Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Delta Technical Center Parade - Japan
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
How to pick up a dropped bike
This is a question that I have pondered on and worried about. I came across this video through Girls On the Move. I thought I would share...
Go to: How to pick up a dropped bike
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Putty on the tank


My tank all nice and shiny after the wire bush treatment. No more rust :-) At least for now!
Friday, April 10, 2009
The rust is back!
Thursday, April 9, 2009
The bike I rode today

SCORPIO





Available Colours
Yamaha Blue
WIN THE RAT RACE
You don’t need twenty large in the bank just to buy a crisp new scoot that will get you to work with a few grins along the way. And here’s proof.
Scorpio’s delicious simplicity equates to maximum value for a very attainable price point, with a strong, reliable four-stroke SOHC engine that – being a Yamaha – you know is going to last.
STING IN ITS TAIL
Scorpio is pleasantly responsive at the go-tube too. And together with the comfortable suspension, disc front brake and light, neutral-handling chassis, it adds up to a highly manoeuvrable commuting package that’s surprisingly good fun.
What’s more, a Scorpio would be a better learner bike than the majority of second hand bikes.
* The Scorpio formula starts with a newly-developed four-stroke engine that’s strong, economical and stone reliable.
* The lightweight chassis, super responsive steering and easy-to-use controls make the Scorpio a simple, no fuss commuter that’s cheap, efficient, and most of all, fun.
* Scorpio mounts a 223cc air cooled 4-stroke SOHC single cylinder that boasts user friendliness, responsiveness and enough speed for freeway travel.
* No fuss ultra reliable electric starting comes with rock solid kick-start back up.
* A 13.5 litre fuel tank capacity maximises range between stops, and with Scorpio’s frugal appetite for fossil fuels, you’ll be surprised at how far you get.
* Low, 770mm seat height allows most riders to put both feet on the ground, inspiring maximum confidence and allowing easy car park manoeuvrability.
* Incredibly low, 124kg dry weight contributes significantly to Scorpio’s easily handling, and superb low-speed agility.
* Twin piston front disc and sealed rear drum brakes provide powerful stopping control in all conditions.
* Not just a weekday commuter. Comfortable pillion seating and footpegs mean Scorpio adapts to your lifestyle.
* Single-sided exhaust emits a satisfying note without being overly noisy, and features chromed heat shield.
* If Scorpio’s blend of style with substance and economy aren’t enough to float your boat… ask the price!
SPECIFICATIONS
ENGINE/IGNITION/TRANSMISSION
Type Air cooled 4 stroke SOHC, 2 valve, single cylinder
Displacement - (cc) 223
Bore Stroke - (mm) 70 x 58
Compression 9.5:1
Fuel Management BS30 X 1
Ignition CDI
Starter Electric/Kick
Fueltank - (L) 13
Transmission Constant mesh 5-speed
Final Transmission Chain
CHASSIS
Length - (mm) 2020
Width - (mm) 770
Height - (mm) 1090
Seat Height - (mm) 770
Wheelbase - (mm) 1295
Clearance - (mm) 165
Dry Weight - (kg) 126
FRONT END
Suspension Front Telescopic fork
Tyres Front 80/100-18 47P
Brakes Front Hydraulic single disc brake
REAR END
Suspension Rear Swingarm
Tyres Rear 100/90-18 56P
Brakes Rear Drum brake (Leading, trailing)
Brushing up...
I strolled purposefully to the training centre; I could see a coupe people packing away gear into the nearby shipping container. One of them came up to me, a woman, strongly built and probably in her late 40’s. She was about my height, dark haired with a weather-beaten but friendly face. She smiled, exaggerating the weathering of her face, but not in an unpleasant way. The woman held out her hand, and I shook it and smiled, her grip was firm.
