majicmaker
Well-known member
Wow! Just joined this party. I've spent 15 years going to Jamaica on a regular basis. But, I've never tasted Ganja as good as this guy had before he decided to post. Yah Mon!!
Well, now we have a thread on expanding oil...so we will go on a search tangent NEXT time!Fortunately nobody got on the SEARCH tangent
Dammit, Iggy...we were both wrong! It was 55 shifts in 10 seconds, not 55 per second.....or per minute. I guess the original post was SO stupid, we both got sidetracked by its very ignorance..This morning, I set up an experiment in a totally control environment to duplicate the shifting of both the A and the AE.......What was involved was sitting on a parked bike an mimicking shifting of both models for a 10 second period....The results I found to be astonishing...
I was able to perform 23 shifts manually alternating between up shifting and down shifting on the A model vs 55 shifts i was able to do digitally (hitting the up shift button, then the downshift button on the AE........
When your bike is on the sidestand, is the oil level at the lower tick mark?When my oil light comes on (to warn of low oil volume) and I don't have time to add oil, I just pull over, turn off the engine, put the bike on the side stand, and wait 2-3 minutes.
Then, leaving the bike on the side stand, I check the oil level in the sight glass. More often than not a miracle occurs: the oil level indicates that the oil light is WRONG.
I believe!
Back on the road...
Quit using logic in a thread that was started without itThat would be true if we all drained exactly the same amount of oil from the bikes. But as you know, there is still almost a quart of old oil left when you do an oil and filter change. Some folks will let it drain longer than others, and so leave more or less in the engine.
People that are following the manufacturers specifications don't do a filter change on every oil change, only every other. I myself have been known to leave a quality oil filter in there for a second oil change. Why not?
Plus, how accurate are you going to be when measuring that extra cup of oil? Technically the amount of oil for a change with new filter is one gallon (4 quarts) plus 7.36 oz.. What if you have one of the longer oil filters on there? It may require a few more oz.
I know that personally, I have never measured it. I just fill it until it is at the upper mark in the sight glass while on the center stand. Start the engine and let it run for a bit to fill the filter (if new). Then shut it off and wait until it settles before topping it up to the upper mark again in the sight glass.
I don't see how the sight glass can possibly be considered ambiguous. But either way, it just isn't worth stressing over.
ThisI know that personally, I have never measured it. I just fill it until it is at the upper mark in the sight glass while on the center stand. Start the engine and let it run for a bit to fill the filter (if new). Then shut it off and wait until it settles before topping it up to the upper mark again in the sight glass.
ThisQuit using logic in a thread that was started without it
Hey GMAK,Through my experience, and experiences discussed here, many areaware of the oil level "growth" issue after an oil change.
I certainly don't have the answer, but I've got a circumvention that I
accidentally stumbled upon. It does not 100% eliminate the growth,
but certainly ******* it to a barely noticeable level.
It's premium grade gas. A few summers ago I began using premium
gas in hopes of gaining a little cooler operation for the hot months.
I began to notice that at my normally short ~2K change interval, that
I hadn't yet filled the entire sight glass. Before the gas grade change,
I would complete an oil/filter change, being very careful to bring the
new oil level to the halfway point of the lower and upper margins. Of
course, this was accomplished after brief run-in to gain a stable oil
level.
As I rode, it would generally take somewhere around 2-2.5K miles
for the initial oil level to expand to, or beyond the full sight glass.
After the gas grade change, that I really just continued throughout
the entire year, my oil level at change time is still very close to the
original midpoint.
YMMV, based on any number of factors. I'm only describing this as
my experience.
Thanks.
Yes it is this hard. There are several processes on the FJR that are included in most standard Mensa tests: Is my oil level correct? How far can I ride with my gas gauge flashing? My engine temperature gauge is one block different from what I remember, should I still ride my motorcycle? I have 9k miles on my spark plugs, will I hurt my engine if I continue to ride my FJR? Why do my spark plugs look new when they have 8k miles on them? What is THE best tire? What is THE best oil? What is THE best battery? Now I have a headache from thinking about all these brain-burners and have to go back to bed...I have never seen such a cluster bump over checking oil! WOW is it really this hard...
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