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Posted

If you're anywhere near Reading, let me know and I'll come round with my Locksmith tools.

I can't cut keys, though.

just read this - annoyingly enough I live in Basingstoke but I'm working up in Cambridge, bike's up here too! fancy a roadtrip ? :P

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Posted

Roadtrip.... Ordnarily, yes. But NOT in this fecking snow.

I haven't yet been able to get my Winter jacket fixed, so I'm riding around in my Summer one... which has vented panels all over the fucking thing - It's absolutely FREEZING!!!!! :lol:

Before you go about angle-grinding and all that, try this:

Take a junior hacksaw and see if you can fit the blade down between the lock body and the disc, to just saw through the locking bolt. A lot of the cheaper ones don't have reinforced bolts since they're mostly shrouded by the disc. Just be sure to use blades for metal, rather than wood or other types.

It'll be a few minutes of work, but much less risky than slipping with an angle grinder!!

Posted

Or...

Take the disc off, buy a new one - here

£47 and no real risk of doing any damage.

Then thermite the old disclock for sh!ts and giggles.

Posted

As metal is of a crystaline structure, you could try this method, a little force with a lot of power, gentle taps are all thats needed-over a long ish period B)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plug_and_feather

Posted

barky,,,?,,,:huh: ,,wtf....

Posted

you say metals are a crystaline structure, unfortunately not always the case, some metals can be "grown" from a single crystal for extra strength, one example i can think of are the compressor/turbine blades for the TurboMeca engines on the AugustaWestland Merlin Mk3/3A

... *mupp mupp... puff...* B)

Posted

FINALLY got it off. attacked it witha junior hacksaw to get through the pin and then it came off... yay!

BUT.

now the bike wont start and the front wheel's all squeaky/doesn't turn great... help again? it's not going well.

Posted

Bike:

Check battery, check kill switch, check you're in Neutral, etc...

Might need more descriptive info on what happens when you try and start it.

Front wheel:

Check the front brake isn't binding, make sure the disc isn't obstructed, perhaps strip and clean the brake assembly.

Posted

Edit: Double post.

Posted

FINALLY got it off. attacked it witha junior hacksaw to get through the pin and then it came off... yay!

BUT.

now the bike wont start and the front wheel's all squeaky/doesn't turn great... help again? it's not going well.

As your bike has sat for a while the brake pots will have allowed the pads to settle against the disc-just take it for a run (be gentle with the braking) and it will ease off-thats after you've charged the battery or replaced it if its fecked B)

Posted

As your bike has sat for a while the brake pots will have allowed the pads to settle against the disc-just take it for a run (be gentle with the braking)

OK cheers - makes sense as it's been there nearing on 3 weeks :blink:

the electrics came on fine when I turned it on, lights and everything, when I pressed the start button it turned over fine but just didn't spark - i tried giving it a bit of throttle and it sparked once then died again. to be fair it does usually take a while to warm up as its only little, i have to leave it on choke for a good few minutes! maybe just a tiny bit of water vapour that's frozen somewhere... I might wait til it gets above -7 before trying to start it again!

Posted

OK cheers - makes sense as it's been there nearing on 3 weeks :blink:

the electrics came on fine when I turned it on, lights and everything, when I pressed the start button it turned over fine but just didn't spark - i tried giving it a bit of throttle and it sparked once then died again. to be fair it does usually take a while to warm up as its only little, i have to leave it on choke for a good few minutes! maybe just a tiny bit of water vapour that's frozen somewhere... I might wait til it gets above -7 before trying to start it again!

Yep the cold will not help, bring it into the house to warm up :D

Posted

uh huh, not sure the landlord will appreciate it though... feck it. :lol: just can't wait to get on it again!

Posted

Do you open the choke up before you start it?

It should be running OK within about 30 seconds.

Some bikes warm up faster/better if you stand them upright off the sidestand (ie sit on it and lift it straight).

Posted

Do you open the choke up before you start it?

It should be running OK within about 30 seconds.

Some bikes warm up faster/better if you stand them upright off the sidestand (ie sit on it and lift it straight).

i do - not quite sure what's happening!

Posted

As your bike has sat for a while the brake pots will have allowed the pads to settle against the disc-just take it for a run (be gentle with the braking) and it will ease off-thats after you've charged the battery or replaced it if its fecked B)

Take off the brake resovoir cap, push the brake calliper against the disc, not to let the fluid over flow,

the put cap back on, spray disc with disc cleaner turn wheel whilst wiping it with a clean cloth,

Good luck

Posted

i tried giving it a bit of throttle and it sparked once then died again.

Try some fuel additive.

Several companies make stuff that you add to the fuel which acts like anti-freeze. Guards against carb icing and the like. Should find it in any MC parts or accessories shop. Failing that, Hein gericke, M&P, Busters Accessories and the other online places should do it.

You add something like a capfull per 10 litres or somesuch. Claire uses it and never has any problems starting her bike up.

Posted

Try some fuel additive.

Several companies make stuff that you add to the fuel which acts like anti-freeze. Guards against carb icing and the like. Should find it in any MC parts or accessories shop. Failing that, Hein gericke, M&P, Busters Accessories and the other online places should do it.

You add something like a capfull per 10 litres or somesuch. Claire uses it and never has any problems starting her bike up.

i went home at lunch, i guess when its maybe above freezing, and it coughed and spluttered and eventually woke up! albeit briefly... i think (as you say) the carb was just iced up despite it being garaged!

Take off the brake resovoir cap, push the brake calliper against the disc, not to let the fluid over flow,

the put cap back on, spray disc with disc cleaner turn wheel whilst wiping it with a clean cloth,

Good luck

one panic over, now just to sort out the brakes... what do you mean by push the brake calliper against the disc? just pull the brake lever?

Posted

i went home at lunch, i guess when its maybe above freezing, and it coughed and spluttered and eventually woke up! albeit briefly... i think (as you say) the carb was just iced up despite it being garaged!

one panic over, now just to sort out the brakes... what do you mean by push the brake calliper against the disc? just pull the brake lever?

No push the calliper with your hand, this will retracked the piston in the callipar, the fluid will

be pushed back up the brake cable and in to the cup, so mind it dont over flow, it just needs a ml or two, that will release the pads from tuching the disc, leaving it free to turn the wheel with out them rubbing any grit that may on the disc.

Good luck, its quit straight forward,

Posted

just 1 question.....what make was the disk lock? i want to know so i dont get one....not if all it takes to get it off is a junior hacksaw. :blink:


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