Archive for October, 2008

The truth about motorcycle riding

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/driving/jeremy_clarkson/article4963194.ece

From The Sunday Times
October 19, 2008
Vespa GTV Navy 125
Jeremy riding a Vespa scooter near his Oxfordshire home

(Paul Hennessy/Gorilla Pictures)
Jeremy Clarkson

Recently, various newspapers ran a photograph of me on a small motorcycle. They all pointed out that I hate motorbikes and that by riding one I had exposed myself as a hypocrite who should commit suicide immediately.

Hmmm. Had I been photographed riding the local postmistress, then, yes, I’d have been shamed into making some kind of apology. But it was a motorcycle. And I don’t think it even remotely peculiar that a motoring journalist should ride such a thing. Not when there is a problem with the economy and many people are wondering if they should make a switch from four wheels to two.

Unfortunately, you cannot make this switch on a whim, because this is Britain and there are rules. Which means that before climbing on board you must go to a car park, put on a high-visibility jacket and spend the morning driving round some cones while a man called Dave — all motorcycle instructors are called Dave — explains which lever does what.

Afterwards, you will be taken on the road, where you will drive about for several hours in a state of abject fear and misery, and then you will go home and vow never to get on a motorcycle ever again.
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This is called compulsory basic training and it allows you to ride any bike up to 125cc. If you want to ride something bigger, you must take a proper test. But, of course, being human, you will not want a bigger bike, because then you will be killed immediately while wearing clothing from the Ann Summers “Dungeon” range.

Right, first things first. The motorbike is not like a car. It will not stand up when left to its own devices. So, when you are not riding it, it must be leant against a wall or a fence. I’m told some bikes come with footstools which can be lowered to keep them upright. But then you have to lift the bike onto this footstool, and that’s like trying to lift up an American.

Next: the controls. Unlike with a car, there seems to be no standardisation in the world of motorcycling. Some have gearlevers on the steering wheel. Some have them on the floor, which means you have to shift with your feet — how stupid is that? — and some are automatic.

Then we get to the brakes. Because bikes are designed by bikers — and bikers, as we all know, are extremely dim — they haven’t worked out how the front and back brake can be applied at the same time. So, to stop the front wheel, you pull a lever on the steering wheel, and to stop the one at the back, you press on a lever with one of your feet.

A word of warning, though. If you use only the front brake, you will fly over the steering wheel and be killed. If you try to use the back one, you will use the wrong foot and change into third gear instead of stopping. So you’ll hit the obstacle you were trying to avoid, and you’ll be killed.

Then there is the steering. The steering wheel comes in the shape of what can only be described as handlebars, but if you turn them — even slightly — while riding along, you will fall off and be killed. What you have to do is lean into the corner, fix your gaze on the course you wish to follow, and then you will fall off and be killed.

As far as the minor controls are concerned, well . . . you get a horn and lights and indicators, all of which are operated by various switches and buttons on the steering wheel, but if you look down to see which one does what, a truck will hit you and you will be killed. Oh, and for some extraordinary reason, the indicators do not self-cancel, which means you will drive with one of them on permanently, which will lead following traffic to think you are turning right. It will then undertake just as you turn left, and you will be killed.

What I’m trying to say here is that, yes, bikes and cars are both forms of transport, but they have nothing in common. Imagining that you can ride a bike because you can drive a car is like imagining you can swallow-dive off a 90ft cliff because you can play table tennis.

However, many people are making the switch because they imagine that having a small motorcycle will be cheap. It isn’t. Sure, the 125cc Vespa I tried can be bought for £3,499, but then you will need a helmet (£300), a jacket (£500), some Freddie Mercury trousers (£100), shoes (£130), a pair of Kevlar gloves (£90), a coffin (£1,000), a headstone (£750), a cremation (£380) and flowers in the church (£200).

In other words, your small 125cc motorcycle, which has no boot, no electric windows, no stereo and no bloody heater even, will end up costing more than a Volkswagen Golf. That said, a bike is much cheaper to run than a car. In fact, it takes only half a litre of fuel to get from your house to the scene of your first fatal accident. Which means that the lifetime cost of running your new bike is just 50p.

So, once you have decided that you would like a bike, the next problem is choosing which one. And the simple answer is that, whatever you select, you will be a laughing stock. Motorbiking has always been a hobby rather than an alternative to proper transport, and as with all hobbies, the people who partake are extremely knowledgeable. It often amazes me that in their short lives bikers manage to learn as much about biking as people who angle, or those who watch trains pull into railway stations.

Whatever. Because they are so knowledgeable, they will know precisely why the bike you select is rubbish and why theirs is superb. Mostly, this has something to do with “getting your knee down”, which is a practice undertaken by bikers moments before the crash that ends their life.

You, of course, being normal, will not be interested in getting your knee down; only in getting to work and most of the way home again before you die. That’s why I chose to test the Vespa, which is much loathed by trainspotting bikers because they say it is a scooter. This is racism. Picking on a machine because it has no crossbar is like picking on a person because he has slitty eyes or brown skin. Frankly, I liked the idea of a bike that has no crossbar, because you can simply walk up to the seat and sit down. Useful if you are Scottish and go about your daily business in a skirt.

