A really cheap & easy GL1000 dipstick

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Sidecar Bob
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A really cheap & easy GL1000 dipstick

#1

Post by Sidecar Bob »

After years of getting out the trouble light and trying to see the sight glass past the frame, then using a little brush to clean the sight glass and deciding if the oil was really at the 1/2 way mark or if I was just seeing the stupid wiper, I finally got fed up and did something about it.

1) The first thing I did was to put the bike on the centre stand and make sure the oil level was just where I wanted it to be.
A few words about oil levels are appropriate here: A couple of years ago something I read on another board about the accuracy of dipsticks and how much oil should be put into an engine got me thinking. Before that I had always filled engines to the upper mark and topped them up when they reached 1/2 way down, every couple of fill-ups. I tried putting the exact ammount of oil Honda specifies into my engine and it came exactly 1/2 way between the upper and lower marks - right where the wiper is. I decided to try running it with the oil at this level for awhile to see what happened. Miracle of miracles - my engine stopped using oil! Now it only needs about 1/2 litre in 6,000Km.

2) Then I put the bike on the side stand in it's usual parking space.

3) I found a reasonably straight piece of 3/32" steel wire about a foot long in my odds and ends, bent a loop about 5/8"dia. (not critical) in one end for a handle, opened the oil filler, and pushed it into a tiny space between the internal parts and the side of the fill hole towards the front of the bike.

4) When I pulled it out, I used a pair of wire cutters to put a mark at the level of the oil. I only put one mark , but you can use your own judgement here.

5) DO NOT INSERT THIS INTO A RUNNING ENGINE OR START THE ENGINE WITH IT INSERTED. I hung mine on the wall by the shelf where the oil is kept, right beside my parking spot. To check the oil I simply park in my usual place, open the oil filler, insert the dipstick, pull it out, and read it. No more crawling around with a trouble light and a little brush!
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#2

Post by Rat »

Good trick.

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#3

Post by Annie's Boyfriend »

Very good tip there, how reliable is it??

My english is not that good, do you mean that you stick it in at an angle, or straight down ??

Bart
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#4

Post by Sidecar Bob »

Annie's Boyfriend wrote:Very good tip there, how reliable is it??
It is more reliable than the sight glass because you don't have to decide if the oil level is hidden by the wiper screw or if it is low.
My english is not that good, do you mean that you stick it in at an angle, or straight down ??
You have to put the dipstick in at the side of the oil filler hole nearest to the front of the bike and sort of wiggle it a bit to get it to go down through the transmission &c. It should be about perpendicular to the boss that the oil filler cap screws into and angled about 1 or 2 degrees towards the front of the bike.

There is something in there that can stop it on the way in that will give you a really low reading, but you should notice that too much of it is still sticking out.
It is possible (at least with the rod I made mine from) to push it in too far and have the end slide across the bottom of the crankcase a bit, but you should be able to tell because not enough of it is still sticking out.
With a bit of practice you can tell when it has gone in right.

I recommend checking the oil when the engine is cold (eg. before you take it out in the morning) because the oil is thickest then so it clings to the dipstick best.
Mr. Honda ('83 GL1100/Dnepr) summer How a motorcycle evolves thread
The Famous Eccles ('84 CX650EI/VeloUral) winter Never Ending Build (CX500forum)
Click: Colour schematics for all GL1000 & GL1100 and GL1200 standard models plus instructions on how to download the full size version
"A guy with two sidecars can't be all bad." - Cookie
Another guy with two sidecars..... Hmmmm... must be something to that....
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#5

Post by Annie's Boyfriend »

perpendicular :-? :-? :-?

Boss :-? :-?

I'm sorry but I am a dutchman, English is not my native language, what do these two words mean ??

( Q, I always had straight A's for English at school, but now it is time for some extra lessons ?? giveup fly into a rage fly into a rage imsmilin shakehands shakehands go get it )

I think I get what you mean, it is important always to check the same way.

Am I correct ??

Bart
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Little Ship of Dreams ...........

( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)

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#6

Post by Sidecar Bob »

Perpendicular: at right angles (90 degrees)

Boss: a raised area.

