bike rides again. problem was a bad ground cable. testing it gave good results, but with the start motor turning, the connection went away. will have the bike back on Saturday ... a month and a half without bike pfffff
We speak a strange Sout style dialect. A couple two tree…..means more than one. Dees, dem does means these, them those.what do you speak then?hammond is in Indiana, correct?
I once heard English defined as "3 continents separated by a common language". <lol>you mean Hoosier twang ? i found this https://www.dialectsarchive.com/indiana-2 . still pretty understandable. we had an exchange student from Kentucky together with another one from Australia. the proper English we learned a school didn't help a bit
LolI once heard English defined as "3 continents separated by a common language". <lol>
Sounds like the GenII wiring harness recall symptoms ?? I'd would have hoped Yammy would have improved harness a bit to avoid a repeat. then again... sometimes things just happen... and it is a 10yr old bikeYes , She's Back! what a feeling !! @RossKean : an electronic expert from Yamaha came to check it out. apparently it was a ground cable in one of the wiring harness that was broken. when testing everything was ok, the current passed, but when they let the start motor turn, the current didn't passed, passed, didn't.... . they didn't changed the bunch oh cables, they put just one new cable beside the wiring harness ( like a shunt?)
As for Belgium and languages, yea my cousins (southern central area of Belgium), all speak 5+ languages.I work with a colleague from Belgium. She impresses me because she’s fluent in 6 languages. I barely speak English.
The English I had the most trouble with was rural Scotland. I recall 4 of us standing around listening to a docent, and looking at each other and shrugging. Every 3rd or 4th word we recognized as english but we had absolutely no idea what the guy was saying. And we really tried... he repeated himself... He understood us, but in the end, we admitted defeat and gave up in trying to understand him. never was sure if he was playing with us, or not.you mean Hoosier twang ? i found this https://www.dialectsarchive.com/indiana-2 . still pretty understandable. we had an exchange student from Kentucky together with another one from Australia. the proper English we learned a school didn't help a bit
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