Riceburner
Well-known member
Too many years riding in the cold without heating the feet damages your feet eventually.....believe me.
Respectfully disagree.
/QUOTE]
Did-you-notice-the-last-word?
I feel bad for him as i know how it was when i first got my bike (November)
All i can tell you is that nothing can prepare you for cold weather on a bike, or wind, or rain or any combination of the aforementioned.
Try not to do it, as tires are cold, engine reluctant (although could be warmed up), you have too many layers and is hard to move, paranoid with new bike, cluth cable is tight because of the cold, your tire temp is for the summer (and not deflated a few PSI for winter) etc....
As everyone else said before ... get a good motorcycle jacket and pants for the winter and a few layers of clothing, heated grips, (your head will be ok in almost any helmet but your face will still get cold and your face shield foggy), let the engine warm up (enough say 1 min or so), deflate the tires by about 2PSI or so, a neck warmer (this will save your neck quite literally). Do a few rounds in your neighborhood before heading out. Braking .. buahahah ... you got no brakes (they are cold) so give yourself plenty of distance. Tires are cold so give them time to bite (acceleration & deceleration)
Report back how it was ... we are interested
I used to use heated grips but after getting heated gloves I see no reason to use them. In fact I have a set of heated grips that has been sitting in my "Bike Box" for about four years that I might install someday but haven't felt any pressing need.
I don't think anyone notable has been banned in a long while, at least as far as I've noticed.
Yay for civility, even when one disagrees.
As V-Tom said, the engines in question warm up quicker under light loads. If you are trying to warm up your bike solely through idling, *that* is actually increasing wear.
Not wishing anyone to crash ever, but Id like to see a Canada Goose jacket explode in a cloud of fluff.
If you were responding to me, perhaps revisit my response again. I'm not advocating idling for five or 10 minutes in an effort to warm up the engine, that I will agree is wasteful and has potential to do more harm than good, however 20 or 30 seconds in cold weather (and perhaps 5-10 in warm) – enough for oil to flow and combustion to stabilize is still wise.
Typically I will start my bike, let it idle while I get my helmet strapped on, and my gloves put on, and get on bike, set her upright, kick up side stand, and get her in gear and go.....
Usually that is more than enough time to satisfy almost any bike I have ever ridden, unless it was a bike with carbs,,,,,, some if not adjusted just right, needed a bit more time to run, but only to idle properly off choke.....
Shock cooling refers to the theory that damage to engines (particularly air-cooled aviation piston engines) may occur because of an excessively rapid decrease in temperature.
The situation where rapid cooling arises is on descent from altitude. In this condition, less power is demanded of the engine (it is throttled back) so it is developing much less heat. In a descent, the plane's airspeed increases, simultaneously increasing the cooling rate of the engine. As metals expand and contract under temperature changes, dimensional changes in the engine may exceed tolerance limits.
i am asking for links, to support anything you have come up with here?[FONT="]Analysis[/FONT][edit]While the subject is controversial and hotly debated, some believe shock cooling, as commonly explained, is nothing but a myth. This position is supported by the fact twin engine planes commonly experience ideal conditions for shock cooling during simulated, single engine failures, yet statistically show no difference in wear or damage distribution between engines. Equally, it has been pointed out the rate cylinder head temperatures drop off after a normal engine shutdown is often much faster than the usual rates deemed to present a shock cooling risk. Furthermore, others believe[SUP][citation needed][/SUP] damage usually associated with shock cooling is actually caused by rapid throttle changes where fuel, which has been supercooled during high altitude flight, is introduced into a very hot engine cylinder during descent, where rich of peak (as opposed to lean of peak[SUP][2][/SUP]) operation is considered the norm, thus causing higher operating temperatures. It is well established[SUP][citation needed][/SUP], high operating temperatures in of themselves, can contribute to excessive component wear and damage, which is typically associated with "shock cooling". Given the available data, it strongly suggests "shock cooling" is nothing but a myth, at least in the context as commonly explained.
Originally Posted by PrivatePilot
It's good for performance, but it's not necessarily good from a wear/longevity standpoint. On piston powered aircraft for example it's quite common for them to have shutters to control air flow over the cylinders in order to avoid shock cooling related failures. Close the throttles on an extremely cold day while still maintaining signifigant airspeed causes a drastic change in engine temperature all of a sudden which can be stressful and even cause the engine to come apart in extreme situations...that are not exactly unheard of in aviation. The shutters can be selectively closed before such power changes are applied in order to minimize and virtually eliminate the risk.
All that said most of this doesn't directly translate to the average ground based air cooled or liquid cooled engine, but it's important to keep in mind that the operation in cold weather does have potential wear and tear issues for *any* engine, although as I mentioned in my first reply there's nothing specific to motorcycle engines per se that make them any different. Your car engine doesn't "like" extreme cold either, but yes, performance may benefit.
links for above?
also?
"The shutters can be selectively closed before such power changes are applied in order to minimize and virtually eliminate the risk."
Google "cowl flaps airplanes" and there's lots of reading. Here's the controls for them on a Piper Seneca, for example.