RocketDaryl
Top Fuel
Of all the issues I had with my R3T, this is one I NEVER had. *smiles proudly*
That said, the head scratcher for me is for a bike that is supposed to be the company's "Flagship" bike, the Rocket *seems* to have the most issues. Of course, there's no way for any of us to confirm that, but it sure appears that way from reading the different innerweb sites, and it was certainly true for me. Don't get me wrong, you'll think you bought the worst POS on the road, regardless of make and model, if you hang out in the tech area of ANY website, but the Rocket seems to have NUMEROUS issues that have been well documented on at least 3 different sites.
And for Flipper, my lifter shaft snapped in half and the freeplay was adjusted perfect (per spec) so you can't just assume it's user error. The lifter shaft in the early R3Ts was ill-designed for the task. There's a thread in here somewhere that I *think* was posted by PowerTripp that clearly illustrates (complete with pictures) the difference between the old lifter shafts and the updated piece (much beefier). But yes, you're correct that too much slop or having it too tight is only going to lead to problems. But, my point is this just another area where Triumph screwed the pooch on the early models, which again, is a real head scratcher since the Rocket is supposedly the "Flagship" bike.
Maybe, since it's the "F" bike, it got the "F" design team.
That said, the head scratcher for me is for a bike that is supposed to be the company's "Flagship" bike, the Rocket *seems* to have the most issues. Of course, there's no way for any of us to confirm that, but it sure appears that way from reading the different innerweb sites, and it was certainly true for me. Don't get me wrong, you'll think you bought the worst POS on the road, regardless of make and model, if you hang out in the tech area of ANY website, but the Rocket seems to have NUMEROUS issues that have been well documented on at least 3 different sites.
And for Flipper, my lifter shaft snapped in half and the freeplay was adjusted perfect (per spec) so you can't just assume it's user error. The lifter shaft in the early R3Ts was ill-designed for the task. There's a thread in here somewhere that I *think* was posted by PowerTripp that clearly illustrates (complete with pictures) the difference between the old lifter shafts and the updated piece (much beefier). But yes, you're correct that too much slop or having it too tight is only going to lead to problems. But, my point is this just another area where Triumph screwed the pooch on the early models, which again, is a real head scratcher since the Rocket is supposedly the "Flagship" bike.
Maybe, since it's the "F" bike, it got the "F" design team.