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Early morning noise? Where do i stand on this?

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spannermonkey...
Renault 5 Driver



Joined: 20 Mar 2015
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PostPosted: 20:46 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Early morning noise? Where do i stand on this? Reply with quote

Hi all

I have an Aprilia RS250 2 stroke all standard with aftermarket road legal exhaust system with an MOT.

I have to warm this bike up before I ride it as I don't want a cold seizure. I don't want to put the engine under load when cold.

I don't let it idle as that doesn't warm an engine up, I have to rev it but keeping the revs around and below 4000 returning to idle, warming the water up in the jacket.

The only time I start my bikes is after 10 am and nothing after 6 in the evening, normally started around lunch time. Which has never upset any of my neighbours. Now if I want to ride to work in the morning leaving at 0630. where do I stand with the law?

I'm playing with ideas to have a removable end can to kill decibels with effecting gas flow over the top of normal cans.

Just wondering if other have such a problem?
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Robby
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PostPosted: 20:54 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's a scooter. Just start it and ride. Don't give it full throttle on a cold engine.

If someone was revving a scooter and no going anywhere outside my window at 0630, I wouldn't enjoy it.
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spannermonkey...
Renault 5 Driver



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PostPosted: 21:11 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

If it was a scooter that would be easy with internal tolerances so far out that cold riding is possible. The little RS is more advanced and I'm not wrecking piston rings, bores, riding on a cold engine. With an engine that has no power below 6000rpm and requires a lot of clutch slip to pull away. So a very different beast.

I think I'll stick with warming it up with sound dampers fitted. I've fixed enough 4 stroke engines over the years for people with worn bores/rings due to being ragged from cold by riders with no mechanical sympathy or knowledge.

Proper Two stokes are miles away from 4 stroke counterparts. But all suffer from tight tolerances and excessive wear from cold as oil is thick and not getting into bearing caps and guides.

One only reason you don't see many high millage bikes as engines are shot. Like many plastic fantastic's and other models.
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M.C
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PostPosted: 21:12 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Re: Early morning noise? Where do i stand on this? Reply with quote

spannermonkey2 wrote:
Just wondering if other have such a problem?

Yes, one of my neighbours has a Bandit with the loudest exhaust known to man, and leaves/returns at all hours. He doesn't seem to have a problem with warming his bike up at 4am, when I'm leaving early in the morning I push my bike to the end of the alley, fire it up and go straight away.

Even I want to cut his brake lines Twisted Evil
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kgm
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PostPosted: 21:29 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I work shifts so I'm frequently starting and returning at unsociable hours. My neighbours have been pretty understanding so I'm lucky. These days I'm normally on the 125 when commuting so it's not a problem.

My er6 can be loud with the baffle out so I tend to walk it out of the street before starting. With the baffle in I just start it and let it idle whilst I get my helmet and gloves on. I'd speak to your immediate neighbours and just ask them to let you know if it becomes a problem. If you seem approachable about it then they'll appreciate it and be less likely to try to cause you problems.

Just don't start it inside a garage - makes it far worse in my experience.
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Jim Mc
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PostPosted: 21:34 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Couldn't you get an electric heater if you were really worried about it? They make them for engine blocks in super cold countries like Canada. Probably can get them for bikes too.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 21:43 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

Personally, I would just ride it straight off (as I do with 2 strokes generally), but just take it real easy until it is well up to temp.

As an aside, if I leave my RS125 idling with just the odd throttle blip then it never heats up (do that once hot and it will cool down).

All the best

Katy
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iooi
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PostPosted: 21:44 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

spannermonkey2 wrote:
The little RS is more advanced and I'm not wrecking piston rings, bores, riding on a cold engine.


Well having riden X7's & LC 350's from new, all year round and starting at silly o'clock. I never had any problems starting and riding straight from cold.... which included a nice steep hill within 100 yds of setting off.. Both managed well over 30K miles without any engine rebuilds before being sold on....

spannermonkey2 wrote:

I've fixed enough 4 stroke engines over the years for people with worn bores/rings due to being ragged from cold by riders with no mechanical sympathy or knowledge.


So you know how you need to ride to ensure you don't fuck the engine. Even sub 6K you have enough to tootle along.
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MarJay
But it's British!



