It's sounds to me like a throttle cable is sticking. Check to make
sure when you rotate the throttle both cables are properly functioning
and the hand control is bound by something like a bar end. Next (less
likely) it could be something improper/sticking with the carb slide
mechanism.
deceleration
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- Posts: 230
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nklr - article about an mc ride and election
How will this election end? To find out, take a rideJoe Soucheray
TwinCities.com-Pioneer PressArticle Last Updated:10/21/2008 11:58:43 PM CDT
On a motorcycle ride Sunday afternoon, I pushed deep into Washington County,
where I have developed several wonderful itineraries, to take in barns and
wooded hills and secret little lakes. Farther, I reminded myself it's a
short season and each ride could be the final one of the year.
Farther.
I got so far into Washington County that I started seeing McCain-Palin
signs. At say, 25 or 30 miles out of town, McCain-Palin signs are not only
plentiful, they aren't even vandalized, while meanwhile, back near the
tallest buildings, the signs are infrequently displayed and often defaced by
spray paint.
Farther. Just a bit more. I got far enough that I saw a lone Palin sign
without McCain's name. Now that's rural, insofar as Gov. Sarah Palin has
been characterized by hunting, fishing, snowmachining and zipping around in
her floatplane.
I turned back at the Palin sign. Maybe going farther would have been like
traveling back in time, to Reagan signs and Nixon signs and Eisenhower
signs.
That's how I will think of it on future rides I got all the way out to
Palin. Michele Bachmann and Norm Coleman were a given. But I got all the way
out to Palin.
As a socially responsible rider, I never rattle the pipes in town. When you
do, particularly on a parkway or a leafy avenue, you only disturb the
sensibilities of people who sit in the window with a quill pen ready to
demand ordinances and restrictions and limitations, because they have every
right in the world not to have their peace disturbed. I don't give them any
ammunition and even understand their point.
But out in Washington County, I could let the throttle loose and listen to
the trusty friend snarl and bark. Easily do I agree to the mythology of the
motorcycle as horse, the rider as cowboy. It's all a game, but a
head-clearing one and the simplest explanation we have for election-result
maps.
John McCain and Palin will undoubtedly win rural America. Barack Obama and
Joe Biden will overwhelmingly win urban America. Not only the yard signs
tell us this, but the famous election maps of the last few go-rounds that
showed George W. winning virtually all of America's real estate while Al
Gore and John Kerry won virtually all of America's cities.
We are not a terribly difficult people to figure out. With a little space, a
little elbow room and the occasional need to make noise with a chain saw or
tow a horse trailer to the Fairgrounds with a big SUV, you probably lean
toward the candidate you most think will leave you alone.
Closer to the tall buildings, closer to density, you tend to lean toward the
candidate you think will make your neighbor leave you alone. I suppose
collectivism has its appeal when you have to shut your windows to the
neighbor's backyard fire pit or plug your ears to the neighbor's leaf
blower.
There are other reasons, of course, why cities lean left and countryside
leans right, chief among them the essentially unexamined notion of peer
pressure. The Obama signs outnumber McCain 50 to 1 in the city. I haven't
counted, but the evidence is there for the observer. For pete's sake, how do
you go to the block party next summer if you had the only McCain sign on the
street?
In two weeks, most of the signs will be gone. But in about a year, it starts
all over again, for among our significant cultural declines, presidential
politics are too much with us, for too long. It isn't healthy. Long rides
are antidotes.
Joe Soucheray can be reached at jsoucheray@... or 651-228-5474.
Soucheray is heard from 2 to 5:30 p.m. weekdays on KSTP-AM 1500.
--
Kevin Powers
White Bear Lake, MN
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