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DaveDanger
Guest
I discovered the softness of Japanese Phillips head screws immediately after riding my 73 CL-350 over (and somewhat THROUGH) a low concrete abuttment wall leading into a one lane bridge somewhere in northwest Kentucky. The impact shattered the clutch cover and painted the entire right side of me with well-used and HOT oil from the previously high-RPM centrifugal oil filter hidden inside the aforementioned cover. A friend located and shipped me a used replacement side cover to help return my ride to a useful form of transportation. I spent 3 days in a stranger's tobacco-barn trying to remove the incredibly useless (I had NO idea that lead could be alloyed with coal-mine debris to create a threaded fastener!) screws and remains of screws from the case. At any rate, I managed to get all but one of the screws cleaned out and replaced with original hardware long enough to get back home. I then invested in a collection of allen-head capscrews for every place on that bike I could get to.
I now loudly and longly proclaim the superiority of allen-headed capscrews and the judicious use of copper-based anti-seize on any motorcycle hardware. "Originality" can bite the big one.
To take this one step further, I'll happily take phillips head screws of any metallic composition over common head screws. All common screws in existence should be smelted down into one solid lump and boosted into a ballistic trajectory resulting in a solar impact. I'll pay NASA's freight bill to accomplish that.
I now loudly and longly proclaim the superiority of allen-headed capscrews and the judicious use of copper-based anti-seize on any motorcycle hardware. "Originality" can bite the big one.
To take this one step further, I'll happily take phillips head screws of any metallic composition over common head screws. All common screws in existence should be smelted down into one solid lump and boosted into a ballistic trajectory resulting in a solar impact. I'll pay NASA's freight bill to accomplish that.