I hope this helps
Mr. Honda ('83 GL1100/Dnepr) summer How a motorcycle evolves thread
The Famous Eccles ('84 CX650EI/VeloUral) winter Never Ending Build (CX500forum)
Click: Colour schematics for all GL1000 & GL1100 and GL1200 standard models plus instructions on how to download the full size version
"A guy with two sidecars can't be all bad." - Cookie
Another guy with two sidecars..... Hmmmm... must be something to that....
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#7

Post by Zryder »

I Thank You Big Time SidecarBob , great info . and Thank You for joining , you're making a great asset to our site . ( Zryder )
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#8

Post by Annie's Boyfriend »

Thanks for the info, Bob.

Always nice to have a lot of folks here who have lots of tips for us.

One tip from me: if you sand the rod the oil will stick to the rod much better, I'd say a 400 grid should work.

Bart
Annie
Dreamboat Annie



Little Ship of Dreams ...........

( lyric from "Dreamboat Annie" by Heart)

[url]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/gallery/Dreamboat-Annie[/url]

[img]http://www.hondagoldwings.com/images/cliparts/eagle3_small.gif[/img]

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#9

Post by QUEEENlE »

I just woke up ....but i was getting there ...

Perpendicular- being at right angles to the vertical/ horizontal; mathematics intersecting at or forming right angles.


Boss-1.circular protuberance or knoblike swelling, as on the horns of certain animals.
2.raised area used as ornamentation.
3.chitecture. A raised ornament, such as one at the intersection of the ribs in a vaulted roof.

a. enlargedpart of a shaft to which another shaft is coupled or to which a wheel or gear is keyed.
b. hub especially of a propeller.

Hugs

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#10

Post by Paxton Gomez »

No Comprendo! :lol:
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#11

Post by merlin »

Boss
Origin: 1635

As far as we know, the first boss arrived in English-speaking North America on November 28, 1635. This is the entry for that date in the journal of John Winthrop of Massachusetts Bay: "Here arrived a small Norsey bark, of twenty-five tons, sent by the Lords Say, etc., with one Gardiner, an expert engineer or work base, and provisions of all sorts, to begin a fort at the mouth of Connecticut."

That base was the Dutch word we now know as boss. Ironically, boss Gardiner was building a fort to keep out the Dutch, who had settled New Amsterdam (later New York) to the south. But the English language readily admitted the Dutch word. And boss grew in popularity over the years, gradually taking the place of master as the latter became associated with slavery. "As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master," in Lincoln's later words. Boss was plain and emphatic, too, making it a useful informal substitute for words like employer, supervisor, and foreman.

In the nineteenth century, only boss would do to describe a new kind of political leader who came to dominate local politics through patronage and corruption. The most notorious was the ruler of New York City in the mid-nineteenth century, "Boss" William Tweed. From that kind of boss it was a short jump in meaning to refer to a leader of organized criminal activity as boss. Indeed, political and criminal bosses often cooperated, and it could be hard to tell which was which.

But those bosses did not tarnish the basic meaning of the word. Boss remains a respectful way of addressing a person to acknowledge that person's leadership or authority. And in modern slang use, boss as an adjective means "excellent, outstanding, superior," if sometimes said humorously instead of with awe. It's a boss word.

A boss can mean other things to but most of that is unprintable in polite company.


Merlin out!

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#12

Post by Bandanna »

HISTORY LESSONS NOW EH??????????????? :shock:



Q........................ :-?
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#13

Post by QUEEENlE »

:-? .... good lesson... can someone research the use of "boss" from the architectural point of view ? ..extra credit will be given of course.

Hugs
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____*____*____*____*____*____*____
Most things make me say, hmmmmm
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#14

Post by RebelRouser »

[quote=Queeenie]can someone research the use of "boss" from the architectural point of view [/quote]

Yeah, I Think I Got This One.....
"If I Do Not Finish My Architectural Designs By Friday On The New Capital Dome, My BOSS Is Going To Fire Me!!!!!"

Well???? Extra Credit????

ARCHITECTURE VIEW; 'Boss' Design: A Los Angeles Sketchbook
Print Single-Page Save

By HERBERT MUSCHAMP
Published: June 12, 1994
LOS ANGELES IS A WORK IN PROG- ress, and the excitement is that the design is still evolving.

