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Re: Rain riding

Posted: Thu Dec 07, 2017 8:51 pm
by davenowherejones
Today I was almost hoping for rain. I tried to go riding yesterday but the ice in the mobile home park just would not melt. I even put a little salt down. The owner asked me to help him with a few things. I went in the 4x4 to McDonalds later on.

The ice this morning also would not melt. The owner wanted some more help so it was about noon before I carefully rode out to the road where there was very little ice. I wanted to go to Mission because it would be a little warmer and safer.

I got half way to Agassiz where the wind was just slamming into me at all sort of angles. The Forza would be leaning over a lot just to go straight and then the wind hit me from the other side. Some of the little mountain valleys were calm and others violent.

It was pretty pleasant by the time I got to Mission. I had a Wendy's baked potato and then had to run to the bathroom. That was unpleasant. I walked around Canadian Tire until I thought it was safe to ride the Honda Maxi-scooter home.

My bathroom break had made me late going home. I had really strange lighting with the setting sun. The wind started slamming me around again at Ruby Creek. I have ridden a lot in violent weather but a few of those gusts truly scared me.

I fuelled up in Hope and went home to make a spaghetti dinner which being really single means I have food for the next week. It is a good job I like leftovers.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Fri Dec 08, 2017 11:44 am
by Mel46
ve inn a mobile home in Canada?? I have always heard that mobile homes are built with less insulation than the average house in order to save money.
When I owned one there wasn't much insulation in the floor area for sure. We had it moved and the pipes broke, so I had to go under the home and fix them. It didn't take much effort to get to the pipes. We put skirting around the base to protect against wind, but it still seemed like the floors were cold.
My brother lived in one for 30 years, but he had to add some kind of insulation board to the underside. Eventually he added a small stove of some sort. I think it used pellets of some sort. It kept the place quite warm.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Fri Dec 08, 2017 3:20 pm
by davenowherejones
Mel46 wrote:ve inn a mobile home in Canada?? I have always heard that mobile homes are built with less insulation than the average house in order to save money.
When I owned one there wasn't much insulation in the floor area for sure. We had it moved and the pipes broke, so I had to go under the home and fix them. It didn't take much effort to get to the pipes. We put skirting around the base to protect against wind, but it still seemed like the floors were cold.
My brother lived in one for 30 years, but he had to add some kind of insulation board to the underside. Eventually he added a small stove of some sort. I think it used pellets of some sort. It kept the place quite warm.
I have a cheap old mobile home, 12x50, I think. It really rocks in the 80 km/hr winds that slam through the valley. With almost no insulation. A water pipe froze last year but it did not break (?). I have added a little insulation under the pipes. My furnace was threatening to blow up. The replacement was more than my written off Forza.

I am thinking of putting some lights on the sides of my front Forza fender. Would flood lights be better than your spot lights? I just want people to be able to see me better.

It is 5C right now. I need to do laundry and a lot of dish washing. The stinking little poodle needs a walk. Sunset is in 4 hours (4:07 pm). I might ride over to McDonalds for an extra large double double $1 coffee.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Fri Dec 08, 2017 6:54 pm
by Mel46
It is snowing right now here in Georgia. There are 3 inches on the ground in a state that might have 3 snow plows for the entire state.People drive like idiots on good days, so imagine what they are driving like now. Either they want to see how fast they can go in snow, or they drive so slow that I could walk faster.

As far as lights on your bike go spot lights work better than flood lights. I have a flood light on the right side of my bike in the front, and a spot light on the left side. I use the flood light to light up the ditch essentially. It works OK at that, but others have put duel spot lights on. Just aim them down enough that they won't bother oncoming drivers.
Also buy some smaller LED lights just to make you more visible as well.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2017 4:59 am
by you you
davenowherejones wrote:
I spent a few years of working with the elderly. To live to be 85 living in a nursing home is definitely NOT one of my goals. I saw too many people doing that. It stinks and the quality of life was really bad for a lot of them.

At age 58 and with no family, I intend to have as much fun as I can in the next few years. If I wait for perfect weather I may die waiting. There is no such thing as bad weather, only wearing the wrong clothing said a famous adventurer. I agree.

Management of risks is a fine line, its called living. I sometimes ride through 20 minutes of rain to come upon great weather at the other side. Other times I just get wet all day. I'd rather get wet than die of boredom.

