Re: [gentoo-user] Re: [OT^2] Simple Linux Router on a live CD?

2007-02-21 Thread Mick
On Wednesday 21 February 2007 20:59, kashani wrote:
 Uwe Thiem wrote:
[unnecessary but good for the soul work...]

 throttle it was pointed out that the chain had a bit too much slack and
 probably needed to be replaced. $28 and one half hour later the problem
 was fixed.

I would have thought that you would be able to hear it clonking if it was that 
slack to affect take-off. What bike are we talking about?

PS. I'm sure there will be some mileage to be gained if we were to do a deal 
on the mutual help thing.  :-)
-- 
Regards,
Mick


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Re: [gentoo-user] Re: [OT^2] Simple Linux Router on a live CD?

2007-02-21 Thread kashani

Mick wrote:

On Wednesday 21 February 2007 20:59, kashani wrote:

Uwe Thiem wrote:

[unnecessary but good for the soul work...]


throttle it was pointed out that the chain had a bit too much slack and
probably needed to be replaced. $28 and one half hour later the problem
was fixed.


I would have thought that you would be able to hear it clonking if it was that 
slack to affect take-off. What bike are we talking about?


PS. I'm sure there will be some mileage to be gained if we were to do a deal 
on the mutual help thing.  :-)


'74 Honda CB350F making of all of 20HP so the clonking was minimal on 
take off. Also no one had mentioned that the bike should live at 
5000-9000 RPMs so I was probably realizing 9HP at most on take off. With 
the above in mind the problem was most pronounced at some speed with 
RPMs around 4000-5000 when I had enough torque to cause the slack to be 
an issue, usually while changing speed or accelerating through turns. 
The overall affect was to see saw the bike which was made worse while I 
tried to compensate for it at the throttle. Springs made in a recent 
decade might have made it easier to figure out. A used, ancient bike, 
with issues was probably not the best choice as a starter bike.


	Relating this back to Gentoo after getting burning in a few consulting 
gigs I started forcing new jobs to have a level of stability before I'd 
start the main project. There is nothing worse than DNS that doesn't 
work or doesn't match reverse DNS when you're trying to read logs. Badly 
configured networks with chains of crappy hubs are another favorite. I 
can't tell why Samba doesn't authenticate your users and frankly I'm 
surprised anything works here with the number of retransmits I'm seeing 
on your interfaces!
	A number of new computer users fall into this trap and resort to 
reinstalling in order to fix what might have been simple issues. Gentoo 
users sometimes have it worse as there is plenty of rope handed out to 
hang yourself if you don't approach it in an organized fashion or at 
least clean up properly after earlier failed experiments. 
Troubleshooting an issue is always hard when you don't have confidence 
that the overall system is correct which was some of the trap I fell 
into with the bike.


In regards to mileage I did SF to LA and back this weekend (on the ZR-7S 
not the 350F, thank God) so don't be surprised when the new '74 CB550F 
project shows up at your door. :-)


kashani
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