Stealth-E Trail Riders

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Tis


Quite quiet

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picking up my new stealth bike tomorrow so ready for a bit of silent exploring by the end of the week.

handguards Tuesday, new tyres (trials type) Wednesday and other required mods Thursday/Friday then out quietly on Saturday.

May you never hear me 'till you see my smiling face!

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Quite quiet

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Welcome Tis. smile

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Quiet

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Hi Tis

good to not see another new face

Whatcha getting thats nice and stealthy ?


whisp
 

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Tis


Quite quiet

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A whisper quiet CCM 230. When it's running the loadest noise is the sound of bits falling off.

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Quiet

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Yup,  thats a proper quiet bike and a nicer seat than the CRF230 with a real back brake too.

As you suggest, they havent quite got the build quality, a sort of Jailing quality Honda ?

But the Argentinian built CRF 230 Honda doesnt quite make the grade either.

Apparently they do look nice with dark plastics though   furious





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Aha !!

You have NEVER seen my Honda CRF230F... now in NEW STEALTH colours.........easy peasy!

Just do not wash of the mud!!

The stealth rear drum has no reflectiveness

Fitting a stealth cover to the shiney front disc as I fear reflection from the Sun may give my position away.... if we ever get any!

evileye


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Tis wrote:

A whisper quiet CCM 230. When it's running the loadest noise is the sound of bits falling off.



PINK ???

 



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Quite quiet

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whisp wrote:

Yup,  thats a proper quiet bike and a nicer seat than the CRF230 with a real back brake too.

As you suggest, they havent quite got the build quality, a sort of Jailing quality Honda ?

But the Argentinian built CRF 230 Honda doesnt quite make the grade either.

Apparently they do look nice with dark plastics though   furious



Having put 2000 miles off road on my CRF 230 in 4 months, dont knock the back brake until you have tried it, at  its always there and very effective and doesnt bend as happens to a lot of discs. 

Quiet as a mouse, hauls my 14 stone anywhere, and uses about 5 litres for 6 hours running, and have just done 60 miles today on my own, and no one knew I was there, theres stealthy for you!!!!!

And what are you whinging about a seat for, get off the thing you sit on it with and alter it to your spec. you do that with the rest of the bike, why not the seat, but then its not something you can buy and bolt on, so its a bit of DIY  


 



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Quiet

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Yo Hammer,

The rear brake on my CRF230 has been a big disappointment.
The shoes seem to wear out in no time and the last set had the friction material debond from the metal backing earlier on the same day that had the front brake circuit fail due to fluid loss.
Think the drum brakes dont like water.

The seat is not bad enough to motivate me to core drill the foam, its just that the seat foam on the CCM felt more 'welcoming'.

The only real moan with the CRF230 is the suspension.

The 'one size fits all' setup is fine for pottering but a long day out with bigger bikes doing bigger distances, has me feeling a bit battered around the seat/arse interface and doing two days on going like Sarn Helen and Strata Florida is no fun at all, as the trade off between monkey butt and and creaking knee joints becomes
painful.

So a good stealth bike but not a good long distance bike I reckon.

If you want a few ideas on disc straightening, I have pulled out up to 0.25 of an inch, using a dial gauge, a marker pen and a big tyre lever.  I dont even remove the wheel from the bike.

whisp





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Quite quiet

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Disc brakes may be better than drums but drums don't squeal.

If you miss the hard bits of the lanes instead of hitting them perhaps your discs won't bend? biggrinbiggrinbiggrin

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evileye
STEALTH ~ E riders ride so quietly at sensible speeds the rear brake is rarely if ever applied, therefore the slowing effect of a drum rear brake is quite acceptable!

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Sigilo wrote:

evileye
STEALTH ~ E riders ride so quietly at sensible speeds the rear brake is rarely if ever applied, therefore the slowing effect of a drum rear brake is quite acceptable!



Ahh this is the stealthy approach, by not touching the back brake, the only sound to be heard will be the dull landing thud as the pilot flys over the bars, due to the front brake being applied. It will however satisfy the environmentallists, providing the injureds screams are kept to a minimum

 



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Quite quiet

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whisp wrote:

Yo Hammer,

The rear brake on my CRF230 has been a big disappointment.
The shoes seem to wear out in no time and the last set had the friction material debond from the metal backing earlier on the same day that had the front brake circuit fail due to fluid loss.
Think the drum brakes dont like water.

The seat is not bad enough to motivate me to core drill the foam, its just that the seat foam on the CCM felt more 'welcoming'.

The only real moan with the CRF230 is the suspension.

The 'one size fits all' setup is fine for pottering but a long day out with bigger bikes doing bigger distances, has me feeling a bit battered around the seat/arse interface and doing two days on going like Sarn Helen and Strata Florida is no fun at all, as the trade off between monkey butt and and creaking knee joints becomes
painful.

So a good stealth bike but not a good long distance bike I reckon.

If you want a few ideas on disc straightening, I have pulled out up to 0.25 of an inch, using a dial gauge, a marker pen and a big tyre lever.  I dont even remove the wheel from the bike.

whisp



It all depends on whose shoes you fit,  like most things you get what you pay for, never had any probs with top quality shoes

 Had no probs with the suspenders on my CRF run all day and never a sore arse

Must compare notes one day on disc straightening, I have pulled some BIG dings out up to 1 inch



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Quite quiet

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Sigilo wrote:

evileye
STEALTH ~ E riders ride so quietly at sensible speeds the rear brake is rarely if ever applied, therefore the slowing effect of a drum rear brake is quite acceptable!



evileye and not forgetting  a stealth ~ e  rider always has his machine in the correct gear and perfect velocity is maintained by throttle and careful adjustment of the magneto advance and retard lever, a mere touch on the decompression lever will controll even the most hazardous of decents, and thus using the engine braking of the long stroke four stroke motor alone, the necessity of applying brakes can be avoided.

Perhaps this is where the modern motorcycle manufacturer should look to proper stealth riders like Hugh Viney, Bob Mann and Harvey Mushmann

I rarely ever need to apply my brakes !

 



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Quiet

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wots that green spike about, just in front of yon badger ?

is he / she about to take a step forward ?

oooeeerrr

hush now, you'll get used to it .....

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