Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
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Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
I need the number on the face of a R75/6 (1976 if it matters). It starts with a 1 followed by a few digits. I need those asap.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
Snowbum article here:
http://bmwmotorcycletech.info/ringgears.htm
He shows 1.186 with a 32/10 final drive. If the final drive was 37/11, then 1.244.
Kurt in S.A.
http://bmwmotorcycletech.info/ringgears.htm
He shows 1.186 with a 32/10 final drive. If the final drive was 37/11, then 1.244.
Kurt in S.A.
Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
1.186 on mine, with a 32:10 final drive.
Call me Mel. Some years ago- never mind how long precisely- having little or no money in my purse, and nothing particular to interest me at home, I thought I would ride about a little and see the other parts of the world.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
Thanks, it was a 37/11, so the 1.244 is correct. This bike was crashed by a couple of friends some 15 years ago. I offered to do some fixing on it. The speedo cluster was destroyed, but I happened to have spare 1.244 and 1.144 units.
This was a high speed crash and both parties were injured and never fully recovered. One died two weeks ago, but from another illness.
Riding double on a nearly bald front tire at near 100 mph.
This was a high speed crash and both parties were injured and never fully recovered. One died two weeks ago, but from another illness.
Riding double on a nearly bald front tire at near 100 mph.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
I can't help wondering, was it a sudden loss of air pressure or a wobble at speed that "caused" the crash? Or something else?Duane Ausherman wrote:Riding double on a nearly bald front tire at near 100 mph.
Ken
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There's no such thing as too many airheads
There's no such thing as too many airheads
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
I don't think that they knew what happened. Both were life long riders, but neither knew much about it. The facts of the accident prove that they knew little about safety.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
This is kind of interesting. Over on one of the Guzzi forums we are having a similar conversation about "extreme tire life stretcher guys" that seem to think it's okay to wear bike tires down to the cords. One pic posted was a guy w/ a TL1000 (not a easy bike on tires to start) that only changed on account of the rear no longer holding air. It seems to me this is as irresponsible as the idiot kids in the sportbike/stunt crowds who think it's cool to ride wheelies down the freeway, but to some it's chalked up to bang for the buck.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
It's never made any sense to me. I'm not saying I never did anything that stupid in my misspent youth, but that doesn't mean it wasn't stupid, only that I was.tenni128 wrote:This is kind of interesting. Over on one of the Guzzi forums we are having a similar conversation about "extreme tire life stretcher guys" that seem to think it's okay to wear bike tires down to the cords. One pic posted was a guy w/ a TL1000 (not a easy bike on tires to start) that only changed on account of the rear no longer holding air. It seems to me this is as irresponsible as the idiot kids in the sportbike/stunt crowds who think it's cool to ride wheelies down the freeway, but to some it's chalked up to bang for the buck.
If a tire costs you $100, and you get 8000 miles out of it, that's 1.25 cents a mile. Getting an extra 500 miles saves you $6.25. During that time you have a FAR greater risk of puncture or catastrophic failure, and your wet weather traction is severely compromised. On a risk vs. reward basis, the math just doesn't make any sense to me.
MS - out
Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
Agreed. Admittedly, I have had tires that looked fine due to the tread design (like the pirellis on my Goose) start to show steel only 20 miles later. It just happened on my last tire, actually. But I parked it and came back with my truck. Certainly not interested in risking it all on a vehicle supported by only two small patches of rubber. One of the guys mentioned, however, that in his neck of the woods (New Zealand, I think) he was looking at 400-500 for a set of decent tires. Ouch!! Still, if you can't afford the consumables, a bike may not be your best bet for transport.
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Re: Help, R75/6 speedo ratio wanted
I well remember that once we had 10 wrecks in the shop. That was a high number to have all at the same time. I walked around and 8 of them had worn out tires. Chicken or the egg?
I am a believer in good tires with lotsa tread.
I am a believer in good tires with lotsa tread.
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