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Ryan D Thompson
Joined: 22 Aug 2005 Posts: 199 Location: United States, Georgia,
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Posted: Sun Oct 02, 2005 6:58 pm Post subject: |
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| Larry Andrews wrote: |
The sliding in part can be more difficult with a Ribtect seat.
-la |
I've got a ribtect seat sitting in my garage waiting to go on the kart, but I'm scared to mount it because of this reason. Do you know of any tricks to doing it with a ribtect seat? |
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Larry Andrews
Joined: 13 May 2002 Posts: 2848 Location: United States, California, SC Mtns
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Posted: Sun Oct 02, 2005 8:47 pm Post subject: |
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How do you get to Carnegie Hall? Practice, practice, practice.
I've seen Eric Nelson pop into his Ribtect enough times to know it can be done - but I'm probably not as limber as he is nor in as good of shape. It's really not all that bad - just requires a twist of the upper body as you go in. |
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Brian Weikert
Joined: 30 Sep 2005 Posts: 3
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Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 6:46 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for all the good responses, lots of stuff to think about.
How does one go about starting a Kart on the stand anyway? I thought that they didn't have pull-starts, do you rig up a strap on the tire like someone suggested, or use an electric drill etc. to spin it?
Onward into more detailed Kart info, are there any particularly good brands (or bad ones)? I read somewhere that TonyKart made an excellent product.
On engines, is anyone running the stock Honda engine that the stock class in California is running (read a couple of writeups on that class)? Those appear to be an extremely reliable engine, but would it be competitive (at least moderatly) in Solo2 F125?
You have to bleed the brakes on Karts every outing? Why, and is this problem not something that is correctable?
Thanks again for all the information. _________________ Brian |
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Vernon Head
Joined: 21 Jul 2001 Posts: 455 Location: United States, California,
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Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 6:58 pm Post subject: |
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Starting a kart on the stand usually requires one person to spin the rear tire and one person to give it some gas. The throttle on my engines has to be open to get it them to fire. What I do is pull the throttle open a small amount like half an inch and then clamp the cable with a small spring clamp. After it starts I usually have to quickly release the clamp to keep the revs from rising too fast.
Stock motors can be quite competitive in Solo II. The stock engine is more driveable and because the tires never get up to temperature it's hard to use all the power of a monster engine. Also, with only 3 or 4 runs on each course, many mistakes are made. Usually it's not the most hp that wins.
Of course if two drivers drive flawless runs in two perfect handling karts the higher hp motor wins. |
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Mark McCrary
Joined: 28 Sep 2005 Posts: 15 Location: United States, Tennessee, Kingsport
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Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 7:15 pm Post subject: |
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Well, like I said before I am so new to karts just do not listen to what I say but if I was going to buy a chassis with money not being a real issue I would either go with CRG or Tony Kart. I might consider a Arrow or Birel.
As for starting it. I just usually lay something on the throttle and crack it open, spin the rear tire and quickly pull off whatever I use to crack open te throttle and then you can just take a twist tie and put it between the pedel and chassis and it should stay just enough rpm to keep running.
The newer chassis you will not have to worry about bleeding the brakes as much. I am sure you will have to bleed then everyonce in a while but not everytime out. If they have resivors you will be fine. My kart does not have that so it just collects air. _________________ Mark McCrary |
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Bob Monday
Joined: 21 May 2004 Posts: 91
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Posted: Mon Oct 03, 2005 10:06 pm Post subject: Starter |
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I saw an electric starter that a guy rigged up. He took a small Yamaha KT100 starter (not one of those in the big aluminum box!), drilled a hole in the side of the seat, welded a socket to the starter shaft, and starts it off the bolt on the rotor/stator. I don't know if he had to reverse the battery cables to spin it the right way or not, but my guess is that he did.
Learing to push start a kart is a good idea, though.
Bob Monday |
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Alan Sheidler
Joined: 09 Aug 2001 Posts: 471
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Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2005 12:35 am Post subject: |
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| Brian Weikert wrote: | Thanks for all the good responses, lots of stuff to think about.
How does one go about starting a Kart on the stand anyway? I thought that they didn't have pull-starts, do you rig up a strap on the tire like someone suggested, or use an electric drill etc. to spin it?
