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DesmoDog

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Everything posted by DesmoDog

  1. I'm not so sure I'd put any of this in the amazing category... maybe an amazingly long time to get anything done... I started working on this in 2005. I'll post up a summary when it's done, I've already got a couple ongoing threads to maintain and this doesn't seem like the place for that sort of ongoing project thing. I don't recall those specifically but I have seen prices on brakes get a bit ridiculous. The Oldani I posted is a replica, I got a decent deal on it from a British shop. It was on consignment and the shop owner just wanted it gone - the brake owner owed the shop owner money from what I recall.
  2. No but the one on my other old Ducati project is. (shown below) That reminds me though. I do have some Honda parts I could put in there that would make it a twin leading shoe brake... I may do that before it's all said and done.
  3. In theory I could, in practie I wouldn't. Plating is expensive so I'm avoiding it on this project. There is also at least one place that 3D prints the sand mold itself but that's beyond what I can do here.
  4. When I cleaned up the spoke nipples it took the plating off, so they're brass now. They're small so it's pretty subtle though. When I rebuild the engine some of the fittings will receive the same treatement, so there will be brass parts sprinkled around on it here and there. But probably not the tail light.
  5. I should have figured the Harley crowd was doing it. I'd prefer the look of raw aluminum over green bronze... and there's no way I'm constantly polishing the damn thing to keep it shiny. I've got better things to rub out. Wait, that didn't sound right...
  6. It won't be white. It most likely won't even be that actual part. I won't worry about the type of paint until the part is finally finalized for the final and last and final final time, instead of that white part which will be bolted to the bike during the mock up phase. Basically I'm putting everything in the general shape I'm going to use for now, then I'll tear it back down and do the final finish on everything, painting and polishing the bits as they go back together. I may reprint the light housing in ABS (the stuff things like Legos are made out of) before it gets painted? That would require building an enclosure for the printer though. The ideal case would be to print it out of wax and use that for a pattern to have it cast out of aluminum. There are filaments available intended for lost wax casting but that would probably take another redesign or three to make it better suited for the task. I thought about trying that at home (my dad sandcast some things for me back when I was a little guy, he taught metal shop in school) but will probably try to find an artist type to do the actual casting. But if I do that it'll probably come back to me in bronze... hmm... a bronze tail light... that'd set it apart in a crowd I suppose. And now through the wonder of mock up parts, I've found my fancy fender mounts prevent me from fitting/removing the chain guard with the fender/chain in place. Which isn't ideal. Looks like a two piece guard is in the cards. Back to the drawing board... and the last part for the one piece guard hasn't even been removed from the print bed yet.
  7. I do have a camera on it, but it's only to monitor what's going on. I have pretty much given up on doing timelapses since I never did anything with them anyway. That said here are a couple I did when it was set up to do it automatically - obviously I didn't optimize anything to make them look good. There are a ton of choices to make it look different, you can freeze the extruder so it looks like it's just moving straight up, or move it off to the side entirely, or let it move around, or a bunch of other crap. Some of them have an effect on the quality of the print so my default is now "off". Also the webcam I use sucks (doesn't handle anything less than ideal lighting very well, doesn't auto focus, etc) and the position of the camera isn't great for this sort of thing. I guess the second one is recent, I updated some software and reset some defaults, but it's been turned off again already. http://teamyikes.com/Hardtail/06_Phil_A_Ment_20210115052430.mp4 http://teamyikes.com/Hardtail/Tail Light Housing v4.aw_20230107011406.mp4 Anywhos... last week I was working on tail lights. The light I wanted to use was made for a larger fender, it didn't fit the radii of the smaller fender very well so I printed an adapter to make it fit. I thought I liked it but every time I left it a while and came back I decided I didn't like it after all and tried to change it. I've printed so many of them in so many materials and designs it's embarrassing. I finally accepted it wasn't going to work and I may as well do the entire light. It will require sanding and painting but should work. I started out thinking I'd use an incandescent bulb because an LED would look out of place on the bike it's going on, then decided to use an LED panel I had for another light/bike. With an LED I can go smaller and won't have to deal with heat. Here's a family shot of the changes that were made long the way. I forgot, this place doesn't let me hotlink photos from my website cuz it's not https... so the first pic is the family of tail lights. Second is the stl file (digital model basically) for the "final" version. Last pic is the earliest version sitting on the fender. This week's project is a chain guard. It's too long to fit the printer bed so it needs to be done in pieces. I'm on the third iteration now and as per usual, as soon as I start printing it I think of something I want to change. It's now 3;20 am here and the shim I printed to mimic the latest change I want to make just finished printing so the last piece that took two hours to print isn't for naught... no pictures of any of that stuff. It's still ugly. It will be a while before that one's done, each change so far has involved starting over from the beginning, not minor tweaks.
  8. What does supervising a basketball game consist of? You're gonna be mayor of that place soon enough! Was dinner in one of the casinos? I don't recall anywhere with that many screens very near you... My day will consist of more 3D printing of things for an old bike, it's so much easier than doing actual mechanical work and you don't have to wash grease off your hands when you're done.
