For what it's worth, anti-seize compound has the added benefit of preventing accidental/vibrational loosening. The high-temp (copper) stuff is pretty damned universal. Obviously, LocTite is what we all think of, but it won't prevent rusting. It's only my opinion, but every bolt on my bike gets one of those two.
BenHM3
Lower octane means burns FASTER...doesn't aging make the fuel LESS ENERGETIC (burns less well overall)? That's why hi-comp engines use hi-octane fuel, it takes just a bit more to get it to burn.
Water in the fuel? Dump a load of rubbing alcohol. (Isopropyl--the usual ingredient of rubbing alcohol--will not harm your fuel system's plasticky bits.) My understanding is we could add quite a lot of isopropyl without harming the engine, but I'm not an SAE engineer.
If your bike is fuel-injected, just turning it on (such that the fuel pump runs) the fuel will be circulated for you. The pump runs at 100% power all the time, the extra fuel is returned to the tank. Just a very brief run after a minute or two's agitation by the pump, should be enough to put StaBil-ized fuel in every vital part.
Darn it, too bad you couldn't ship them home as parts. (Radar, MASH) It would be funny to look up the rules, it's possible removing the wheels or handlebars or something simple renders the entire thing as "parts." (Still, I feel your pain.)
Dammit, I want a moto cat now.
Add: wet concrete dust/tailings. Avoid those pavement-cutter crews like the plague. Also: wet street-sweeper dust and leaves. Wet paint, as in, rain on pedestrian-crosssing stripes.
If you MUST ride over any lo-traction surface, "loose hands, tight knees." Try to neutralize all acceleration, get off brakes and throttle. Let the suspension be in its happiest set before hitting the <whatever.>
I've aged prematurely along with you, @[email protected], tar snakes suck.
Humans are wired to notice/recall the rare and the lurid. It's how we survived way-back-when. So we give disproportionate attention to crashes. For each crash-and every one of them is a terrible thing-you've got to figure close to a billion rides completed safely just that day. Motos are everywhere, and the most common individual transport in a lot of places. We don't have an organ in our brains for statistical understanding, this is why we just naturally come to believe motorcycling is more dangerous than it is.
Having said all that, it IS dangerous. Dress for the slide, not the ride. Because "debridement" (DO NOT look at the pictures) is just about the most painful procedure a human can endure AND it's success isn't great because of post-procedure infection. Am I sweating in my suit, helmet, boots, and gloves? Oh yeah. Because road rash SUCKS.
That motel is GREAT. The Tail is a lovely ride.
Came to share this, so BOOSTING. Esp for liability, the Insta will give more context. Even if just under the windscreen (so 1/2 the 360 is just you) the Insta will give more context than a GoPro.
You're riding the best BMW GT so far. (I've had a K1200 and K1600GT.) As long as you're comfy with the dropped handlebars, you're at peak-smooth, max-power-to-weight, least heavy BMW product. Sure, the later K1300S got a different ECU with more HP, but honestly, you could already peel the paint off my 2016.
Further, I'm kind of in the "butts=motorcycles" quantity school. I have 1, so 1. Mainly because they can suck so much money/labor and the storage space is the same as a car. I do all my own work, so maybe I'm weird.
With those in mind, seems to me you're next bike should excel at everything your current bike FAILS at. Or it should be a big experiment: which to me seems to scream "electric." Watch some FortNine videos if your up for a nerdgasm: the bike reviews are fascinating.
You do you, but if we were talking about this over a burger, this is what this old guy would tell you.