One Year in
18/07/2019
The BMW is now insured, MOT'd and rideable. So is the Bullet.
Over the next six months or so I have to get some miles in to decide
which of these I keep.
 With
the shield on the silencer, and my new heel toe gear lever, and
summer in Cornwall, I can now ride in shorts and flip flops.
Yea.
The electronic ignition is now working. It has not affected
performance in anyway, but I'll probably never need to replace the
points again.
I
fitted a clock and a thermometer - £7.44 the pair from China via
Amazon.
The thermometer read about 8oC
low when it arrived but was easy to calibrate.
 As the weather got sunnier I found it increasingly difficult
to read the sat nav (actually just googlemaps on a phone) in the
tank pouch so I relocated it to the handlebars.
The mount was made from bits lying around - an old phone mount
for a microphone stand and a P clip.
The handlebars
were getting a bit cluttered now and I really don't like the handlebar
mounted usb sockets so I simply fitted mine in the headlamp and
ran the wire out to phone. - Much neater in my opinion. It is wired
through the ignition to avoid flat batteries.
The unit came from eBay for the princely sum of £3.06 Inc.
postage for TWO!
I do hate the wiring on the bike. It is vastly over complicated
with wires running all over the place.
For example, the ignition switch puts power on the coil and other
things when operated but also shorts out the points when not operated.
Why?
Why does the starter motor still turn when the cut of switch
won't let the plug fire?
There are lots of junctions IN THE HARNESS. Why? This more than
doubles the number of wires crossing from the frame to the headlamp.
If I still have the bike next winter I will do a re-wire to my
own design.
I think I need three looms. One inside the headlamp to
connect to the switches, ignition, lights etc. One at the
rear to connect to the taillights, battery etc. And a spine one
that runs from the headlamp to the rear. The fiddly bit will be
finding mating connectors to the switches and other fitments.
The BMW is growing back on me.
I had forgotten what a proper gearbox and clutch were like!
And what it is like to be able to overtake a lorry going uphill
without worrying if I can get past.
Update:- I took the Bullet and the
BMW out for a spin today (August). I have to admit I prefer
the BMW to ride. It is faster at 90+ mph and handles well.
The Bullet has shown 83mph on the clock but that is around
75mph on GPS. On the same flat stretch of road
in the opposite direction it managed around 60mph (GPS). I
guess there was a headwind in one direction and a tailwind
in the other.
The Bullet sounds good, but I need earplugs when riding it
and after an hour or so the noise does irritate. The
BMW is much quieter and the exhaust not is really less than
the wind noise in my open face helmet.
The Bullet looks better and I like the nice low seat, and it
now has lots of fancy extras on it .
But my friendly old R65LS is competing for, and winning, my
affections.
I could tune the Bullet. I'd need to gas flow the head, fit
a piston and bottom end that could take the power and
another carburettor. I think that the cost would be around
£2000. Then, as an Enfield, I could run it for a few
years hopefully, but after 30,000 miles it would be a "high
miler" and ready for a complete stripdown and rebuild.
By contrast the BMW with 47,000 miles on the clock has clean
insides with negligible big end play or barrel or piston
wear. Not so the valve seats which were recessed badly due
to sustained high speed running on unleaded petrol. I can
get the valves seats replaced for around £500. But it is
still going OK now. The money I could get by selling
the Bullet could be used on the BMW.
I've never been one for showroom bikes. Functional, reliable, comfortable
and lived in, is my style.
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