Ducati Sporting Club UK
 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 05-Jan-2006, 20:14   #1
rockhopper rockhopper is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Corse
rockhopper's Avatar
 
Posts: 3,367
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Pinxton
I'll take some pics at the weekend. Its a bit difficult at the mo cos i need to move the Monster which isn't easy with a broken arm. Also i parked the car too close to the doors and i can't get them open.
Reply
Old 05-Jan-2006, 21:13   #2
YMFB YMFB is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Meccanica
Bikes: R1200RT F800GS. Hopefully another Ducati soon
YMFB's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,526
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Salisbury
Quote:
Originally posted by rockhopper
I'll take some pics at the weekend. Its a bit difficult at the mo cos i need to move the Monster which isn't easy with a broken arm. Also i parked the car too close to the doors and i can't get them open.

cheers mate please dont go to any more trouble especially in your predicament, id hate to hear you had dropped it trying to get me pics.

Cheers
Steve
Reply
Old 05-Jan-2006, 22:33   #3
John W John W is offline
Registered Forum User
500SD
Bikes: MTS12S, R1, off road stuff, and vintage stuff too.
John W's Avatar
 
Posts: 828
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Cranleigh, Surrey
Mood: MTS1200 - yum yum yum yum yum yum yum ...
Mine is fitted in the same way, and fitted to the underside of the swinging arm. I stuck it using the superglue that came in the kit. I cleaned the underside of the s/a with 'a545 protect & shine' spray. One of the places has become unstuck now, but it doesn't hang down so I've left it as is.

I have also fitted a 'viper' dual feed end, so it oils both sides of the chain, which works a treat. The two tubes rub on either side of the rear sprocket which then throws the oil out into the chain.

I did try feeding oil to the front sprocket as mentioned in the posted link, but found it kept eating the end of the tube !

[Edited on 5-1-2006 by John W]
Reply
Old 05-Jan-2006, 23:42   #4
YMFB YMFB is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Meccanica
Bikes: R1200RT F800GS. Hopefully another Ducati soon
YMFB's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,526
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Salisbury
Quote:
Originally posted by John W
Mine is fitted in the same way, and fitted to the underside of the swinging arm. I stuck it using the superglue that came in the kit. I cleaned the underside of the s/a with 'a545 protect & shine' spray. One of the places has become unstuck now, but it doesn't hang down so I've left it as is.

I have also fitted a 'viper' dual feed end, so it oils both sides of the chain, which works a treat. The two tubes rub on either side of the rear sprocket which then throws the oil out into the chain.

I did try feeding oil to the front sprocket as mentioned in the posted link, but found it kept eating the end of the tube !

[Edited on 5-1-2006 by John W]

John is that the dual dispensor ?

C:\Documents and Settings\Manager\Desktop\VFR800_sprocket2.jpg
Reply
Old 05-Jan-2006, 23:43   #5
YMFB YMFB is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Meccanica
Bikes: R1200RT F800GS. Hopefully another Ducati soon
YMFB's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,526
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Salisbury
and another



[Edited on 5-1-2006 by YMFB]
Reply
Old 07-Jan-2006, 12:26   #6
tebby tebby is offline
Registered Forum User
 
Posts: 11
Join Date: Dec 2005
Mood: dissapointed
ST4S vibration
Well loosened the chain to 50mm free play when the bikes on the centre stand, interestingly with a pillion on board when I reached down to check,the free play was still only about 5mm.I wonder if this is enough!?
vibration has improved maybe 20% but still there.
When I adjusted the chain, the wheel as returned from the dealer after a smaller frtont sproket had been fitted & engine tuned, still squeaked.
The dealer had said to ignore the swing arm graduations & that they used a laser to line up the wheel.
When I checked the graduations, they were exactly the same measurement from the back of the swingarm on each side. I measured the rear of the axle to the rear of the swingarm & re adjusted & the squeak vanished!
Reply
Old 07-Jan-2006, 17:01   #7
YMFB YMFB is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Meccanica
Bikes: R1200RT F800GS. Hopefully another Ducati soon
YMFB's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,526
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Salisbury
Quote:
Originally posted by tebby
Well loosened the chain to 50mm free play when the bikes on the centre stand, interestingly with a pillion on board when I reached down to check,the free play was still only about 5mm.I wonder if this is enough!?
vibration has improved maybe 20% but still there.
When I adjusted the chain, the wheel as returned from the dealer after a smaller frtont sproket had been fitted & engine tuned, still squeaked.
The dealer had said to ignore the swing arm graduations & that they used a laser to line up the wheel.
When I checked the graduations, they were exactly the same measurement from the back of the swingarm on each side. I measured the rear of the axle to the rear of the swingarm & re adjusted & the squeak vanished!

Has anyone else used a laserline to align the back wheel, Im sure they are cheap enough from B & Q ?
Reply
Old 10-Jan-2006, 13:11   #8
Derek Derek is offline
Registered Forum User
GTL
Bikes: ST4s ABS
Derek's Avatar
 
Posts: 480
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Tayside, Scotland
Quote:
Originally posted by YMFB
Has anyone else used a laserline to align the back wheel, Im sure they are cheap enough from B & Q ?

I'd never though of using a laser. I just bought one from Aldi for £8.49. Thanks for the tip.
Reply
Old 10-Jan-2006, 22:26   #9
John W John W is offline
Registered Forum User
500SD
Bikes: MTS12S, R1, off road stuff, and vintage stuff too.
John W's Avatar
 
Posts: 828
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Cranleigh, Surrey
Mood: MTS1200 - yum yum yum yum yum yum yum ...
Steven,

yes, the 'viper' is basically the end bit as shown in those links you posted. Sorry for delay in posting - very busy so only getting the occasionaly evening to try to keep up on the posts.

Never used a laser line. I use a 1.8m spirit level lifted off the floor by a couple of bits of 4x2 timber. I then line it up across the edge of the tyre and check I have a similar clearance either side of the front wheel. once you have it set you just need to ensure you put the same number of turns on each side when you adjust the tension
Reply
Old 22-Jan-2006, 10:26   #10
YMFB YMFB is offline
Registered Forum User
Ducati Meccanica
Bikes: R1200RT F800GS. Hopefully another Ducati soon
YMFB's Avatar
 
Posts: 2,526
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Salisbury
what setting have you guys got your scott oilers set on ?

I fitted mine last week, primed it but didnt get the oil all the way out just 1/3 down the discharge line, set in on no.1 and went for a ride yesterday forgot to check it until I got back and if the oil has moved it ain't far. Ive turned it up but would be pleased to know what you have yours set on.
Reply
Reply
  
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes
Postbit Selector
Switch to Vertical postbit Use Vertical Postbit

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Recent Posts - Contact Us - DSC Home - Archive - Top
Powered by vBulletin 3.5.4 - Copyright © 2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. - © Ducati Sporting Club UK - All times are GMT +1. The time now is 16:24.