Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2007 1:04 pm
1987 ninja, 27k miles. carbs were overhauled once, other then that it runs like a champ.
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actually, no. most chevys come with the 3.73 gears (standard in the Z-71 package which you see on 9 out of 10 trucks) but other than that you're spot onShorts wrote:There are several options for gear ratios. Most Chevys come with 342s. 373s and 410s are available as well.
I'm catching up....totalmotorcycle wrote:I have around 55,000 km's on my 1982 Seca and it's still going.
Mike
Hey, that's great as I know you have a new bike. I'd love to ride even more than I do, I can't wait till I get a "new" bike soon then I'll clock even more km's.Sev wrote:I'm catching up....totalmotorcycle wrote:I have around 55,000 km's on my 1982 Seca and it's still going.
Mike
We'll have to go for a ride this summer thentotalmotorcycle wrote:Hey, that's great as I know you have a new bike. I'd love to ride even more than I do, I can't wait till I get a "new" bike soon then I'll clock even more km's.Sev wrote:I'm catching up....totalmotorcycle wrote:I have around 55,000 km's on my 1982 Seca and it's still going.
Mike
But being an 1982, it's not really a bike you can take on long butt burner trips, it's more of a... classic... ya that's it...
Mike
RandyO! the vavle guides are shot tho..totalmotorcycle wrote:I hold to the belief that a slower revving, not built for weight savings and low horsepower for the engine size motorcycle will last longest. While supersports will not last as long. Thus, there are going to be a lot of cruisers in 15-20 years from now...
Like any machine, a motorcycle just needs proper maintenance and care. With that, I don't see a problem with some motorcycle models going over 100,000. I know of a sportbike (a 1999 Suzuki SV650) still going at 135,000 miles. But it's worn, but still alive.
Mike.
There's some truth to that. When you're designing an engine to run at the maximum edge of performance, you have to make some engineering tradeoffs. If you don't care about weight, or squeezing the maximum amount of hp out of a given displacement, you can design it like a tank.totalmotorcycle wrote:I hold to the belief that a slower revving, not built for weight savings and low horsepower for the engine size motorcycle will last longest. While supersports will not last as long. Thus, there are going to be a lot of cruisers in 15-20 years from now...