Just now, the Getty Center is the Acropolis in reverse, a lofty urban landmark on the rise instead of one in ruin. Brentwood's hilltop city of the arts, a symbol of the surging cultural ambition of Los Angeles, will not be completed for two years. But if construction were halted tomorrow, it would still be worth climbing the hill just to see the sublimely beautiful stone veneer that now clads the Getty's base.

Part of the pleasure of visiting this nascent citadel, which will include the museum and a research center for scholars, is the surprise of seeing Richard Meier work with stone. The purest and palest of all the architects once known as the Whites has gone and got himself a beach-boy tan. Yet the white porcelain panels of Meier's other buildings have often taken on subtle coloration from reflected light, and here the stone resembles a fossilized form of the radiant air around it. A Roman travertine, cleft-cut against the grain, the stone is shot through with yellows, violets, grays and pinks, an iridescent palette that varies from block to block and from hour to hour as the sun's angle shifts.

But the complex is rising at a moment of skepticism about powerful cultural institutions like the Getty, a time when many people are more inclined to resent their power than respect their culture. Seen from the city below, the Getty hulks against the sky like a fortress; Marcel Breuer's Whitney Museum is a sweet little sand castle by comparison. And while Los Angeles may be ready to exchange the Hollywood sign for a more culturally elevated urban symbol, the Getty's symbolism is double-edged.

Physically remote, the Getty also presents a picture oddly distant from the city whose cultural prestige it is meant to enhance. The cultural vibrancy of Los Angeles today has little to do with either the high-art tradition represented by the Getty or Hollywood's commercial kitsch. It derives partly from the breakdown of that dualism under cataclysmic social and environmental pressures -- riots, earthquakes, challenges to the power structure -- and from the city's receptivity to ideas that reckon with those pressures.

Power is the theme of one of the newest buildings in town, the U.C.L.A. Energy Services Facility, popularly known on campus as the Chiller Plant. Raw power, utility-type power: the plant's chief function is to generate the energy required to light, heat and cool the entire campus. But the design is also concerned with power on a philosophical level. It invites viewers to ponder the impact of power on those who use it.

Designed by Wes Jones when he was at the San Francisco firm Holt Hinshaw Pfau Jones (he now heads Jones Partners Architecture), the plant is indeed a chiller, the air-conditioner of the apocalypse. At age 36, Jones is a cold-war child, and a recurring theme of his work, like the Astronauts Memorial he designed for the Kennedy Space Center in 1991, is the interplay of fascination and dread that technology generates in the nuclear age. Jones shares little of the modern architect's belief in technology as a benign social force. He is even less sympathetic toward the post-modern desire to put the machine back in the box and tie it up with bows.

Jones's approach derives from Heidegger's warnings about the spiritual impact of the machine. In Jones's view, the problem in seeking to master nature is not that it jeopardizes the planet but that it threatens humanity. The Lord of the Universe role is a corrosive delusion; masters are corrupted by the subordination of others into a role of servitude. Nature is one of those others. Jones's Chiller Plant is an architectural essay on the need to confront the desire for mastery. It stands not only for the technology to heat or cool a campus, but for the mind-set it takes to build a city in a desert, atop a network of seismic faults.

The plant is a full-service servant. Besides generating power, it houses repair shops and offices for the campus maintenance department. But the main tenants are two gigantic generators, designed by the engineering firm Parsons Main. In effect (and appearance) giant jet engines, their function is not to thrust an aircraft but to transport a campus, lifting it out of its desert habitat into a condition more favorably disposed to scholarly pursuits.

It would be logical to hide the machinery behind normal-looking wraps; this is, after all, a structure whose function is to normalize the environment for human beings. Jones's design partly acknowledges the desire for concealment. Walls of red-orange brick, identical in color to those found throughout the campus, clad the building's lower half. Except for some brick panels that tilt down (like overscaled garbage-chute doors), and some segments of contrasting slate-blue brick that dance like stylized shadows across its ruddy surface, the bottom part of the building could be a generic campus brick box of the 1960's.