Onward into more detailed Kart info, are there any particularly good brands (or bad ones)? I read somewhere that TonyKart made an excellent product.
On engines, is anyone running the stock Honda engine that the stock class in California is running (read a couple of writeups on that class)? Those appear to be an extremely reliable engine, but would it be competitive (at least moderatly) in Solo2 F125?
You have to bleed the brakes on Karts every outing? Why, and is this problem not something that is correctable?
Thanks again for all the information. |
Using the finger of one of your driving gloves under the throttle pedal rest will give you enough opening, ususally. That idea was purloined from Jon Goodale, who used a tie wrap or two snugged on the frame. I generally use second gear, or third even. One good reason to have someone at the front of the kart is to avoid pulling it off of the stand, though. A couple of years ago there were guys at a swap meet selling start straps for nearly $20. Forget that! Cheapo me took the tail off of a 1" wide tie-down (shortened it to attach the kart to the trailer floor anchor), singed the ends, and made a handle from a leftover plastic water filter wrench. We call it the "dog bone" because it looks like a blue.... dog bone.
Regarding a stock engine, I'd heartily recommend going that direction. I have run a 1996 Honda, bought new January of 2000. It still has all of what it was built with, including the 36mm carb and (gasp) the power valves. The only time I had any problems with it was at an event with monsoon-style rain, and the coil packed it in. I'll be putting in a new piston for next year, the second time I have done a top-end. I think a stock motor can be decently competitive at most venues. Events where I have been close to the front could have been wins with better driving on my part. Nationally, as in Topeka? 5 years ago, it would have done the job, had I been up to it. Now? No.
When I first got the Renspeed, I was always bleeding the front brakes, even after a caliper and master cylinder rebuild. Sometimes I'd have to do it twice in a weekend! Just a plain pain in the butt. A couple of years ago, I noticed an issue with one of the fittings only a couple of days before I was to leave for a distant event. A local office of a national company named Pirtek helped me find the right ones. When I look at some hose-to-housing fittings on some karts, I just can't help thinking that they must be the same incorrect ones my kart was apparently delivered with. Seems to me that the hose-to-fitting connection was a metric compression type, and the fitting-to-caliper (or master cylinder) connection was English pipe thread. I now can go a month or more between bleeding the brakes! Air infiltration was the big problem before, and directional instability was the result. Now, the kart stops great!
Alan |
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Paul Williamson
Joined: 26 Mar 2004 Posts: 1638 Location: United States, California, Frazier park
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Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2005 4:24 am Post subject: |
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i run a stock 125... so, while the kart is on the stand, if it's cold, i blow into the overflow tube of the gas tank until i see fuel flowing into the carb... then i put a dime, or something around that thickness between the stop bolt of the gas pedal and the frame... next, in 2nd gear, i grab the wheel with both hands and give it a spin... it usually fires on the first spin... if it is warmed up, it always fires, and have not needed to use the strap method... also, i have my idle turned up so that once i get it fired, it stays running... starting a shifter was a concern of mine, but it's really pretty easy...
paulski _________________ My Behavior Does Not Reflect Anything |
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Larry MacLeod
Joined: 28 Sep 2005 Posts: 299 Location: United States, Michigan, Ypsilanti
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Posted: Tue Oct 04, 2005 1:40 pm Post subject: |
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Brake Bleeding? I haven't bled my brakes since.... I can't remember? May... maybe? Probably after I rebuilt the calipers with new pads/seals at the start of the season. Or maybe a little in June after a track practice day. And I run my kart in Solo *almost* every weekend, including Nationals, usually with a co-driver.
If you're bleeding brakes too often and all you're doing is solo II, then you have something else wrong with your brakes (probably a leak somewhere).
As for starting, I always do mine in 2nd gear with a strap wrapped around the right rear tire, but I pull towards the front of the kart. That way I can stand by the gas pedal to blip it when it fires up. But once it's running, the carb will idle.
Lefty
I have already run my last laps in the kart for 2005
That is unless a crowd of F125 shows up in Detroit (DTE Theatre) on Sunday, then I'll run the kart. Otherwise, Porsche Boxster S it is!! ((borrowed ride) _________________ F125 #196
Old Birel/ hodgepodge Honda CR125
Lefty Funk
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