“I guess you are Gwyn?” She nods, “I’m Izzy, here for the private tuition.”
Gwyn offers me a drink, and I go for water, my nervousness making me thirsty, as is the warmth of the autumn day. Foam cup in hand she leads me to the classroom where we sit down and discuss what I have done before riding wise, and what I want to get our of today’s session. In all this time she is re-assuring that it is common for people needing extra experience after doing their pre-learners course, as it is sometimes hard for people like myself who haven’t ridden before to pick things up straight away and so failing h course the first time. She also said the “odds were stacked against me” with the type of class I was put in. After our talk and some initial paperwork, it was time to “play” and Gwyn put it.
Outside I had a choice of bikes, two types of dirk bikes and the 225cc Scorpio, the last of which I had ridden in the intro course and pre-learners. Gwyn said her preference was for the dirt bikes, but others like the “Scorpie”, which is the heaviest of the lot. A dilemma, to go with the bike that caused so many problems for me in the pre-learners, but it was something familiar and closer in style to the one I own. I went for that one, and if I had too much trouble I would try one of the dirt bikes.
Gwyn went through with me what I remembered after not riding so many months, but things were surprisingly still there. She saw my tension and kept telling me to breathe. Her style and teaching manner I noticed was similar to my own when I teach pracs, which made me smile and relax even more.
Unlike doing the pre-learners course, there wasn’t the pressure, I did things at my pace, and I picked things up reasonably well, or so I was told. I was encouraged to go beyond what I had done before in each step, but only to what I was comfortable and I knew I could back down, but I didn’t feel that I needed to. There wasn’t the macho testosterone thing that went on the last course that applied so much pressure. This time when I did do something wrong, it was explained to me, logically; not only how to fix it, but why mechanically it made sense to do it that way. That logic made me understand the machine better, understand how to handle it better and stuff up less. In over and hour I only stalled it twice. Once when I didn’t have enough revs when I went into second, and the next was when I accidentally went into third.
By the end I was having so much fun, the buzz was amazing going as fast around the tight corners as I felt I could, controlling the bike with the rear break and even staring to lean into the corners. Shifting up and down seemed so much easier. Sometimes I would make it a little messy and jittery, but other times you could hardly hear when I was up-shifting.
It all had to come to an end, but I didn’t want it to, I wanted to ride longer, but my time was up and I think Gwyn sensed I needed a bit of break before I started making mistakes and then left on a low rather than on a high. With a warm handshake when I was still on the bike she beamed, “I know you will be grinning like that for the rest of the afternoon. I know how you feel, I feel like that every time I ride.”
What a way to feel! It was like a drug that I wanted another hit later this afternoon. I know tomorrow will be worse.
Feeling more confident again, I have booked myself into the pre-learners for the 22nd and 23rd of April for the afternoon sessions. It will be with Gwyn. I hope after that I will have my ticket to ride. Being mid-week I will have to flexi work, but I like Gwyn’s thoughts on this, it is for “my health”, my mental health :-)
Cost for a one-hour session of private tuition at DECA: $120.00
(using their bikes is included in the fee)
Distance covered: about 2 km
Monday, April 6, 2009
Corney but kind of cool
Sunday, March 29, 2009
It has been on my mind for a while...

