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Messages - bollard

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1
The Classic Biker Bar / Re: nothing to do with classic bikes
« on: May 03, 2017, 12:05:32 AM »
The latest versions of all the jap offerings all have that visibility issue I mentioned, even the current version of her car - the yaris. It' s really between the vw and the skoda.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: nothing to do with classic bikes
« on: May 02, 2017, 07:46:10 PM »
Yes I am the same - I'd be happy with an old micra for £600 but this is the wife and she won't want to be breaking down on a motorway with no hard shoulder.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: nothing to do with classic bikes
« on: May 02, 2017, 04:47:31 PM »
Ah well there were a couple of reasons that it came down to the polo and fabia, one of them was rear visibility and the other was comfort. I imagine that the peugeot is comfortable though. In recent years designers have made rear windows higher. In our home circumstances we are at the far end of a turning head, two of the neighbours park in the turning head itself so it is difficult to reverse and turn to get out unless you can actually look round and see what,s going on. Cameras are too narrow for this. I wish the guy with the huge people carrier would park it in his own driveway but there we are and no I haven't asked because I know what the answer would be.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: nothing to do with classic bikes
« on: April 30, 2017, 04:50:30 PM »
good to know about the servicing - thanks  :)

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The Classic Biker Bar / nothing to do with classic bikes
« on: April 26, 2017, 04:03:17 PM »
my mrs is buying a replacement car

its come down to the skoda fabia or the vw polo

which would you go for?

you get better value with the skoda and actually the new ones look quite cool

the polo is slightly more refined but somehow rather boring. difficult choice.

6
 if oil is coming out of a breather then either the oil level is higher than it should be or compression is getting past the rings allowing the crankcase to become pressurised.
 first step is to check oil level, if OK then a compression test imo. Bit puzzled though as there is usually smoke in the exhaust in the latter case.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: She Who Must Be Obeyed
« on: April 19, 2017, 10:27:30 PM »



cartoon that went with one of my stories about the office.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: She Who Must Be Obeyed
« on: April 19, 2017, 08:08:28 PM »
the chief exec got about £150Kpa plus bonus and there was a quibble about £15 boots in the quantity they ordered them in.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: She Who Must Be Obeyed
« on: April 19, 2017, 04:00:40 PM »
I'm not sure why it comes to mind. Somehow I am reminded of trying to claim for a fresh pair of boots at work.

I was in a contracting part of an organisation and every now and then they would issue safety equipment including boots, it was a matter of course.

then things changed, work got out sourced and i was moved into an administrative division where i eventually ended up with a female boss

since i still did site visits i needed boots and sought for replacements, my boss asked to look at the one's i had got. they were pretty worn but not worn out.

however the stitching had come adrift on the upper surface of one boot (due to my m/bike gear change lever). she mumbled about changing them puzzled at the damage.

of course i said nothing and just thought that this is how she must be with her kids, the whole thing was embarrassing, my old boss would have just said go ahead.

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The Classic Biker Bar / She Who Must Be Obeyed
« on: April 18, 2017, 10:36:27 AM »
Dare I risk another of my essays?  This one is a bit more advanced than the others, I hope you like it, critical comment welcome


SWMBO

Boys used to have train sets and girls were given dolls – it's the blue verses pink.  Generally speaking, we like different things and that's what makes us men and women. Some of us men have an craving for old motorbikes where as our womenfolk are more fond of handbags and shoes, they often say that they need more yet their wardrobe is stacked.

There are women motorcyclists although, on the whole, it is a male dominated field and especially older motorbikes, where tinkering is prevalent, tends to be almost exclusively male territory. In life the two sexes have to get on and a degree of tolerance of each others preferences helps an harmonious co- existence but it can be a tricky business.

Excesses need to be curbed and, in particular, men seem to need to be kept in order. Motorbikes are desirable objects, what red blooded man can resist them?, one's very own magic carpet. They are such good fun and it's nice simply to own one, even if  you don't use it much. Mine grace the garage, on sunny days they are brought out on display although not admired by the neighbours, strange that.

Males sometimes need to be reminded of family commitments and that they are no longer single and free to do what they want. When I joined a motorbike group I was struck by how many members were divorced, single or widowed. They were thus able to indulge in long Sunday lunches at the pub that was the club's venue and they did indeed seem to own numerous motorbikes in various stages of repair.

One chap I met had a similar bike to mine and in the course of conversation he mentioned that he had an engine for sale. The price was right and I was going his way to a meeting so I arranged to take it. My meeting went on longer than anticipated so I 'phoned to say I'd be late, he said he was on an early shift, that he'd leave the engine in a wheel barrow and I should put the money in his letter box.

When I next saw him I asked if he got the money, he said 'no, my partner was up before me'. Possibly he owed his partner money, I don't know. Later I went round his house and saw that he had an additional motorbike. I said 'that's new isn't it?' . He said that his partner had asked the same question. 'What did you say?' I asked. 'That I'd had it for ages' he replied. After a moments pause he said, 'that's what she says to me when I ask about her new stuff'.

Fortunately for me my wife's brother has always owned motorbikes so my shenanigans are tolerated despite being limited to two. She won't ride pillion because she says if we are both killed then there will be nobody for the children, now there's a sobering thought! Actually, I have a third bike but it's in bits so that it isn't obvious.

Sensible expenditure and time spent on motorbikes is OK with her as it stops me being too grumpy and, lets face it, there's worse things that I could be getting up to. It is something of a hobby really and we are all allowed a hobby. It is that ill defined grey area that is the problem, the trick is to push up against the line without crossing it.

I can just about remember dismantling a motorbike in my living room before I was married. Proposing something like that now would be viewed extremely dimly if not grounds for divorce. Pity as the garage is freezing but there we are. We intuitively know when not to argue. A friend insisted on taking his bike on holiday, his wife had the kids in the car, she wasn't impressed when he flew past at a great rate of knots. He was pushing his luck there.

Where there's a will there's usually a solution: so hold on, take a deep breath, stay calm, think it through then negotiate and agree something, it's usually a compromise but better than nothing. Of course I don't need to tell you all this. You've found out yourselves, hopefully not the hard way. Relationships are about being happy, surely there is room for give and take, although it is reminiscent of my “discussions” with my female manager at work and I never came out of those especially well.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: Biker Image
« on: April 18, 2017, 10:35:10 AM »
cheers mini  :)

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: Biker Image
« on: April 17, 2017, 10:23:46 PM »
hmm, i have had very little to do with hog riders, they don't wave so i ignore them.

at vjmc meets the riders there are typically people with a bit of money, they tend to trade in older models that have become valuable, they tend not to be all weather riders

i'm not a big fan of adventure bikes or modern street/nakeds particularly so i suppose that i'm a tad out on my own anyway  :)

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: Biker Image
« on: April 17, 2017, 09:46:06 PM »
Get out on your bike more,its a cure for nearly everything. haha that's true

seriously though, and despite me exaggerating it, there is a perception of bikers lowering the tone and also, funnily enough, some snobbery in the biking world itself.


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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: Biker Image
« on: April 17, 2017, 05:58:23 PM »
i guess we live in a status conscious place and yes i probably am getting some resentment off my chest

it has been helpful posting on here because i see that it would be a good idea to ditch that bit of my text

i suppose you could call that section a rant - they build houses so close today that there isn't much privacy.

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The Classic Biker Bar / Re: Biker Image
« on: April 17, 2017, 02:11:11 PM »
good point ian - i just come out with stuff that i find applies to me, things that concern me or that i think about and ponder.

self indulgent yes but so far i have had eight items published over the years, comments from people like you help mangle these articles into shape  :)

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