xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
- iDemonix
- Site Supporter
- Reactions:
- Posts: 651
- Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2010 10:26 pm
- Bike owned: '92 NC30
- Location: Banbury, Oxfordshire
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
£150 + half pack of hobknobs. Seriously.
A roaring V4 is the summer soundtrack.
- vfrman
- Senior Member
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1390
- Joined: Sat Apr 05, 2008 7:54 pm
- Bike owned: NC30, 1098s
- Location: Layton, Utah, USA
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
Thunderace, there is a stipulation....if you buy this bike you MUST do a fully documented repair thread!
- bikemonkey
- NWAA Supporter
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1521
- Joined: Tue Dec 27, 2011 12:33 pm
- Bike owned: 92 NC30, 90 VFR750
- Location: Oxfordshire
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
vfrman wrote:Thunderace, there is a stipulation....if you buy this bike you MUST do a fully documented repair thread!
- speedy231278
- NWAA Supporter
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1549
- Joined: Tue Jul 03, 2012 11:58 am
- Bike owned: RVF400, TZR125, ZXR750R
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
Maybe we could all chip in with a few quid to buy the bike, and have a get-together one weekend and try and sort it? I'd be up for a bit of that if it ended up close enough.... :-)
- xivlia
- Senior Member
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1206
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2011 3:27 am
- Bike owned: Ducati 749 D
- Location: Scotland, Inverness
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
a group buy on a bike eh? thats a first
- Sam-NI
- Site Supporter
- Reactions:
- Posts: 173
- Joined: Sat Apr 21, 2012 12:07 pm
- Bike owned: '89 VFR400
- Location: Belfast
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
Ersan, this thread is infuriating. I bought a cheap nc30, knowing that I would have to do a bit of work on it.
When I got it home, the more I looked at it, the more was wrong with it. I'm still saving money, and buying parts, but I'm doing it with the direction of these guys, who have been unbelievably helpful and generous. They have given clear concise intrusion, which I have followed to the best of my ability, and now have a perfectly usable bike, of a little rough round the edges.
Some of the problems may be from before, but that doesn't matter. Also a bike doesn't just suddenly break, or stop. Something has changed or worn out.
You need to step back and think about what you want. A bike that looks good, or a bike that works. At the moment you have neither. Investing time to learn will have more benefit that fancy fairings or spray jobs.
To be blunt, I find it marginally offensive that after all the efforts these guys have given to guide and instruct you on how to get this bike running well, you cannot even put the effort in to do what they say. They are gaining nothing from helping you. You will gain a nice bike if you do what they tell you. No matter system you think, you do not know more than the combined minds on the board. Use this knowledge, or please.stop moaning.
When I got it home, the more I looked at it, the more was wrong with it. I'm still saving money, and buying parts, but I'm doing it with the direction of these guys, who have been unbelievably helpful and generous. They have given clear concise intrusion, which I have followed to the best of my ability, and now have a perfectly usable bike, of a little rough round the edges.
Some of the problems may be from before, but that doesn't matter. Also a bike doesn't just suddenly break, or stop. Something has changed or worn out.
You need to step back and think about what you want. A bike that looks good, or a bike that works. At the moment you have neither. Investing time to learn will have more benefit that fancy fairings or spray jobs.
To be blunt, I find it marginally offensive that after all the efforts these guys have given to guide and instruct you on how to get this bike running well, you cannot even put the effort in to do what they say. They are gaining nothing from helping you. You will gain a nice bike if you do what they tell you. No matter system you think, you do not know more than the combined minds on the board. Use this knowledge, or please.stop moaning.
- xivlia
- Senior Member
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1206
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2011 3:27 am
- Bike owned: Ducati 749 D
- Location: Scotland, Inverness
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
lol, like how do you know im not following what theses guys are telling me? i am listening to them. have you actually read all of 1065 replies on this thread? i have done pretty much everything they have told me to, ive upgraded the bike with a nice earthing kit, ive follow the DIY carb jetting guide, ive used my Hanyes manual... i admit i do ask a lot of things, and just to clear some points, why would i ask so many questions if im not even gonna follow what they say to me?Sam-NI wrote:Ersan, this thread is infuriating. I bought a cheap nc30, knowing that I would have to do a bit of work on it.
When I got it home, the more I looked at it, the more was wrong with it. I'm still saving money, and buying parts, but I'm doing it with the direction of these guys, who have been unbelievably helpful and generous. They have given clear concise intrusion, which I have followed to the best of my ability, and now have a perfectly usable bike, of a little rough round the edges.
Some of the problems may be from before, but that doesn't matter. Also a bike doesn't just suddenly break, or stop. Something has changed or worn out.
You need to step back and think about what you want. A bike that looks good, or a bike that works. At the moment you have neither. Investing time to learn will have more benefit that fancy fairings or spray jobs.
To be blunt, I find it marginally offensive that after all the efforts these guys have given to guide and instruct you on how to get this bike running well, you cannot even put the effort in to do what they say. They are gaining nothing from helping you. You will gain a nice bike if you do what they tell you. No matter system you think, you do not know more than the combined minds on the board. Use this knowledge, or please.stop moaning.
the carb leaking happend when i came back from my holiday, i did nothing wrong to it. it was sitting there for 2 months.
my bike is just a worn out piece of shit, the person i bought it from was also a piece of shit. i shouldnt have bought it from that dick head, who ONLY said, i quote "the rear brake is sticky, thats the only problem" my arse its the only problem.
- jim157
- Admin NWAA
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1004
- Joined: Mon May 17, 2010 7:15 pm
- Bike owned: A few small ones
- Location: Norwich
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
^^^
Have you thought about asking if anyone on here would be up for swapping it for another bike? Perhaps something mechanically 'simpler' like a CB500 twin might suit you better at the moment.
Have you thought about asking if anyone on here would be up for swapping it for another bike? Perhaps something mechanically 'simpler' like a CB500 twin might suit you better at the moment.
AUTOEXEC.TWAT
- iDemonix
- Site Supporter
- Reactions:
- Posts: 651
- Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2010 10:26 pm
- Bike owned: '92 NC30
- Location: Banbury, Oxfordshire
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
I would seriously love this bike. I'm rebuilding mine and could do with all sorts of spares from it, then turn yours in to a track slag :D
A roaring V4 is the summer soundtrack.
- xivlia
- Senior Member
- Reactions:
- Posts: 1206
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2011 3:27 am
- Bike owned: Ducati 749 D
- Location: Scotland, Inverness
Re: xivlia's thread of nc30 problems and questions
Jim the thing is, i bought this bike because i wanted raw power. v4 power, going into a twin engine, is not what i want. plus i hate the noise the twins make.jim157 wrote:^^^
Have you thought about asking if anyone on here would be up for swapping it for another bike? Perhaps something mechanically 'simpler' like a CB500 twin might suit you better at the moment.
if i was older. like 25+ i wouldnt have even considered buying an nc30, only reason i bought this is because the insurance on anything above 400cc was about 2 and a half grand a year... so i bought an older bike, hence the nc30, i knew it was demanding, i just didnt know id be ending up getting the shitest one in the world. just my luck i suppose...