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Well New Project time!
Moderators: paul doran, Taffus, KeithZ1R, chrisu
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Which is the best way for the oil cooler lines?
Mocked up at the weekend with hose pipe, not that sure that this is the right way? Any advice gents!
Mocked up at the weekend with hose pipe, not that sure that this is the right way? Any advice gents!
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
Put the cooler on the other way up and feed the lines over the top of the engine and then down between the carbs thats how I had mine setup on my Harris and thats what I am going to do with my current project
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Computer and Laptop repairs.
Cooler can go either way but I favour the hoses feeding in at the top if possible.
This has a few advantages.
1 - Oil will circulate quicker from cold as the cooler remains full of oil and won't drain down when stood.
2 - Due to the cooler holding oil this increases the systems oil capacity slightly.
3 - It usually keep the hoses away from the exhaust area.
Only minor downside is having to drain the cooler at oil change time.
This has a few advantages.
1 - Oil will circulate quicker from cold as the cooler remains full of oil and won't drain down when stood.
2 - Due to the cooler holding oil this increases the systems oil capacity slightly.
3 - It usually keep the hoses away from the exhaust area.
Only minor downside is having to drain the cooler at oil change time.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Thanks gents I will turn it round and measure the length of hose I will need, put that on the list for the weekend amongst house painting and gardening!
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Bit the bullet and placed an order with Motogadget, quite a few people have said that their stuff is top quality and above all easy to fit. I've ordered a speedo, was going to order a GPS one but the only one I could find was in Italy and after several emails to the company gave up! Ordered the M-box which does away with fuses and relays, 4 really small indicators and an remote ignition!
Also ordered a pair of Vitaloni mirrors for that classic look!
The wife is flying back to the UK in a few weeks so have to get my parts in, seen an original Norton F1 panel off a race bike, talking to the bloke now about a price, love to be a fly on the wall when that turns up at her Mums house
Also ordered a pair of Vitaloni mirrors for that classic look!
The wife is flying back to the UK in a few weeks so have to get my parts in, seen an original Norton F1 panel off a race bike, talking to the bloke now about a price, love to be a fly on the wall when that turns up at her Mums house
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
PS if your a friend of mine on Facebook please don't mention about the wife flying back as its a surprise Fooking expensive bloody surprise but I can't moan!
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Had to contact Motogadget nice bunch of people, got back to me straight away via email. I'd cocked up with the order and needed to add too it, not a problem at all! So I've ordered their wiring loom, didn't know about it until I was reading the web site yesterday at work and stumbled across it, should make life a lot easier! Also stumbled across some utube videos on their site, bloody amazing gear and simple to wire up, no relays or fuse box!
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Got my act together this week and decided to borrow a trailer and take the bike to get brake lines and the oil cooler lines.
Managed to find a small company that specialise in Hell brake line for motor racing, the bloke didn't really want to help until I told him it was a Harris then everything changed, took the bike to have the front and rear brake line done and he ended up changing the line for the rear suspension as he said the original one didn't look right, didn't charge me for it as well. He just loved the frame, all together $200, result!
Then off to my local Pirtek, I give them quite a lot of work with being in Forklifts, so I dropped the bike off to them and went back a few day latter!
They went the extra mile as well, $100 another result!
So at the moment I'm very happy with what's going on with the Harris!
Managed to find a small company that specialise in Hell brake line for motor racing, the bloke didn't really want to help until I told him it was a Harris then everything changed, took the bike to have the front and rear brake line done and he ended up changing the line for the rear suspension as he said the original one didn't look right, didn't charge me for it as well. He just loved the frame, all together $200, result!
Then off to my local Pirtek, I give them quite a lot of work with being in Forklifts, so I dropped the bike off to them and went back a few day latter!
They went the extra mile as well, $100 another result!
So at the moment I'm very happy with what's going on with the Harris!
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
Bought some thin board at the weekend and have started to list the electrical parts so I can make the loom up, any tips and advice would be greatly appreciated. At the moment I'm not too confident but really want to give this a go
So Gents what are your best tips when making a fresh loom up?
So Gents what are your best tips when making a fresh loom up?
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
Is Vic There wrote:So Gents what are your best tips when making a fresh loom up?
Have a look at the thread on building Horace in Projects. I built a loom from scratch using all motogadget stuff: m-Unit, Motoscope Pro and the breakoutbox-b.
Be aware though that the m-unit needs to be away from the coils and the ignition needs to be well suppressed or there is RFI interference
Started off with their switchgear but dropped those in favour of racing stuff from bikesportdevelopments.com - pricey but good quality and the a Harris is worth it!
other than that - top quality materials, cable, connectors & multipin plugs plus tools and always buy more than you think you need
regards
Howie
http://www.z1ownersclub.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3841
CD185, Maggot, Z1-R, Horace, Monster 620ie
zed1015 wrote:Cooler can go either way but I favour the hoses feeding in at the top if possible.
This has a few advantages.
1 - Oil will circulate quicker from cold as the cooler remains full of oil and won't drain down when stood.
2 - Due to the cooler holding oil this increases the systems oil capacity slightly.
3 - It usually keep the hoses away from the exhaust area.
Only minor downside is having to drain the cooler at oil change time.
Vic did you change your mind
Zeds-R-Us
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- Hardcore
- Posts: 1285
- Joined: 8th Nov 2011
- Location: Brisbane, Australia.
000zeds wrote:zed1015 wrote:Cooler can go either way but I favour the hoses feeding in at the top if possible.
This has a few advantages.
1 - Oil will circulate quicker from cold as the cooler remains full of oil and won't drain down when stood.
2 - Due to the cooler holding oil this increases the systems oil capacity slightly.
3 - It usually keep the hoses away from the exhaust area.
Only minor downside is having to drain the cooler at oil change time.
Vic did you change your mind
Being honest the company who did the lines for me did it as a bit of a favour as I use them for hydraulic lines, so I didn't want to upset the apple cart so to speak! The bloke who fitted them said this would be the easiest for him and I couldn't argue as its a freeby.
Norton 850 Command, Harris Mag 2, Harris Mag 5, Triumph Steve McQueen, Suzuki RGV250 Barry Sheene, RG250 Walter Wolf, RD125LC, Lambretta Li150, Vespa 50N.
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