I couldn’t agree more.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Mon Jan 08, 2018 7:18 pm
by MBMyer
Mel46 wrote: For night time road visibility I have two Kawell spot lights.
<snip>
https://www.amazon.com/KAWELL-Light-Lig ... ell+lights
In the pictures at Amazon, the bulbs look yellow. Are the lights perceived as white or amber?

Thanks,
Michael

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Wed Jan 10, 2018 3:45 pm
by dkazzed
I got an anti-fog insert for my HJC CL-17 at a local dealer for $20 and it's the best thing ever. I'm cheap too but I'll take safety over saving money.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2018 5:50 pm
by mhdgraphics
What kind of tires do you like for rain riding?

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2018 7:18 pm
by davenowherejones
mhdgraphics wrote:What kind of tires do you like for rain riding?
Michelin City Grip is better than Michelin Power Pure or Dunlop Scootsmart.

The smoothness of the rider matters more. Easy on the throttle and easy on the corners. Staying warm also helps. You are probably going to get a little wet even with good gear.

The tires are way better in the rain than you think possible but take it easy anyway just in case.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2018 8:25 pm
by Mel46
GeorgeSK,

I received the lights that you showed that link to. I installed them on the mirror stems. They work nicely. Pretty bright, though nowhere near as bright as the Kawells.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2018 9:20 pm
by GeorgeSK
Cool! I would think they would be more to make us more visible than to actually provide useful riding light, so "pretty bright" is hopefully OK. I wish I knew enough electronics to put in a little modulation circuit to make the lights pulse a bit. The eye picks up movement and change better than something static - something that I have noticed when viewing an oncoming bicycle with a blinking headlight vs. a static one.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Fri Jan 12, 2018 3:42 pm
by Mel46
New lights plus Kawells-2.jpg
New lights plus Kawells-2.jpg (202.57 KiB) Viewed 1146 times
Here is a picture I just took in our basement with just the new handlebar lights plus the Kawell fender lights on. With the bike running the regular lights look quite dim compared to these. I also have some baby strobe lights on the windshield and under the fender, just for night use.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Mon Jan 15, 2018 8:10 pm
by davenowherejones
Vancouver Motorcycle Show next weekend. I started up the the Forza and let it idle till it was up to full temperature. No problems. I have started shovelling the snow from shed to the driveway. Too much ice.

I have no intention of riding the Forza to the show. Too far and gets dark too early. Vancouver show is 60 km from Vancouver. It should be renamed. And the Forza isn't a 300. Too much bs in the world.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Mon Jan 15, 2018 9:32 pm
by Jge64
Do some research. If you put an engine to bed for the winter, leave it sleep. Starting it occasionally just adds condensation to the oil. It takes a good 20 minute run to get rid of it all, if you’re not gonna do that, leave it alone.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Mon Jan 15, 2018 9:45 pm
by davenowherejones
I intend to ride the scooter in the next week.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2018 4:58 pm
by dkazzed
I was just in Chilliwack Sunday picking up a tent trailer and was thinking of you going through Hope. It was sunny and 8C out, I would've been out riding all day.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2018 5:55 pm
by Ole
mhdgraphics wrote:What kind of tires do you like for rain riding?
On my Iron Butt lap of Lake Superior, the last 400 miles was in sideways rain. My Forza shod with City Grips held firm and stuck like glue. # Verypleased

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2018 6:19 pm
by davenowherejones
dkazzed wrote:I was just in Chilliwack Sunday picking up a tent trailer and was thinking of you going through Hope. It was sunny and 8C out, I would've been out riding all day.
I still have pneumonia. Getting better but not cured by any means.

I also need to shovel the snow in a path from my shed to my driveway. Hope is just a little colder than Chilliwack for it to be a bigger problem.

Soon, if I don't die first. Been reading the news of famous people dying lately. Too many cases list "Pneumonia" as the cause of death. I should quit reading the news.

Vancouver Motorcycle Show this weekend.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 6:13 pm
by you you
Jge64 wrote:Do some research. If you put an engine to bed for the winter, leave it sleep. Starting it occasionally just adds condensation to the oil. It takes a good 20 minute run to get rid of it all, if you’re not gonna do that, leave it alone.

No it doesn't.

Re: Rain riding

Posted: Wed Jan 17, 2018 9:45 pm
by gn2
mhdgraphics wrote:What kind of tires do you like for rain riding?
Black ones.