But above the brick, the plant shifts into high expressive gear, first with a tier of immense steel louvers, painted a bland industrial putty tone, then in a barely controlled eruption of mechanical equipment -- chimneys, compressors, ducts, pipes -- that rise above the louvers, enveloped in an infernal cloud of steam.

This ominous superstructure is an example of what Jones calls "boss design" -- mastery in built form. It is the vocabulary of industry, weaponry, engineering and urban infrastructure. In its poeticized form, boss design was also the grammar of modernism. But while Jones exposes the boss, he suppresses the poetry. His intention is not to celebrate technical prowess but to honor the power of nature. The raw display of industrial strength is a tribute to the mightier natural forces it seeks to control.

The plant is an ecologist's nightmare. It does nothing to decrease the city's disconnection from the natural environment. What it seeks to do is challenge our disconnection from the technology that makes that separation possible. As such, it performs a teaching function. It instructs the university to take responsibility for the environment it has created.

BY COINCIDENCE, THE chiller Plant sits directly opposite another recent building dedicated to science: the MacDonald Medical Research Laboratory, designed by Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates. The lab was completed two years ago, and even then it looked like a period piece, though a fine one, a decorated shed of patently post-modern vintage.

The MacDonald lab, too, deals in a sophisticated way with issues of screening and exposure. Like Guild House, Venturi's seminal post-modern building of 1963, the lab has a flagrantly false facade, pasted onto the front of the building, and much of the interest resides in the play between the two-dimensionality of the facade and the richness of its ornament. With its bands of patterned red and orange brick interwoven with rows of flush-mounted checkerboard-mullioned windows, the facade is an ornate Victorian pile that has been flattened to a pancake by a century of disbelief. When one of the windows pivots open, at once calling attention to the flatness and breaking out of it into the third dimension, the trompe-l'oeil effect is as startling as one of Magritte's.

The MacDonald lab doesn't completely hide the technology within. It also has louvered panels, two little ones that peek out from the roof line on either side of the facade. The effect is a bit like someone making donkey's ears behind someone else's head. It gently mocks the ornament's humanist aspirations and subtly puts into question who's the real boss: the pretty face or the mean machine lurking behind it.

I imagine that from Venturi & Scott Brown's perspective, the Chiller Plant must look like a period piece too. Do all those steaming pipes really add up to a substantial departure from modernism's machines for living? It is true that in the Chiller Plant Jones is dealing with historical themes. He's picking up a strand of history that post-modernists let fall. Implicitly, his design rebukes his post-modern elders for thinking that the machine could be civilized with historical quotations or teased into submission with jokes.

I'm drawn to Jones's side of the street, because he's the challenger in this unplanned contest. He has introduced a polemic as gutsy as the one Venturi mounted 30 years ago, before post-modernism became the boss. Also, as a cold-war child myself, I'd like to think that architecture can reckon with the complexities of superpowerdom. Yet it's not necessary to reject one of these buildings to appreciate the other. Of course, the architects themselves have taken sides. The strength of both projects reflects the vigor of their designers' convictions. But my overriding response to both is one of gratitude toward a city that has invited architects of conviction to create buildings that matter.

Hows That????
If You Didn't Build It, Customize It, And/Or Modify It, Then It Truly Isn't Yours. Rebel Rouser
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#15

Post by QUEEENlE »

RebelRouser wrote:
Queeenie wrote:can someone research the use of "boss" from the architectural point of view
Yeah, I Think I Got This One.....
"If I Do Not Finish My Architectural Designs By Friday On The New Capital Dome, My BOSS Is Going To Fire Me!!!!!"

Well???? Extra Credit????
Ummmmmm for ^^^^^^^ that ?....nope ! .....for the rest of it ....ok.<smiling> ..sometimes we need a little push to learn about something we would otherwise never have known about, eh?

Hugs
Q
O, for a horse with WINGS ~Shakespeare
____*____*____*____*____*____*____
Most things make me say, hmmmmm
80 GL1100 [img]http://www.nakedgoldwings.com/albums/queeenie/King.thumb.jpg[/img]
* * * * * * * * *
I didn't say it was your fault, I said I was going to blame you!
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