shift shaft oil seal dimensions

DSN_KLR650
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Norm Keller
Posts: 712
Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2004 7:48 am

shift shaft oil seal dimensions

Post by Norm Keller » Fri Dec 06, 2013 11:53 am

 
Good tip, Michael!
 
I hadn't considered a cork screw but these "outside the box" solutions can be very useful. One aspect I like about the cork screw is that these tend to be free of sharp edges which might nick the shaft. Putting a nick or other surface damage onto the shaft is a real problem as it likely means replacing the shift shaft.
 
A push type center punch is very handy for indexing parts, or even just taking notice of the exact position avoids removing the shift lever to reposition, as John stated. Anyone else had to do this more than once on one's own bike?  ;)

John Biccum
Posts: 542
Joined: Tue May 20, 2003 4:21 am

death valley daze non-event

Post by John Biccum » Fri Dec 06, 2013 6:58 pm

I recognize that ‘tis the season for oil threads, tire threads, even political threads.  So ‘cuse me for wanting to talk about a riding opportunity!

Starting about a decade ago a group of southern California BMW street riders started showing up at Death Valley National Park in late January.  Over time the event picked up a name: Death Valley Daze (DVD).  Then many of the street BMW guys started riding GSs and KTMs and the event became less about paved  road riding and more about riding many of the lovely unpaved “roads” that date back to when the Park was an active mining area.  This SoCal group typically stays a weekend in the park or maybe makes a three-day weekend out of the trip.  Many of this SoCal crowd can be found on ADVRider.com. 

A couple of years ago, the Park Rangers became aware of a post on a website that purported to show a sand dune in the park defaced by trenching with the trench filled with gasoline and set alight.  The flames spelled “advrider”.  Needless to say the Rangers were less than pleased.  The (chief) Park Ranger demanded to know who was in charge of the Death Valley Daze event and demanded that this organizer purchase a Million Dollar liability policy indemnifying the park for any damage caused by this organized group.  The reality was that no one was really in charge, DVD was not really an organized event, no dues were collected, it was more about like-minded people showing up at about the same time.  So the unofficial event called Death Valley Daze was *[b]officially[/b]* cancelled and (surprise!) the same folks showed up anyway.  According to one telling of the burning dune story, there was no trenching, no flames, the entire dune incident was nothing more than a Photoshop-modified photograph of the (undamaged) dune.   A hoax. Or maybe the flaming dune *did* happen and the idiot(s) responsible fabricated the Photoshop tale when the rangers became upset.

A group of KLR riders from the Seattle area would frequently come down but we make a week out of it arriving Sunday and leaving Friday.  But lately most of the Seattle folks have aged out of wanting to ride that type of event.  Last year I went alone and the weather was terrible (floods!) and the park was deserted.  I was unwilling to ride the back county alone so rode some pavement and lamented making the 1600 mile round trip from Seattle.

Late January is a wonderful time to ride in Death Valley National Park.  The daytime high temps are typically in the mid-60s, the overnight lows are in typically in the mid-40s.  This same area has daytime highs in the 120 degree range in the summer!   In late January most of the snow has melted in the higher elevations, there are few tourists about and the park and the riding is excellent, it’s perfect KLR-country.

 

I have some pics of previous events on my smugmug site:

http://johnbiccum.smugmug.com/Motorcycles/Death-Valley-2012/21234406_sJmHQk#!i=1690235896&k=6sHsqhv

Who is interested in attending this non-event?  I’d probably trailer down from Seattle if there was others attending.  We could go at the same time as the ADVrider crowd (January 30-Feb 2nd) or pick a different week.  Even if we showed up coincident with the ADVRider “crowd” you will be unlikely to even see another bike unless they are part of your riding group: the park is that large and there was some many miles of “roads” to ride. 

I mentioned the burning dune incident/hoax only to note that if you show up in January and a ranger asks if you are attending the Death Valley Daze Event the factually correct and only acceptable answer is that there is no such event, DVD was cancelled a few years ago. 

