- Joined
- Dec 19, 2016
- Messages
- 36
Hi Richard
I believe it fits in the bottom of the battery box.
I believe it fits in the bottom of the battery box.
Sorry but an RZ350 is not even close to as fast as a TD3. at least a 20 mph speed differential. And it was first built 12years later.My mate was happy to tell me that he beat a Minnovation Seeley 750 with his RZ350 Yamaha - probably as fast as a TD3 ? To me it does not mean anything. It is all 'horses for courses', when they are stuck to the wall like flies. Have a look at Moto GP these days - where do they pass ? It is never on a straight or a long sweeping bend - usually in the tight corners.
Just so, and as a further bit of featherbed minutiae I have recently discovered the letter E stamped on the right hand side of said engine steady lug on the frame of my 1954 Dominator. The stamping on the top of mine is M/4/54. The letter M appears on frames from different years, so possibly is not date-related. Frame number is 122 575xx.reynolds tubes dating stamp number its on the top endge of the top lug for the engine steady just at the back of the head stock in very small numbers a a letter you need to scrap the paint of to see anything
AND ........ twins have the pump mounting brackets on the right hand side, whereas Inters seem to all have them on the left.Just so, and as a further bit of featherbed minutiae I have recently discovered the letter E stamped on the right hand side of said engine steady lug on the frame of my 1954 Dominator. The stamping on the top of mine is M/4/54. The letter M appears on frames from different years, so possibly is not date-related. Frame number is 122 575xx.
24.5 degrees with 19 inch wheels. Have you measured it? A TD3 Yamaha has 26 degree rake with 18 inch wheels, and all Seeleys have 27 degree rake with 18inch wheels. Aftermarket featherbed frames in Australia usually have 26 degree rake and 18 inch wheels, and handle like Suzukis. When I got my Mk3 Seeley, it had 450 Ducati fork yokes, the Ducati steering head is much more vertical. I ended up with about 94mm of trail, using 18 inch wheels - the bike mishandled dangerously. The offset on the Ducati yokes was 65mm, I now use Yamaha fork yokes which have 53mm of offset, and I now have about 106mm of trail. It is important. When you fit 18 inch wheels to a Manx frame with Manx yokes, the steering becomes much heavier. If it had 26 degree rake with Manx yokes, it would handle like a Japanese two-stroke - neutral steering - it would not over-steer when the bike is accelerated in mid corner. That is the reason, the Manx Norton is faster than many other bikes of the same capacity. Also the motor must be as far forward in the frame as possible. The difference in handling between a Seeley and a Manx is bloody ridiculous. A Seeley G50 would run rings around a Manx. The fastest British 350cc single in the 1960s was the Seeley 7R AJS. Peter Williams raced the Arter 350 cc AJS - 'Wagon Wheels' - The first Commandos had that steering geometry, and a few kids crashed them after riding over cats' eyes in slippery roads. Peter Williams was embarrassed and the trail was reduced by changing the yokes. I suggest there are no Seeley G50s at the Goodwood Revival. It would be a different game. When you look at a racing motorcycle - they all look similar, and many guys blame their own riding ability when they are slower. More trail and smooth power delivery are much faster.Great letter. Ken says pretty much the same thing in his book, but we've never been able to convince Acotrel that the head angle wasn't 24 degrees. Hey, that's part of life on a forum.
Ken
There's definitely something wrong with you!24.5 degrees with 19 inch wheels. Have you measured it? A TD3 Yamaha has 26 degree rake with 18 inch wheels, and all Seeleys have 27 degree rake with 18inch wheels. Aftermarket featherbed frames in Australia usually have 26 degree rake and 18 inch wheels, and handle like Suzukis. When I got my Mk3 Seeley, it had 450 Ducati fork yokes, the Ducati steering head is much more vertical. I ended up with about 94mm of trail, using 18 inch wheels - the bike mishandled dangerously. The offset on the Ducati yokes was 65mm, I now use Yamaha fork yokes which have 53mm of offset, and I now have about 106mm of trail. It is important. When you fit 18 inch wheels to a Manx frame with Manx yokes, the steering becomes much heavier. If it had 26 degree rake with Manx yokes, it would handle like a Japanese two-stroke - neutral steering - it would not over-steer when the bike is accelerated in mid corner. That is the reason, the Manx Norton is faster than many other bikes of the same capacity. Also the motor must be as far forward in the frame as possible. The difference in handling between a Seeley and a Manx is bloody ridiculous. A Seeley G50 would run rings around a Manx. The fastest British 350cc single in the 1960s was the Seeley 7R AJS. Peter Williams raced the Arter 350 cc AJS - 'Wagon Wheels' - The first Commandos had that steering geometry, and a few kids crashed them after riding over cats' eyes in slippery roads. Peter Williams was embarrassed and the trail was reduced by changing the yokes. I suggest there are no Seeley G50s at the Goodwood Revival. It would be a different game. When you look at a racing motorcycle - they all look similar, and many guys blame their own riding ability when they are slower. More trail and smooth power delivery are much faster.
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24.5 degrees is with methanolThere's definitely something wrong with you!
24 deg. with a drum front brake.24.5 degrees is with methanol
Yes that's exactly where it should be because stating the same wrong information over and over again can never make it factualCome on guys, give us and Al a break. Take this rant to the Pub area.
- Knut
A magnetic based protractor is useful - stick it on a fork leg.. My project bike has an Egli frame with the same geometry and running gear as an RG250 Suzuki. In two models, there is 0.5 degree difference in the rake - the first model had a 17 inch front wheel with an 18 inch rear wheel - the second had 17 inch wheels front and back. It makes a difference. My frame with 17 inch wheels front and back gives a rake of 25 degrees - same as the later RG250. It is important - wrong can mean a crash. The bike has a two stroke motor, it needs to be stable.I read somewhere that someone measured an existing frame (wrongly !) so that they could publish the frame angles , possibly because could not be bothered to find orriginal drawing . Which is why there is conflicting information . Sounds a bit unlikely ,but someone knows!. The orriginal irish frame jigs turned up recently on someones farm in a TV programme.