Yesterday I picked up some stuff from my parents place as they are moving and what ever I had stored there has to come here. Looking through what I had brought down I had found a clipping I much had cut out from the RACT MotorNews many years ago. So many years ago, that the training group for Tasmania was not DECA, but StayUpright!
Saturday, February 28, 2009
In the News: Global Downturn Biting Yamaha

Yamaha to cut motorcycle output
Yamaha Motor, one of the world's largest motorcycle makers, will cut production in Japan by up to 24% this year amid falling global demand.

Production may fall to slightly more than 260,000 units in Japan, a spokeswoman said. Analysts said this would represent a 40-year low.
Yamaha Motor may also reduce its motorcycle output by 20% in Europe, the spokeswoman said.
Export-oriented Japanese firms have been hit hard by the downturn.
Official figures showed on Wednesday that Japan's exports plunged 45.7% in January compared with a year ago to hit the lowest figure in 10 years.
The Japanese economy contracted at an annualised rate of 12.7% in the last quarter of 2008, recording its worst performance in almost 35 years, officials said last week.
Net loss
Yamaha Motor had already planned to close some of its plants for 10 days in February and March to reduce output by 13,000 motorcycles.
It also plans to discuss further plant stoppages in the April-to-June period with trade unions.
The company has predicted that 2009 will see its first net loss for 26 years. The loss of 42bn yen ($430m, £303m) would come after a net income of 1.85bn yen last year.
Sales are expected to decline by 22% to 1.25 trillion yen.
Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7912231.stm
Monday, January 12, 2009
Junak
For more info on the model and pictures of the bikes, see...
http://www.junak.net/
Saturday, January 10, 2009
The Black & White Era
Can you guess which one is my dad?

A: The one on the back!
This isn’t the oldest photo of my dad on a bike, there is one when he is about 16 on an older style motorcycle. Sadly I could not get a scan of that one.
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
In the News: Vegi Helmets

Nigeria bikers' vegetable helmets
Motorcyclists in Nigeria have been wearing dried pumpkin shells on their heads to dodge a new law forcing them to wear helmets, authorities say.
Officials in the northern city of Kano said they had stopped several riders with "improvised helmets", following this month's introduction of the law.
Road safety officials said calabash-wearers would be prosecuted.
Thousands of motorbikes have been impounded around the country and taxi motorbike drivers have staged protests.
Calabashes are dried pumpkin shells more commonly used to carry liquid.
According to the new law, all motorbike drivers and motorbike passengers must wear helmets.
Kano Federal Road Safety Commission commander Yusuf Garba told the BBC they were taking a hard line with people found using the improvised helmets.
"We are impounding their bikes and want to take them to court so they can explain why they think wearing a calabash is good enough for their safety," he said.
Fifty motorbikes had been seized so far in Kano city alone, he added.
Menace
Motorcycle taxis, called "achaba" in the north of the country and "okada" in the south, are a cheap way for Nigerians to get around congested and chaotic city streets.
MOTORBIKE TAXIS
- Achaba comes from a Hausa phrase meaning "double enjoyment", referring to taxi drivers being paid for being close to women passengers
- Okada is from name of ex-state governor's now defunct airline
- Okada bike taxis were banned from the capital Abuja in 2006
- The motorbikes cost around $290 (£200)Passengers pay about 70 naira ($0.50; £0.35) for a short trip
Many drivers of the motorcycle taxis are furious over the new law, which came into force on New Year's Day.
In the city of Kaduna, drivers waved palm fronds and rode in convoy to protest at the price of helmets, which can cost up to $29 (£20).
They say passengers often steal the helmets once they reach their destination.
Stories have also appeared in the local papers highlighting passengers' fears that the helmets could be used by motorcyclists to cast spells on their clients, making it easy for them to be robbed.
"Some people can put juju inside the helmets and when they are worn the victim can either lose consciousness or be struck dumb," passenger Kolawole Aremu told the Daily Trust newspaper.
Local government authorities often give motorbikes to jobless young men, saying it gives them a way to make a living.
But the BBC's Andrew Walker in the capital, Abuja, says handing out the vehicles does not address the underlying cause of Nigeria's economic problems.
It is often an attempt to buy support for elections, our correspondent says.
The number of motorcycle taxis in big cities has exploded in recent years, causing concern about road safety.
Often untrained and illiterate, the drivers are considered a menace by many motorists.
Fatal accidents are common. Road safety authorities say almost every collision in Nigeria's cities involves an okada.
More than 4,000 people die on Nigeria's roads every year and 20,000 are injured, according to the Federal Road Safety Commission.
Monday, December 22, 2008
My Bike
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Introduction to Motorcycling Course
Two people dropped out of the course of the course, leaving 3 of us left in total. We were told we had done ¾ of the pre-learners prac stuff. Knowing that I felt better, especially after Helen’s tales of dropping her bike and getting through with a scooter license. I am hoping that won’t happen to me, but I think I will be okay… I happy not dropping the course on the first course.
Total ride time: 3 hours
Total km: about 1 km
Cost of 4 hour course: $90
On and I sat on a very lovely Virago that was for sale. Not sure if I will get it, but it felt so right and lovely to be on, so much nicer than the Scorpion on the course.
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Toy Run in the Sunday Mercury



