W
William P. Guff
Guest
it'd be interesting to know what you did here:
"It began to make the loud bog, but I managed to pull out of it
I pulled in the clutch and kept the throttle and rpm's up. A delicate balancing act. If I didn't the bike would stall.
And when engaging the clutch, the bike would move, but sluggish at very high rpm. Suddenly it would get back to normal throttle, and I could operate it at regular shifting.
Today though I did the same thing as yesterday. But I limited my shifting not going beyond 4th.
I was able to get around with no problems until I tried to pass a truck.
This truck coincidentally happened to be my ex girlfriends Dads truck. Its a truck that I hadn't seen in years.
I consider the truck as a steed, and them as people, that I really would prefer to avoid. Not that they're bad people, its just to avoid the coincidental awkward run in.
Human nature.
So of course the bogging happened as soon I went to 5th gear for the first time all day, and tried to get past them. Thus sending me swiftly to a side street where the bike toiled to get me home.
The good thing was that because I couldn't pass the truck, they might not have seen me. So maybe I should thank the bog......
......this time.
Obviously it is a change to a certain gear that makes it happen. Last time it was 3rd gear.
Now its 5th.
And I was able to get around for 2 days without too many bogging instances. But the COUNTDOWN has begun.
Last time it was a few days living with the bog....but pretty soon when I started the bike the bog happened and I couldn't get out of the parking lot.
So the sequence begins again. Soon the bike will not go anywhere. After the football game was over I got on my bike and a block later it was bogging.
Any remedies? A cure all?
Or a procedure that might make it run regardless if the bog is not precisely identified.
Sort of like when a computer gets a virus and the whole thing is wiped and re installed?
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