction. And glad Lucas doesn't appear to have an overheating engine problem on his hands.As a "Gen II-er", I'm chiming in. We have twice as many bars on our temperature gauges. 4 bar is normal, still below half scale, equivalent to 2 bars on a Gen I.That seems way too high. My '04 has never seen a "5" though 4 is fairly common on a hot day in stop-and-go traffic. A 4 on a cold day like you mentioned would be extremely rare unless major extended traffic stoppage. I think the Gen II bikes like yours have improved air flow, so should be better (?). Did it hit 4 while you were moving at all? I would get it out on the highway and see if you could get it to cycle down to 2, which should be easy to do on a cold day. (Other Gen II-ers chime in if I'm wrong.)-Before the oil change, temperature was 4-5 bars. This morning it was 3-4. However, it's 35F outside this morning.
I'm almost positive the bike wasn't rode hard. The owner was the original owner, and was probably 68-70 years old. He was very easy going, and told me that he just rode the bike on the weekends, usually 300 mile rides.my '04 cans are not yellowed @ 52,000. I'd guess discoloring was prolonged heavy throttle application; an Iron Butt guy would know.Can any of you confirm whether or not your exhaust is discolored? ...
At some point you're just going to want to accept and enjoy riding the bike rather than worrying about prior use.
good you've got fresh oil in it. Strong motor.
Sounds like the oil could have been either regular car oil with friction modifiers (dodgy clutch operation) or it was just beat to hell. I assume he gave you no service records at all? If not, call the shop he used that you mentioned and get the invoices for the work performed.
Also, while you're at it might as well flush everything. I mean the rear drive, the coolant, and all the hydraulics. That way you know what, when, and where from now on.
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