I also liked the idea of a Vespa because most bikes are Japanese. This means they are extremely reliable so you cannot avoid a fatal crash by simply breaking down. This is entirely possible on a Vespa because it is made in Italy.

Mind you, there are some drawbacks you might like to consider. The Vespa is not driven by a chain. Instead, the engine is mounted to the side of the rear wheel for reasons that are lost in the mists of time and unimportant anyway. However, it means the bike is wider and fitted with bodywork like a car, to shroud the moving hot bits. That makes it extremely heavy. Trying to pick it up after you’ve fallen off it is impossible.

What’s more, because the heavy engine is on the right, the bike likes turning right much more than it likes turning left. This means that in all left-handed bends, you will be killed.

Unless you’ve been blown off by the sheer speed of the thing. At one point I hit 40mph and it was as though my chest was being battered by a freezing-cold hurricane. It was all I could do to keep a grip on the steering wheel with my frostbitten fingers.

I therefore hated my experience of motorcycling and would not recommend it to anyone.

The Clarksometer

If you like misery, climb aboard

ENGINE 124cc, one cylinder

POWER 14bhp @ 9500rpm

TORQUE 8.5 lb ft @ 8500rpm

TRANSMISSION Automatic

FUEL TANK CAPACITY 9.5 litres

TOP SPEED 63.4mph

PRICE £3,499

I’m such a ghetto scientist

Or trailer trash scientist, call me which ever (I heard that ghetto is now considered a racist term, which is such total bullshit, ghetto is a financial/social slur, not a race slur, there’s lots o’ white folk in the ghetto). I’ve been running my freeze dryer. It requires a cooling water supply to work (the water goes into the vacuum chamber and is used to keep a copper plate cool, and then thermoelectric cooling devices on that plate keep the stuff your are freeze drying 30-40 degrees colder than the water, which is cool enough to maintain a solid, hard freeze, which is needed to freeze dry). Previous to now, I’ve been using a big cooler and I would dump in a bunch of store bought ice, and it would circulate ice water as the cooling water supply. The problem with that is that it can take 24+ hours to freeze dry a sample, and you need the water to stay cool the entire time. That means it sometimes took as much as 6-8 *bags* of ice to keep the water cold the entire time.

So, real scientists use what’s called a circulating chiller in these cases. But, if you go to a scientific shop, they want like upwards of $2,000 for base models. In all fairness, they are intended for exact conditions where the temperature must be maintained to within .1 degree centigrade +- of your target temperature. I don’t need that. I need cold water without bags of ice. So, I went to home depot and bought a $79.99 dorm room refrigerator and a $6 13-liter trash can that had roughly the right shape to fit in this dorm room refrigerator. I brought them home, cut away the molded door panel on the inside of the door of the fridge, disassembled the ice tray so I could reposition it into the trash can, put the trash can inside the fridge, the ice tray (which is where the refrigerant is and is the part that actually cools the inside of the fridge) down into the trash can, then the pump I had from my previous setup inside the ice tray in the trash can, and ran the hoses and the pump power cord out through a notch I cut in the door seal. I now have the worlds lamest, but cheapest, recirculating chiller. Pictures of the slaughter at my personal web server:

Setup from the outside

Setup from the outside

img_3501

Trash can, pump, and water/antifreeze mixture (that's why it's purple)

img_3502

Cut away door panel

KYR!!!!

Never heard this before, but now that I have, I’m going to be yelling this at ryeth any time she steps out of line. KYR stands for “Know Your Role” and was recently related to ryeth as part of a story from a co-worker. Evidently, the story went like this. Ryeth’s co-worker is sitting down watching TV with her new possible boy friend (the co-worker is recently separated and is now dating for the first time in a long time). The boy friend asks if she would mind making him a sandwich. Not too horribly out of line if he’s at her house for only the second or third time and doesn’t know where anything is IMO, but certainly I would have just asked where stuff was and made my own. In any case, she agrees to make him one, and while in the kitchen she hears him say “KYR”. She doesn’t know what he means, and he said, somewhat jokingly but she suspected also somewhat seriously, “Know Your Role”. Since having this relayed to me, I have taken full possession of this term and will now be using it liberally any time I wish to tell ryeth to do my bidding.

Been quiet lately

It’s not my fault though, I swear. You see, ryeth normally posts about all the day to day things, so I don’t duplicate what she does. That means I only post about unique goings on around our house (or scientific/social diatribes). But, due to our fucked up patent system in America, if you tell people about what you are working on before you patent it, you loose the right to patent it (tell people in a public sense, you can tell individuals privately, but mass dissemination is out). Well, I’m working on some research in my spare time, and some of it appears to possibly be patentable, so I can’t talk about it. That’s why I’ve been so quite lately. However, I can say that I’m now able to freeze dry small samples of things at my home and I can say that I think I’ve come up with a design for equipment that will simplify the mechanical requirements of freeze drying. I just can’t say *how* my design does so or that would kill the patentable part of it ;-)