  9. That doesn't surprise me. As a Harley rider you're obviously obsessed with overweight shit.
  10. I dunno, I liked it enough to take one home.
  11. Somehow this thread reminds me of a barefoot shoemaker...
  12. Yeah, sort of, about 25 years ago. And the street version was only available in Poland or something like that. Bare minimum to make the race version legal for the superbike class. That picture looks like a computer rendering of the VR1000? It's been too long for me to spot the changes but either the joke is Harley keeps reintroducing old bikes, or someone has updated the VR1000 in photoshop for some reason. As for the real one, If it had been available in the USA and somewhat similar in price to a Ducati I would have owned one. As it was, the few I saw available in the USA after the fact were about $65k if I remember right. I've forgotten all the details but I seem to recall Harely didn't handle the development of the bike very well. Kinda pissed me off but like I said, this many years later I've forgotten the details. EDIT: Never mind. Looking at a real VR1000 that's someone's digital rendition of something inspired by it. Still looks old though. Missing it's winglets. All the cool kids use winglets now.
  13. Me: "A couple guys here ..." You: "Well for a start there are only a couple of peeps..." If it were later in the day after I've had some chocolate I'm sure I'd have some witty retort but for now I've just gotten up (fuck off, I'm retired and sleep in when I want to) and, um, ah crap. I got nothing. Most of the guys who are blowing smoke up each other's asses on the Ducati forums are gay, so I don't join in unless I'm getting paid. Like I said, $20 is $20 and timing belts aren't free.
  14. I don't stop by here as much as I used to, partly because of the season (won't be riding for a while) and partly because it seems every thread I read ends up with someone replying with "gay". A couple guys here apparently have serious obsessions with homosexuality... for fuck sake just admit you're confused and work through it. Nobody cares if/that you're gay. And as I was reading through this thread I saw it fits too. Fucking hilarious. Again. No, really, it's fucking hilarious, each and every time and time again. The imagination it takes to reply with a single word is beyond comprehension. True comedic genius. And FWIW I'm not offended, just bored as fuck seeing it again and again and again and again and, well, you get it. seriously, update the material. We get it already. And for the record, no, I am not gay. But $20 is $20...
  15. A) They are ugly as sin (Past versions more than current ones) B) I don't want a touring bike C) A friend had one. He loved it. I rode it. Did NOT love it. While I am a Ducati fan boy, that does not mean I love all Ducatis.
  16. TL;DR version - At this point it's probably as much experience/familiarity as anything else. 30+ years ago when I was first getting into bikes, I wanted a Honda. Then I went down to Daytona to help out a friend who was racing there and saw someone racing a Ducati F1. That was it, I was hooked. The sound, the rawness of it. And they were the underdog, a small company going up against the Japanese brands. When the time came to buy something, I went against everyone's advice and bought a Ducati as my first bike. Soon after that someone saw the bike and asked if I was a machinist, or an engineer, as if those were the only choices. I told him I was an engineer, why? He said those were the only two types of people who bought those things. Back then there was some truth to that, most owners were rather mechanical. Insert jokes of "making mechanics out of riders since 1949" here. Anyway I have always been pretty mechanically inclined so I fit in. The Japanese companies make great bikes, but there is something generic about them. They feel like they were designed by comittee or something. Take all the branding off a new Yamaha, Honda, Kawasaki and Ducati. The Ducati will be obvious just by sitting on it, without looking at the engine. The others? I'd be lost trying to tell you which was which. I dunno. They just feel right to me and I like the history of the company. Honda and Ducati started building bikes at roughly the same time. The same year Ducati announced they had built their one millionth bike, Honda built their 300 Millionth bike. Every Ducati I've ever owned was built in the same facility, from the '66 160 Monza Jr to the 2015 Monster. (Yes, I've been there, a few times). Bikes are an emotional purchase so I never put much effort into trying to rationalize why I like one more than another. I just go with the one that I keep thinking about. I bought a Hypermotard over an Aprilia whatever even though the reviews all said to buy the Aprilia. I liked the Hypermotard, sold it to buy a Monster 1200S which I REALLY liked. None of the enjoyment I've had riding Ducatis over the years has been lessened by someone pointing out the Japanese whatever is cheaper and makes 10 more HP. So what? They are emotional choices. Buy the one that makes you smile. Newsflash - the bike has never been the limiting factor when I'm out on a ride. Well, aside from the 160 Monza. I'm slow on everything, I don't ride because I'm fast - I'm not. I ride because I like bikes. I once read something along the lines of "if you don't stop and look back at your bike after a ride once in a while, you bought the wrong bike". I'd agree with that. PS - one of my absolute favorite bikes ever is a Honda RC-30. I searched for one once but bought a new 996 instead. Kinda wish I had continued looking for the Honda even though the 996 is the one Ducati I regret selling. Actually I found one, but the dealer still wanted MSRP for it even though it had been sitting on display for years. I passed. Oops, today it'd be worth a lot more than he was asking. But then a long time ago I also delayed calling about a '74 Ducati 750 Super Sport because it needed work and when I finally did call it was already sold. They wanted $700 for it IIRC. In good shape that's a $100k bike today. EDIT: 2003, I'm in Italy with my sister and brother in law. We're standing outside and I tell him there's a Ducati coming. He looks around, there's no traffic. "Where?" Oh just wait, it's coming. Yep, down the street a bike appears and as it goes by he reads "Ducati" on the tank. "Really?" dude... You doubted me??? And yes, I did name one of my dogs "Desmo".