And from their online service...
December 07, 2008 12:00am

A dedicated band of volunteers is setting up a Christmas workshop Santa and his elves would be proud of.
THEY may not always wear red robes or have flowing, grey beards but a dedicated band of volunteers is setting up a Christmas workshop Santa and his elves would be proud of.
For 11 months of the year, the Salvation Army uses its large hall in Moonah as a community meeting place.
But in December, the hall is transformed by 20 volunteers and a full-time co-ordinator into a huge distribution centre for goods collected in the state's Christmas appeals, including the Motorcycle Riders Association's Toy Run.
Salvation Army divisional public relations officer Stuart Foster said more than 9000 children's gifts, 700 gifts for adults and tonnes of food would arrive at the centre for processing.
"It is a huge logistical exercise," he said.
"I don't think people realise how big the task is and how much work it takes to collect and distribute donations gathered through the state's Christmas appeals."
In addition to the volunteers at the centre, up to a dozen others worked as drivers to pick up donations.
"Budget (car hire) gives us a van for December and it operates to a daily running sheet," Mr Foster said.
"We also have other vans and trucks in operation and staff and volunteers in the North and North-West."
At the annual MRA Toy Run, held in Hobart yesterday, the Salvos filled two 2-tonne trucks as well as two vans.
"The amount of donations are so large, we are never able to count each gift as it arrives at the distribution centre," he said.
"All cash donations are audited."
After gifts arrive at the distribution centre, they are unwrapped, sorted into age and sex categories and then laid out as if in a retail store.
"Towards, the end of December, the centre opens for a week so clients registered for assistance can come in and select one main gift and one small gift for each child," he said.
Mr Foster said other agencies also brought clients to the centre.
"While we assume responsibility for the distribution of the MRA Toy Run, the Kmart Wishing Tree and some of the proceeds from the ABC Giving Tree, the donations are split with other services who then distribute them," Mr Foster said.
In addition to collecting and distributing Christmas donations, Salvation Army staff also register clients seeking assistance.
Most charities in Tasmania have a one-agency policy, meaning clients register with just one agency for assistance.
Mr Foster said people needing assistance from the state's Christmas appeals were found in a variety of ways.
Some register with agencies, some are referred by other organisations or schools and some are identified by case workers, he said.
Saturday, December 6, 2008
29th Motorcycle Riders Association Toy Run
Today I made a conscious effort to see the Toy Run, to see the bikes coming all the way from the Derwent Entertainment Centre heading into the city; Sarah came with me. We stopped near the turn off to Moonah, along the Brooker Highway and quickly found a good viewpoint amongst so many others. It was only a few minutes before the first bikes came down the road, which had now been closed by the Police, when dark clouds came over and the rain came down heavily. It didn’t matter at all, when the roar of the bikes came through, and standing on street level, it was amazing!!! There were three lanes of bikes, with usually two bikes in each lane, thundering down the highway. Horns were used happily, bikers waved, you could see their grins even under their helmets.
The rumble, the noise, the smell, it just made my heart race and adrenaline rush. Seeing about 5000 bikes would do that. It was a fantastic hour of bikes and recommend anyone see it if they love motorcycles. Sarah liked afternoon too, and she isn’t that keen on them normally. ☺
Driving home, still high from the buzz, I just thought to myself, wouldn’t it be brilliant to be part of the 30th Toy Run next year? I am going to try.




















Friday, November 28, 2008
Documentation
Monday, November 24, 2008
It’s booked!
And so it begins...
Other people I need to thank is Mike M from Otago… Your shear passion for riding was just catching, and I enjoyed when you took me on pillion. …Anton, another colleague and friend from Otago, I still remember your bike in bits in the kitchen! I love listening to you and Mike chatting about bikes, over beers in the Staff Club, wishing I could join in.
I am sure on this journey I will have to thank others too, but I will when the time comes.
So here is the start of my journey of getting two wheels.