• 30 Apr 2008 /  Motorcycling

    Mounting an EZ-Pass toll tag on a bike is always a bit of a challenge. When I bought my V-Strom the previous owner had put some really ugly black velcro on the windscreen to mount his EZ-Pass toll tag.
    Original Velcro
    Not only is it ugly, you have to look at it all the time, and since it’s not the proper velcro, it isn’t even very secure. I wanted something a bit more polished and inconspicuous.  Looking around the bike, the tag fit right in between the windscreen and the mount down low. I thought about just using the correct velcro down there, but it would be difficult to attach and remove given the angles involved. I swap my tag between my truck and the bike, so it needs to be easy to move. I figured I needed some sort of pocket.

    For the impatient, here’s the end result:

    Finished mount

    Here’s how to do it:

    Look around your basement and find a large black plastic container. Mine was actually for gunpowder, but any reasonably stiff, but flexible plastic would work.
    Cut the side out and bend it around your toll tag. I trimmed mine with scissors and made sure to leave the top exposed to allow the tag to be grabbed easily.
    Pocket1
    I left the back side lower since I wanted to be able to easily see that the tag is there and also that edge will determine where it sits on the bracket. I tried to get some nice corners by bending over the edge of the bench, but it only worked so-so. A little curve seems to be fine though.
    In restrospect, I should have left the front taller to completely cover the tag, after installing, it doesn’t need the clearance there. Have to save that for v2.0.

    Next I found some nice wide electrical tape and wrapped it carefully around the whole thing to form the pocket.
    Taped up
    You want to keep it nice and tight as friction and gravity are the only things holding the tag in. Also be sure and get a wrap around above the thickest part of the tag, this pulls it in a bit above that ridge and makes it more secure. Try to be neat, but a few wrinkles or bubbles won’t be a big deal.
    Optionally, cut a couple of thin strips of tape to cover the exposed adhesive on the inside of the pocket.

    Finally, make a couple of slits in the bottom of the pocket, right at the back. Slip a couple of black 8″ cable ties down inside the pocket and out through the slits. Take the windscreen off and run the ties back around the windscreen bracket and tighten them up. Use pliers to get them nice and tight as that makes them lay flat.
    Finished pocket
    Snip off the tails and put the windscreen back on and you’re all set!
    So a piece of black plastic, Some electrical tape, and 2 cable ties; not quite free, but pretty damn close!

    I’ve used it a few times, and it’s quite secure and reads just fine. It might not hold up to severe jostling like you might find off-road. Other than my driveway, I don’t plan on much of that.

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  • 29 Apr 2008 /  Motorcycling

    Just picked up a “new” bike. A 2007 Vstrom 650 with 1200 miles. It’s basically brand new and even has an extended warranty. So far I’m very happy with it, it’s a lot like the BMW F650 (which will be up for sale soon). The V-twin makes a bit more power and does it more smoothly than the single in the F650. The fuel injection means no more fussing with a choke, yes it seems I have gotten that lazy. It sure nice to have things like a fuel gauge too. Being built in lawyer times, the thing has about a dozen warning stickers on it, I’ll have to get rid of those.
    Vstrom

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  • 13 May 2006 /  Motorcycling

    Picked up and installed the new Voltage Regulator from Max BMW in Troy today. Voltage indicates all is well. Crisis averted.

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  • 09 May 2006 /  Motorcycling

    Yesterday Erica is running a bit late to pick up Declan at my parent’s house, so I decide that I should ride over there and take him off their hands in case they have some plans. So, I hop on and start the bike up, it seems to crank a little slowly, but it fires up quickly and I just figure it’s been sitting a couple of days. (We’re about to see some evidence of how often I am completely wrong.)
    I get almost all the over to the folks and the bike starts sputtering, I reach down and flick the reserve, even though the odometer doesn’t indicate I should be out for another 100 miles or so (no fuel gauge on this bike). No help from that and just as I’m cresting the hill it dies. Lights are dim and it won’t crank at all, indicating a flat battery. I try and pop start it, but it just sputters for a second and dies again.
    Fortunately for me, it’s downhill all the way to the parent’s house, so I just coast down there. I put the charger on the battery and it’s really sucking the juice, so the battery is indeed dead. After charging for a while it starts up fine, but a meter on the battery indicates that it isn’t getting a charge. Uh Oh, Sad Beemer (
    Anyway tracked it down to the voltage regulator and will have to find a replacement part.

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  • 25 Apr 2006 /  Motorcycling

    So, I took my sweet time getting the bike out. I never posted what happened at the end of the season last year, but I ended up having a mouse living in the tail and he was chewing up some of the wiring. I quickly decided that I needed to find better storage for the winter, so a friends garage became the vacation home. It was too bad as I could have ridden a little longer, but it wasn’t worth risking more damage to the machine.

    Anyway, I finally got over there and got the battery charged up and brought it home. Started right up, which is always a good thing. I’m looking forward to another season of riding, and hopefully some better storage on my own property this winter.

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