Excellent point Carlton........It is one of the fixes I am considering.

  When you ride thousands of miles on a malfunctioning bike, worrying that
it may quite anytime, you have plenty of time to contemplate more than your
navel in looking for solutions.

I think any heat shields that may have been on the tank, were removed when
it was rebuilt.  It is something definitely needed and which I will install.

I would warn everyone though that the strainer is a real potential
restriction on the GTS and a very real potential problem.  It can aggravate
and make altitude and heat the final straw, as I found out.

As I was topping off the gas tank in Salt Lake City, a guy in a car walked
up and we started talking about the vapor lock problem.  He owned a Kaw and
said he had to remove is lower fairing to stop a vapor locking problem.
They talk about dry heat being tolerable out West, obviously whoever says
that has not driven a motorcycle in early afternoon on the black asphalt
interstates there...it is hot.

When the GTS vapor locked climbing out of Salt Lake, the Highway patrolman
stopped and helped me push it a couple hundred yards to a rest stop to get
out of the traffic.  He wasn't even breathing hard and I was sure my lungs
were going to start to bleed as I gasped for air.  Anything I can do to keep
it from becoming a problem again is open for discussion.

hawke



On 6/22/02 1:04 PM, "Rev. Baroonstein" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I wonder if a little heatshield (aluminumfoil or 'real' material) glued on
> to the bottom of the tank would help, it would reflect most of the heat from
> the engine.
>
> Carl
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "John Laurenson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> summer.  The gas tank on the GTS is completely covered with plastic and
> doesn't cool down as effectively as an exposed metal tank would.  Just
>

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