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PostPosted: 22:01 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

ride as soon as you can, gently until it's warm. Warming it by revving doesn't really get the coolant circulating properly.
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Ste
Not Work Safe



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PostPosted: 22:07 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

spannermonkey2 wrote:
I've fixed enough 4 stroke engines over the years for people with worn bores/rings due to being ragged from cold by riders with no mechanical sympathy or knowledge.

Well don't rag it from cold then. Do as Katy and iooi say and take it really easy until it's up to temperature

If you're revving it up to 4k at 0630 every day then someone is likely to kill you or fuck with your bike. Laughing

If you want to be a dick to your neighbours then if / when they report you to the local council, they'll be looking for it being regularly and at anti social times. To get the most accurate and complete answer, call the environmental health department at your local council and ask them.

If you rent the property then neighbours can also complain to your landlord.
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redeem ouzzer
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PostPosted: 22:24 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Start, ride. Don't bray it untill it's warm. My friend has a tuned KR1S and doesn't fanny around with it idling when we go for a thrash.
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Robby
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PostPosted: 23:43 - 28 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah, I read it as SR50, not RS250.

Still, get on it and ride, don't open it up fully until it's warm.

Don't get worked up over rebuilds. It will need a rebuild at some point, you'll rebuild it. This is how 2-stroke ownership works.
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gorillaonabik...
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PostPosted: 00:05 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't know your situation but I push my bike up the road and then start it. Takes me an extra minute but the neighbours are happy.
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Pigeon
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PostPosted: 00:26 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

An RS250 is a modern classic and a horse with some pedigree.

Second hand prices are (or were) 4-8k

I wouldn't be using it on cold morning commutes. Some bleary eyed commuter rear ending it at a roundabout, no thanks.
I'd buy something cheaper (and quieter + less fussy).

Just my 2p is all.
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stinkwheel
Bovine Proctologist



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PostPosted: 01:30 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's no such thing as a cold seize. Only a heat seize and that happens more easily when the engine is cold.

Get on the bike as soon as it'll run and ride it. Heat is generated by work done. Your engine is only doing work when it's pulling its weight and a rider. Running it from cold while stationary is only prologing the agony, give it some work to do.
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 02:25 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Legalities are ambiguous at best.

Come under causing nuisance or anti-social behavior, and its a very subjective subject, in which you are probably reasonably on firm footing, IF you are merely starting the bike up to go to work, and bike is road legal.

I've got a NIMBY neighbor on one side; all fur coat and no knickers; gawd knows how many times we've had drunken singing at silly o'clock in the morning as she or her daughter have come rolling in from the pub, or loud domestics spilling out of her front door into the street; but in seven years I have had two letters about 'niosy motorbikes' from the council....

It would seem coming home at midnight and leaving the bike running on the drive whilst I open the gates, constitutes 'loudly revving it under her bedroom window in the middle of the night', whilst popping to the shops on a Saturday afternoon, she had the stereo full blast in the garden, giving a party to show off her new jaquizzi 'disturbed' all her guests Rolling Eyes

As far as I am concerned, and as far as my other neighbors are concerned, we live on a street; I have a dropped kerb access for my driveway that runs between the houses and is obviously a vehicular access, one would reasonably expect a vehicle to be started and driven or ridden down from time to time. Also 'reasonable' for people to have to use vehicles at less sociable times of day, whether that's coming back from outings later in the evening or going to or coming from work at anti-social hours, and a road legal vehicle is a road legal vehicle, and should not be unduly 'noisy'.

Point at which the council might take action; would be if it can be construed to be a 'nuisance' or 'unreasonably' antisocial.

If you are reving the engine trying to balence the carburettors in the small hours of the morning; or are coming and going every ten minutes; or have a host of freinds coming and going every five minutes; or the like; they may be able to make a case.

As is; starting the bike up and letting it idle a few moments, whilst you open the gates or put your gloves on; are 'reasonable' activities associated with vehicle use and access. And, while 'the other party conferred', chatting about it with my divorce lawyer (who made FAR too much money, to be able to afford to ride an MV Augusta!, but worth every penny!!!) A fairly compelling case would have to be made to prove that activity was an unreasonable nuisance or anti-social act, and more to impose any penalty that impinged on your 'Human Rights' of free association and unimpeded access to your own home, even more that could harm your livelihood, preventing you getting to and from work......

