Tires came off the Bandit this morning and taken to Iron Pony in Columbus OH for a swap but I ran out of time to put them back on tonight due to other commitments so I'll finish it tomorrow night.
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Tires came off the Bandit this morning and taken to Iron Pony in Columbus OH for a swap but I ran out of time to put them back on tonight due to other commitments so I'll finish it tomorrow night.
I have to, it's how I pay the bills.Oh, Man. I didnt know there were such things.
Sounds like you were quite determined to troubleshoot this down... and you did.
Don't trust the parts I'm given to be authentic OEM replacements.I was wondering what you might learn along the way.
When you work at a shop, you learn fast to make sure's going the right direction. I've done it a couple of times when I first started doing this for a living. I even had one all the way on the bike before I caught it. I was tightening the brake caliper bolts and had that, DOH! moment when I noticed the arrow pointing the wrong direction. Funny thing is it wasn't a week later I had a customer come back pizzed off saying I put his front tire on backwards. My boss said the guy was coming back in and I told him I guarantee it was on right. The guy came in and I looked at it and pointed to the arrow pointing forwards and he points to the tire tread saying it isn't right. How can you argue that. I didn't make the tire. I didn't design the tread pattern.I changed the front tire on my 1100G, but ?Doh!!! Put it on backwards! So, did it again the right way.
When you work at a shop, you learn fast to make sure's going the right direction. I've done it a couple of times when I first started doing this for a living. I even had one all the way on the bike before I caught it. I was tightening the brake caliper bolts and had that, DOH! moment when I noticed the arrow pointing the wrong direction. Funny thing is it wasn't a week later I had a customer come back pizzed off saying I put his front tire on backwards. My boss said the guy was coming back in and I told him I guarantee it was on right. The guy came in and I looked at it and pointed to the arrow pointing forwards and he points to the tire tread saying it isn't right. How can you argue that. I didn't make the tire. I didn't design the tread pattern.
Just curious Cowboy, what tires did you go with? Iron Pony pretty reasonable on mounting and balancing? I like the fact that they Spin Balance the wheels.
No wrenching, but some preparation. I'm trying to get the window motors to work on a '96 Astro. The new motor didn't work in the van, so I want to test externally. I need to stick wires in connectors, attach to a battery, and use a fuse. So I went to find a fuse holder. Radio Shack used to be the easy source for such thing. In Lafayette, IN, there was a nice small store for radio/electronics/alarms/computer parts. In Albuquerque, there seemed to be no stores for such things. In Cedar Rapids, Iowa, I went to Iowa Radio Supply, which used to be big and carried almost everything. Now it is tiny, and carries very little. I was able to find what I need for this task.
So it now appears that internet purchases are about all that is available for such items. Sad.
...Funny thing is it wasn't a week later I had a customer come back pizzed off saying I put his front tire on backwards. My boss said the guy was coming back in and I told him I guarantee it was on right. The guy came in and I looked at it and pointed to the arrow pointing forwards and he points to the tire tread saying it isn't right. How can you argue that. I didn't make the tire. I didn't design the tread pattern.
I never consider myself a tech. I prefer mechanic. I like fixing things. It give me pleasure to have a customer happy that their bike is working again. I got into this line of work a few years ago as a second career, because I enjoyed bringing the bikes I'd buy, back to life. I'll leave the tech term to the performance guys that use computers and dynos to squeeze the most they can get out of what is presented to them. Me, I'm just a monkey with a bunch of different wrenches.This is an interesting window into the life of a professional tech... From a distance, it's compelling because you seem so engauged in the work that it sort of pulls me in when I read about it.
My very thought after seeing my mistake, I only do this once a year or 2 years, so I have to learn it all over again. Took 1 1/2 hours to do it the 1st time, only half an hour the 2nd time.When you work at a shop, you learn fast to make sure's going the right direction. I've done it a couple of times when I first started doing this for a living. I even had one all the way on the bike before I caught it. I was tightening the brake caliper bolts and had that, DOH! moment when I noticed the arrow pointing the wrong direction. Funny thing is it wasn't a week later I had a customer come back pizzed off saying I put his front tire on backwards. My boss said the guy was coming back in and I told him I guarantee it was on right. The guy came in and I looked at it and pointed to the arrow pointing forwards and he points to the tire tread saying it isn't right. How can you argue that. I didn't make the tire. I didn't design the tread pattern.