  17. I rode Ducatis exclusively for about 25 years, then strayed when I bought an Aprilia RSV-R for a track bike, and then a Guzzi V85tt for a street bike. I never bonded with either. The Aprilia was sold off last spring, and it's pretty much decided the V85 will be put up for sale next spring. I already bought a 900ss track bike to replace the RSV, the Guzzi wil likely be replaced by an older air cooled Ducati Monster, or if I decide to sell my 851 also, perhaps a V2 Streetfighter. I need to see one in person first but so far it's caught my attention.
  18. Spring of 1991. I went to pick up the Ducati 907ie that I had put a deposit down on months before and of course, it starts raining. So I ride it home and park it, anxiously awaiting the next day when it's supposed to be clear. The next morning I get up to sunshine. Suit up, head out. This was before the 900ss came out, and before Ducati's big come back, so most people had NO idea what a Ducati was. People who did know what it was often thought they had gone out of business. So the bike was a but of an oddity. Anyway... I'm tooling along and saw a guy I kind of knew, a friend of a friend who was in to bikes. I pull into his driveway. He has no idea who I am, he only knows this brand new Ducati is pulling up. I get to the garage, start to turn, and realize I haven't got enough room to turn around, I'm going to hit one of his cars. So, against everything my brain was telling me, I hit the brakes while still turning. And promptly fell over. I'm on the ground. Brand new bike is on the ground. This guy has no idea who I am yet. I don't recall taking off my helmet or picking up the bike or anything for a bit. Nice enough guy though. He told me the story of how he was pulling a BMW into the garage one day and fell over onto his dad's newly repainted Jaguar. Made me feel a lttle better... but I still went straight home and went back to bed. The only real damage to the bike was a cracked mirror and a couple scuffs in the paint, so it could have been worse. Messed up my wirst too but I didn' tfeel that right away... Years later, a friend asks me to ride with him in a team Hare Scrambles off road event. I had a KDX250 and had ridden off road for about five miuntes in my life but sure, why not? I had off road gear, what could possibly go wrong? He takes the first leg, then hands the bike off. I fumble around the track for a bit, mostly trying to stay out of everyone else's way. I was climbing a hill (a weak point in my already very limited skills) and I hear a two stroke coming up behind me, so I try to up the pace and get to the top. The bike hits a bump, I go up in the air, the bike drops, I start to drop, the bike hits another bump and comes up while I am still dropping down, and the tank crashes into certain body parts that are not known to resist impacts very robustly. Fack me. I got to the top of the hill, pulled over, and took a little rest... But that's not the embarrassing part. I remounted and continued on, a bit worse for wear and getting pretty tired. Suddenly the trail opens up into a small field with a checkpoint table. Open field after all the riding through the woods. Nothing to avoid, no trees to dodge. Well, I mean there was one small little tree there, out in the open, before the table. Not much more than a sapling really, right there by the table. You'd have to be a complete idiot to... oh son of a bitch, I clipped it with the bars and went down. Right in front of everyone sitting there doing checkpoint stuff. And I'm not exactly running with the pack so there wasn't much else for people to be watching when I pulled up. One guy has his kid with him. The kid starts laughing. The dad tells him not to laugh. I stood up and told the kid it was ok, that was pretty funny. And I started laughing too. It was that or cry. I got back around to the pits and handed the bike off to the other guy. It had been so long he thought I had broken down. And that was the end of my Hare Scrambles career.
  19. I rediscovered this when going through some old videos. I get a kick out his comments at the end. http://teamyikes.com/vids/Rookie.mov
  20. Because there is already a market for the good parts. Why make yet another market for something that is already in demand instead of creating a market for something there is a surplus of? Buffalo chicken wings are one of the great marketing stories of the '80s IMHO. Create the market, grow it by expanding to other seasonings, and suddenly that stuff you used to have to pay to have hauled away is bringing in money. EDIT: And I've got to say, when done right they're pretty good.
  21. I rode my '66 160 Ducati to a show, was convinced to enter it, and ended up winning an award.
  22. Yeah... Eric "rides" from Colorado to Ohio in two days, and 1000 miles into the trip he shows a huge enclosed trailer that just HAPPENS to be from... COLORADO. Yeah, sure, he rode all the way... uh huh...
  23. Some days I wish I hadn't sold this bike. I owned it for 17 years and put about 7500 miles on it. It was the worst streetbike I've ever owned but when the time was right it was awesome. I sold it and kept my 851, some days I think I sold the wrong bike.
  24. In the USA that's the only color they came in. It was also the reason I had Larry find me a yellow 996 instead of buying the red one they had in stock.
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