Lou D
Well-known member
Anybody have trouble shifting into first when the bike is stopped?
Mine shifts fine.Anybody have trouble shifting into first when the bike is stopped?
Shifting was fantastic the first 5 miles from the dealer. Then not so much, stuffing it into 1st at a stop was problematic by the time I got home (30 miles).Anybody have trouble shifting into first when the bike is stopped?
It is absolutely not a clutch issue. If anything the problem is that the clutch disengages too well. Dumb luck, dog teeth on gears stop out of alignment. Stomping on the shifter will only bend the shift forks. The way to get it in gear is to release the clutch to spin the input gears, clutch again and transmission will drop into 1st as spinning gears catch dog teeth.Perhaps the clutch soak saga continues.....
40 weight oil is 40 weight at operating temperature no matter synthetic, refined, 5W, 15W, no matter what.No shifting issues here. Using Rotella T Triple 15w-40. I tried the T6 for a short period of time and found the shifting a bit notchy. In my experience on 2 Honda STs and now the FJR using an oil with lower than 15w feels a bit like running water in the tranny, no cushiony feeling.... Even the beloved and expensive Mobil One Racing 4T 10w-40 felt a little "thin" to me, but better than the 5w of the Rotella T6.
It's my understanding that the base stock used in synthetic oils tends to be lower viscosity. I've never like the feeling of these oils in my bikes. YMMV
My bike has always, from day one, shifted better with 15-40 or 20-50 than it does with 10-40 or 5-anything. Just the nature of My Beast, I learned not to put Rotella in it. Heavier Valvoline works mucho gooder but of course mine is a temperamental '07 *****. YMMV..40 weight oil is 40 weight at operating temperature no matter synthetic, refined, 5W, 15W, no matter what.No shifting issues here. Using Rotella T Triple 15w-40. I tried the T6 for a short period of time and found the shifting a bit notchy. In my experience on 2 Honda STs and now the FJR using an oil with lower than 15w feels a bit like running water in the tranny, no cushiony feeling.... Even the beloved and expensive Mobil One Racing 4T 10w-40 felt a little "thin" to me, but better than the 5w of the Rotella T6.
It's my understanding that the base stock used in synthetic oils tends to be lower viscosity. I've never like the feeling of these oils in my bikes. YMMV
+1I've had no problems whatsoever with shifting... loving the new transmission.
What weight of synthetic?+1I've had no problems whatsoever with shifting... loving the new transmission.
I have zero clunk shifting from neutral to 1st with no engagement issues. I switched to full synthetic at the 600 mile service.
"Synthetic" is not a motor oil performance specification. The color of the bottle has about exactly the same meaning.What weight of synthetic?
5W-40 is a 5 weight oil which does not thin worse than a 40 weight oil at 212°F. At 212°F it is exactly the same viscosity as a straight-weight 40.It's my understanding that the base stock used in synthetic oils tends to be lower viscosity. I've never like the feeling of these oils in my bikes. YMMV
I agree, but it is my understanding that the additives used to make that 5w oil act like 40w oil at those temps breaks down over time and the oil starts reverting back to its 5w base stock characteristics. I've also read that if you start with a 10w or 15w base the oil won't revert, over time, to characteristics as low as the oil which starts out as 5w.5W-40 is a 5 weight oil which does not thin worse than a 40 weight oil at 212°F. At 212°F it is exactly the same viscosity as a straight-weight 40.It's my understanding that the base stock used in synthetic oils tends to be lower viscosity. I've never like the feeling of these oils in my bikes. YMMV
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