just cut the top off, pull over the carb rubber, loose end through the rubber, again over the rubber. Problem, in my age you rarely have condoms in your pocket, LOL
ON THE ROAD REPAIR TIPS (VARIOUS)
- Powolotti
- Dealer
- Posts: 103
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 2:53 pm
- Location: 40 miles north of Vienna
- Contact:
fixed a split carb rubber with a condom, lasted 350 miles 
just cut the top off, pull over the carb rubber, loose end through the rubber, again over the rubber. Problem, in my age you rarely have condoms in your pocket, LOL
just cut the top off, pull over the carb rubber, loose end through the rubber, again over the rubber. Problem, in my age you rarely have condoms in your pocket, LOL
meet me on Facebook: Michael Powolotti
some of my tuning work:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Powolotti ... 6938811863
my club:
http://www.wiener-spitzbuam.at
some of my tuning work:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Powolotti ... 6938811863
my club:
http://www.wiener-spitzbuam.at
- rog60
- registered user
- Posts: 588
- Joined: Fri Feb 13, 2009 7:18 pm
- Main scooter: Indian GP200
- Location: SWINDON (Wilts)
- Contact:
Temporary repair to loose plug cap.
Grovel around at the side of the road for a bit of nylon type string, tie the string round the plug cap/lead and the clutch/gearchange cables.
Held my plug cap on from Southampton to Swindon on a Sunday........90 miles
Grovel around at the side of the road for a bit of nylon type string, tie the string round the plug cap/lead and the clutch/gearchange cables.
Held my plug cap on from Southampton to Swindon on a Sunday........90 miles
NO IT'S NOT A F***IN* MOPED!!!!!!
Gas soldering irons can save an AA trip or untold headaches if your abroad. I always carry spare gas as well( the small cans birds use for gas curling tongs).
Obviously useful for soldering wires on stators but very useful for plastic welding plastic float bowls on Vespas!
A plastic toggle as found on rucksacks etc shoved down the spark plug hole locks the motor to get the flywheel (or clutch on a Vespa) off if needed. Especially good for Vespas with PK or HP4 flywheels. Obviously have the toggle on cord so you can get it back out again.
You can buy wallet sized circuit testers off ebay for about a fiver. Saves hours at the roadside looking for electrical faults.
Obviously useful for soldering wires on stators but very useful for plastic welding plastic float bowls on Vespas!
A plastic toggle as found on rucksacks etc shoved down the spark plug hole locks the motor to get the flywheel (or clutch on a Vespa) off if needed. Especially good for Vespas with PK or HP4 flywheels. Obviously have the toggle on cord so you can get it back out again.
You can buy wallet sized circuit testers off ebay for about a fiver. Saves hours at the roadside looking for electrical faults.
those mounts did about 800 mile like that, we used the same sealant to repair the cracked petrol tank building it up bit by bit.6LDA 28B wrote:1997 on our way back from Milan i had an engine mount disintegrate but i was lucky i had Cezetawith me or as he was back then mild mannered nick
.
He got me to straighten up the engine and he packed twigs and sticks found at the side of the road around the engine bar then filled it in with gasket seal,
it got me home two's up
cylicone was used again this year in france, a stainless pipe broke, we could only find a farmer with an arch welder so we used that but it leaked so kitchen sealant did the trick bound with gaffer tape.
my wheel barrow tyre kept getting punctures, its solid now full of expanding foam......im not sure thats a great idea but if needs must
- rakki
- registered user
- Posts: 91
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2009 1:07 pm
- Main scooter: sx|px|rally×2
- Location: Helsinki, Finland
- Contact:
I know it's in on wrong section but method can also applied to Lammys.
This is what we done to Vespa fourth gear when it had couple of teeth snapped. Gearbox lasted several hundred kilometers without any problems.

This is what we done to Vespa fourth gear when it had couple of teeth snapped. Gearbox lasted several hundred kilometers without any problems.

- coaster
- registered user
- Posts: 3125
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 12:35 pm
- Location: London and Norfolk
- Contact:
That must have been a while ago if we are talking about the same guy (Brian?) I haven't seen (or heard) from him for a couple of years now, he comes and goes with the winddirtyhandslopez wrote: Rode home all the way from the Orkney Islands( after visiting Doofa, Coasters aforementioned friend) like that once.
- coaster
- registered user
- Posts: 3125
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 12:35 pm
- Location: London and Norfolk
- Contact:
I had that problem a few weeks ago onmy T5 coming back from Hemel Hemstead on the M1. The cap wouldn't stay on as the thread was worn on the plug and I didn't have a plug spanner with merog60 wrote:Temporary repair to loose plug cap.
Grovel around at the side of the road for a bit of nylon type string, tie the string round the plug cap/lead and the clutch/gearchange cables.
Held my plug cap on from Southampton to Swindon on a Sunday........90 miles
Anyway, I ended up holding it on with a bungee cord........................you've just reminded me it's still on there, I must have done 200 miles or so since then
-
dirtyhandslopez
- registered user
- Posts: 465
- Joined: Sun Mar 22, 2009 5:15 am
- Location: Richmond Virginia, USA
- Contact:
Yep, same man. Used to be married to Gene from the Coasters. He's still riding with the Coasters. Look 'em up, they've got a website. When I got to the Orkneys, he still had a Lammy with him, a 205 Kegra jobbie called "if it feels good, do it". Helluva ride up there and back by my lonesome. Blew a drive side seal just before getting on the ferry for the way back. Twas a tad smokeycoaster wrote:That must have been a while ago if we are talking about the same guy (Brian?) I haven't seen (or heard) from him for a couple of years now, he comes and goes with the winddirtyhandslopez wrote: Rode home all the way from the Orkney Islands( after visiting Doofa, Coasters aforementioned friend) like that once.Seen to remember him being up in Shetland/Orkney in the mid 80's. A very entertaining chap, have to love him, I could write a book
That's not going anywhere...
- GP Kevo
- registered user
- Posts: 321
- Joined: Wed Mar 11, 2009 7:48 am
- Main scooter: 1969 150 DL / GP225 TS1
- Location: Warsaw
- Contact:
Exhaust snapped in two near the end can, so I stopped at a hardware store and bought an automotive exhaust leak repair kit, the kind with tape you wet down to make sticky, a length of metal tape, and a wire to tie round it. It worked and still have it on until Monday when I meet with a local welder.


i used a stainlees steel lockring on my rear hub but stupidly used a mild steel nut . doin a good 75mph down the motor way in holland when my rear hub came loose ,pulled into a lorrypark and all looked well until i took said lockring of. the nut was perfectley round where the lockring sat ,must have slowly over time been moving against the lock ring .to get me home we packed out one side of lock ring with an old fag packet found in lorry park.
that is prob my worst/best bodge to get me home
i never mix ss with mild now either
that is prob my worst/best bodge to get me home
i never mix ss with mild now either
