The Rally season is over and 2015 was certainly a bit different
My first overseas rally
My first navigation rally
My first experience of riding desert sand and dunes
My second longest year of racing with 8 days of racing, only
beaten by 2012 when I competed in six rallies and raced for ten days in total.
So what’s in store for the winter and beyond?
Well first I’ll
have to get the house move over and my new garage set up. The bike is pretty
sorted as the Hafren won’t have taken much out of it but it will need a very good clean and there are a few jobs that need doing.
Over the winter I will sort the wiring and put a light
switch back on the handlebars, so I can run it in “enduro mode” with a small headlight unit and without the
navigation tower and fairing, that way it can easily go in and out of the van
without any modification.
During the Hafren Rally I noticed the speedo wasn't working. This wasn't surprising as the plug on the sender on the front wheel got broken in Morocco so doesn't latch together. I had thought I'd fixed by sticking some heat shrink tubing around it but clearly not. I have purchased some micro plugs so a better repair will be done.
During the Hafren Rally I noticed the speedo wasn't working. This wasn't surprising as the plug on the sender on the front wheel got broken in Morocco so doesn't latch together. I had thought I'd fixed by sticking some heat shrink tubing around it but clearly not. I have purchased some micro plugs so a better repair will be done.
The tyres will do me for a few trail rides yet but will need
to be replaced for Portugal, luckily I still have a brand new tyre on my spare
front wheel. The mousses in both wheels will get checked and re-lubed as
necessary and I’ll get round to replacing the bearings in the spare front
wheel.
So apart from any service needs during that time e.g. brake pads, chain and sprockets, oil and filters that should be it, the harder work will be to sort out the navigation gear….
So apart from any service needs during that time e.g. brake pads, chain and sprockets, oil and filters that should be it, the harder work will be to sort out the navigation gear….
When the bike fell over in the garage a few months back it
ripped one of the wires out of the back of my RNS TripMaster so I’ll have to
try and identify where they fix to and get the soldering iron out!
I could replace it but cost apart (about £250), RNS is a one man band (aka Tony
Schattat in Germany), so they only seem to get produced in small batches from time to time and no one seems
to have any in stock at present.
The alternative is the ICO Rallye Light but that has
a reputation for not being water tight and suffering from condensation, so although the "industry standard" for trip meters, maybe not
so good for use in the UK!
Also ICO have announced a new improved model, the Rally Max that addresses these issues but it won’t be launched until the the Tuareg Rally next year and that starts on the 5th March 2016 so not much use to me as the Tour of Portugal starts a day earlier on the 4th March, so it looks like a repair is my only option at the moment.
Also ICO have announced a new improved model, the Rally Max that addresses these issues but it won’t be launched until the the Tuareg Rally next year and that starts on the 5th March 2016 so not much use to me as the Tour of Portugal starts a day earlier on the 4th March, so it looks like a repair is my only option at the moment.
Also you may recall that the road book switch gave up the
ghost on the Tuareg Rally, or more correctly the wires to the switch failed. As
the cable is far longer than it needs to be, I will pull it apart, look for any
obvious breaks and chop that section out and re-solder it together at a more
appropriate length! If that fails I'll just have to buy a new one, at least they are a bit more readily available!
So just a few things to keep me busy then!
So just a few things to keep me busy then!
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