My very thought after seeing my mistake, I only do this once a year or 2 years, so I have to learn it all over again. Took 1 1/2 hours to do it the 1st time, only half an hour the 2nd time.
There's a huge electronics, wiring, and components place here in Indy not far from my house called MAI Prime Parts. Very, very cool place that does a lot of business with motorsports and car and motorcycle customizers. Always great advice, too --
One of MAI's specialties, and their big money-maker, is parts and supplies for "vintage" industrial electronics dating back to the vacuum tube era. There are a LOT of factories and plants out there running with 25+ year old PLCs and even much older stuff where the manufacturer vanished long ago. It's a neat trip down memory lane for me, too -- my Dad specialized in troubleshooting obscure, ancient industrial control systems like this, so it's cool to see some of the stuff he was always talking about. Quite often, the engineers who designed and built these systems were long gone, and Dad was the only graybeard who could figure them out and get them running again.
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Well it is the ignition switch. The replacement switch I was given to try, is a very good Chinese copy that looks identical, but it doesn't have the antenna to receive and send the signal back to the ECM. . I was told it was OEM, but it isn't. I tried it again and noticed some of the blue plastic protector over the keyhole they use to keep the cheap metal from tarnishing before it is bought. I took the one from the known good donor bike and it started every time I tried it. I have one from a part out bike at home, but they want to play the cheap game on me. I ought to tell them just to take there chances with eBay. I've been with them almost 4 years come Nov. and they still want to play games.
Don't trust the parts I'm given to be authentic OEM replacements.I could have figured this out in a couple of hours or less, if I didn't have a cheap boss.
So as an update, I ask if they will be buying my ignition switch for $120, which is a deal compared to eBay prices and I'm told they are going to buy another aftermarket ignition switch. Stunned I ask, "why?" I have a proven OEM switch that I have started the bike five straight times in a row and I'm told "it's cheaper and the seller has sold hundreds of them." OMG, I'm about to pull my hair out.:livid: I'm dealing with total idiots here. I spent nearly 8 hours researching, testing and swapping components, doing everything I could think of to figure it out and to find out it was a bad switch they bought off of eBay and now they are buying another one. I'm not sure who is making the decisions of what to buy, the salesman/service writer or the actual boss that sits in his office seemingly doing nothing. Now maybe you can see why I was interested in that job at Piper in Vero Beach or opening my own shop. All the wasted time I've spent trying to get this bike right and I'm then to get screwed on my paycheck, because I'm getting inferior cheap parts to use. I'm hoping that this one that comes in is crap also, then I can offer my switch at the price I have it on my Clist ad for $150, the going average.
Talking to the customers for the most part is a no no. This isn't a customer bike any way. It's actually a bike from a guy that called me for parts. He decided he wanted to sell it instead. I didn't have the money at the time so I passed it on to the shop. They got it dirt cheap and never gave me a finders fee, which sucks because if I refer someone to buy a bike I can get $100 per referal. I work at a resale shop that does customer work, but 90% of the bikes I work on are our own bikes they bought from auction or private sales.This may be bad business and could possibly get you in trouble but is there any way you can talk to the bike's owner on the side and explain the situation? I know I personally would not want to have the same bad parts put back onto my bike again if I knew there was a better one out there. Maybe he will understand enough to tell the shop to leave it alone and he'll fix it himself aka getting with you on the side for the correct part
I can just see some manager asking you "why do we have 16+ hours charged to fixing this one problem with an ignition switch?"... ... ... ... I work at a resale shop ............... 90% of the bikes I work on are our own bikes they bought from auction or private sales.
............... It looks like three of the threads at the tip of the bolt are busted ............