 


mark ward
Posts: 1027
Joined: Fri Jan 15, 2010 11:18 am

death valley daze non-event

Post by mark ward » Fri Dec 06, 2013 8:00 pm

OK! As someone who HAS BEEN THERE DONE THAT, (with John B.) I feel the "need" to edit here a bit. 1st. John is.....WAY UNDER SELLING D.V. If you have 4 weeks to spare, (AND THE MONEY) YOU WILL NOT BE BORED. 2nd. Depending on WHERE you set up, the temps can be 28 at night. (where john wanted to go, Furnace creek WAS WARMER, that week, the where the other 10 wanted to stay.)SO (accidently) taking your grandsons, SMALLER, (6ft by SKINNY) SUMMER!! bag is a NO NO!!! (YA! ask How I know.  I couldn't zip it past my waist area. LOL) 3rd. John is WAY UNDER-SELLING D.V. 4th. see 1&3 LOL Bring a spare Camera, I mounted my cheap Nikon on the handle bars and sand got in the lens. OOPSFood and gas is PRICEY ($2. more ave.) Plan accordingly. (Gas was $5.65 gl. in April I was told.) restaurant food, (espeacialy away from Furnace creek, OUCH. $8. 1/4 lb hot dog. $8. reg size bowl of chilly.) But food IN places like, Disney, a ski-resort ETC. ARE PRICEY ALSO! just be ready for the sticker shock. [b]But I assure you, After you leave, what you WILL REMEMBER IS, #1 #3 & #4[/b][b][/b] [b]I've ALREADY been toying with, Trailering SOUTH (from W. Mich.) the Riding over.[/b]  
[b]From:[/b] John Biccum [b]To:[/b] DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com [b]Sent:[/b] Friday, December 6, 2013 7:59 PM [b]Subject:[/b] [DSN_KLR650] Death Valley Daze non-event   I recognize that tis the season for oil threads, tire threads, even political threads.  So cuse me for wanting to talk about a riding opportunity!Starting about a decade ago a group of southern California BMW street riders started showing up at Death Valley National Park in late January.  Over time the event picked up a name: Death Valley Daze (DVD).  Then many of the street BMW guys started riding GSs and KTMs and the event became less about paved  road riding and more about riding many of the lovely unpaved roads that date back to when the Park was an active mining area.  This SoCal group typically stays a weekend in the park or maybe makes a three-day weekend out of the trip.  Many of this SoCal crowd can be found on ADVRider.com.  A couple of years ago, the Park Rangers became aware of a post on a website that purported to show a sand dune in the park defaced by trenching with the trench filled with gasoline and set alight.  The flames spelled advrider .  Needless to say the Rangers were less than pleased.  The (chief) Park Ranger demanded to know who was in charge of the Death Valley Daze event and demanded that this organizer purchase a Million Dollar liability policy indemnifying the park for any damage caused by this organized group.  The reality was that no one was really in charge, DVD was not really an organized event, no dues were collected, it was more about like-minded people showing up at about the same time.  So the unofficial event called Death Valley Daze was *[b]officially[/b]* cancelled and (surprise!) the same folks showed up anyway.  According to one telling of the burning dune story, there was no trenching, no flames, the entire dune incident was nothing more than a Photoshop-modified photograph of the (undamaged) dune.   A hoax. Or maybe the flaming dune *did* happen and the idiot(s) responsible fabricated the Photoshop tale when the rangers became upset.A group of KLR riders from the Seattle area would frequently come down but we make a week out of it arriving Sunday and leaving Friday.  But lately most of the Seattle folks have aged out of wanting to ride that type of event.  Last year I went alone and the weather was terrible (floods!) and the park was deserted.  I was unwilling to ride the back county alone so rode some pavement and lamented making the 1600 mile round trip from Seattle.Late January is a wonderful time to ride in Death Valley National Park.  The daytime high temps are typically in the mid-60s, the overnight lows are in typically in the mid-40s.  This same area has daytime highs in the 120 degree range in the summer!   In late January most of the snow has melted in the higher elevations, there are few tourists about and the park and the riding is excellent, it s perfect KLR-country.  I have some pics of previous events on my smugmug site:http://johnbiccum.smugmug.com/Motorcycles/Death-Valley-2012/21234406_sJmHQk#!i=1690235896&k=6sHsqhv Who is interested in attending this non-event?  I d probably trailer down from Seattle if there was others attending.  We could go at the same time as the ADVrider crowd (January 30-Feb 2nd) or pick a different week.  Even if we showed up coincident with the ADVRider crowd you will be unlikely to even see another bike unless they are part of your riding group: the park is that large and there was some many miles of roads to ride.  I mentioned the burning dune incident/hoax only to note that if you show up in January and a ranger asks if you are attending the Death Valley Daze Event the factually correct and only acceptable answer is that there is no such event, DVD was cancelled a few years ago.   

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