DanielMc wrote:
Chuey - your excellent words remind me of the time I was explaining to a friend why I prefer the challenge of changing gear on my R90S to doing likewise on my much slicker, driveline shock-absorbed R65LS. I explained how I tried to plan ahead so that unnecessary gearchanges were avoided, tried to avoid having to come to complete stops wherever possible and generally treated the gearbox as carefully as I could by matching road speed to gear selection and pre-loading the lever before each change. Downshifts, I advised, need a lot of care, but the rewards when I got it right were worthwhile. I said it's possible that getting a good gearchange on an old airhead is one of the things that adds greatly to rider happiness..
He asked me if I was some kind of Buddhist...
Oh man, my R90S has the transmission from the planet "Clunk". My other bikes shift so smoothly, it makes me wonder what the difference is. I have a lightened flywheel and the trans was rebuilt lavishly by The Beemer Shop. It
still clunks. When I first got the bike, my first BMW, I rode it around and marveled that it didn't break, what, with those loud clunks; but how could I help it shift better. I have striven to perfect the technique. The thing I noticed about it was that if I was having a fang in the hills (you guys know I love that word,
fang, thanks Ozzies!), it shifted pretty fine indeed. It was as if it was saying "Hey, that's more like it! Come on, let's keep this up. Isn't it more fun anyway?" And that's how I came to learn that the bike appreciates spirited riding.
Chuey