To my sense sensibilities; trying to represent a track born piece of leisure equipment and trying to pass it off as a utilitarian piece of commuter transport, might be a little 'rich'.. but without trying to suggest that its an exotic sports 'special' that you 'have' to carefully warm up like a Ferarri before you can ride it, or drawing attention to the fact that its fickle state of tune means you have to rev it, or it stalls or anything, it's a position that shouldn't unduly prejudiced your case; that its a road bike, with a number-plate and tax disc, being used to support your livlihood in a 'reasonable' way.

I don't think I would sit there doing a paddock blip, reving the tits off it wanking the throttle for twenty minutes like we used to to warm up pre-mix drinking TZ's way back when, and would be more inclined to get on and put the thing under some gentle load to get it up to temp ASAP; but I certainly wouldn't go so far to pander to the NIMBIES as to push the bike to the end of the street before trying to start the bludger!!!! {Bloomin bike weighs quarter of a ton and I'd have to push it 50 yards up hill for starters! THAT would be 'unreasonable'}

So it's a situation where the ambiguities really make it one where its probably easier to ask forgiveness than permission.

"Due Process" starts with the expectation that any aggrieved neighbor should first try and resolve it face to face, and tell you they are annoyed by it, before they go winging to the council; then the council should try and corroberate the 'complaint' before they take any action, which will simply be to inform you of a complaint and tell you they 'may' install monitoring equipment, and may take the matter to court, where you may, get told to stop it!

So many 'mays' in that train, and beyond.. for where you are at, no one has said its a problem, so presume its not a problem until otherwise challenged, then re-evaluate.

But, ultimately it's your call; You obviously recognize the bike 'could' be a problem... and legal high-ground isn't always the safest. I'm a homeowner; I don't have to worry a landlord would get arsey or anything outside of the court system, and am not particularly worried that militant NIMBY might pour brake fluid over my car in the night or anything!!! You may not.
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carpe_diem
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PostPosted: 08:26 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Legalities aside, I think the mantra of 'don't be a cunt' is a good one to love your life by.
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1198
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PostPosted: 10:04 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

carpe_diem wrote:
Legalities aside, I think the mantra of 'don't be a cunt' is a good one to love your life by.


A succinct way of wording Tef's paragraphs!!
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GSTEEL32
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PostPosted: 10:20 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I commuted once on a RS250.

I lasted a week.

Epic bike. $hit commuter. Its also a target for thieves. I was also worried about someone leaning something cheap & Chinese against the plastics and scratching them when parked up.

I then spent £650 on the next ebay auction for a 4 stroke.

I bought a triumph trophy, but it could have been anything tbh.

I'd advise you to do likewise.
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Rncv
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PostPosted: 10:39 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bit off topic; You don't happen to be based in Norwich by chance?
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c_dug
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PostPosted: 10:39 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've owned a couple of two strokes and have never warmed any of them up as you describe. In fact I've never warmed any of my bikes up at all.

I'll quite happily start the bike up with it in gear and literally ride off in less than a second from hitting the starter button.

I know roughly where on my route a bike will be warm by on both my journey to work and home again, obviously dependant on traffic and to a lesser extent the weather. I just take it easy before that point.
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flat spot
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PostPosted: 11:34 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Kick it over and ride. A cold seize is when the different internal parts of the engine expand at different rates but don't forget engine designers know all about this. Possibly on a frosty morning you get on your bike and cane the bugger there's a chance this could happen but under normal riding whatever the weather it will be fine. I don't care to think how many decades I've owned 2 strokes riding all year round so trust me it won't be a problem.
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Fin
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PostPosted: 14:04 - 29 Oct 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

If It's cold and I'm leaving from home then I will hold the revs around 5k and do little blips, this is because I have to go up a hill and the bike does up better when warm.

I ride my bike easy for about 3 miles, gradually building up the revs and how much I open the throttle.

If I'm somewhere flat then I will start it and take it easy for a few miles, I keep an eye on the temp sensor and think how long I've been on the bike so I can guess that all the components are at a good enough temperature.
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