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• #6527
Any thoughts much appreciated. I actually had the grip/bars apart recently, which is why I ruled it out. They're very different on a Vespa than a proper bike. The grip is attached to a tube which rotates in the headset, unlike a throttle grip rotating around the bar on a motorbike.
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• #6528
Sorry if that came across as being adversarial, he has a proper vespa. The modern plastic bodies are bar ended types.
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• #6529
Spotted in soho
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• #6530
Spotted in Manchester.
Looks horrible to ride.
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• #6531
Very briefly heard and saw this today, mental.
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• #6532
Need machine-guns and Judge Dredd.
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• #6533
Needs fully tweed'd up rider + hunting rifle over shoulder
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• #6534
Bike equivalent of the Chelsea Tractor, chances of that triumph seeing off-road action = 0
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• #6535
Agree. Naff in the extreme.
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• #6536
No worries. I was thinking rubber grips contacting with the switchgear could be a possibility. This is only based on the scooters I've owned though. i.e not Vespas
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• #6537
Are those ape hangers even legal, never mind comfortable.
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• #6538
The curbs are really high...
Mind you like a gs...
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• #6539
They are selling an image...
Scramblers are trendy ATM
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• #6540
I'd love a Scrambler, but I'm not buying new and they hold their prices way too well. Bah. Getting a decent secondhand one is like trying to buy a steel road bike frame with horizontal dropouts in 2008, or an Arrospok in 2009...
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• #6542
The problem with unfinished projects is, they've been started. If you see what I mean?
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• #6543
Stripped then put in to boxes....
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• #6544
Running perfectly prior to stripping of course.
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• #6545
After a couple of years of faultless service my Primavera conked out the other day. Restarted after 15 mins cooling down. What does hotness do to make it stop going along? (excuse the technical terms)
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• #6546
They're crap to ride too. Top heavy and slow like a late 70s Japanese bike. I'm not 100% sold on the look but the Duc scrambler is a very fun little bike with genuine off road ability.
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• #6547
Of course and everything is there....
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• #6548
It could be your reg/rectifier dying, same for the spark plug, HT lead or cap. Air leaks tend to only appear when hot but fresh air tends to lean the mix and make the bike run better (right up until it goes bang). Check the plug for colour and oil, measure the resistance ratings of the stator, look for tell tale oil leaks eminating from the head or exhaust manifold. How've you been riding it, long distance or city stop start?
Edit: check your in line fuel filter too if you have one, the fuel tap also has a gauze in the tank too so shine a torch in to see if there's any crap in the tank. The carb will have a filter too where the pipe enters which can get clogged and cause fuel starvation.
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• #6549
Stop start, it was on a commute, so lots of sitting behind buses, plus I've got a heavy right hand so tend to rev the bollocks off it
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• #6550
When did you last change the plug? 2007? You've got leccy ignition too if I remember right?
I had noticed that while passing them. Just thought I'd throw my 2 cents in. You are most probably right about the carb springs.