Ringwood State Park
Yesterdays ride in RSP.
Author Archive
Yesterdays ride in RSP.
Today’s ride in Peekskill NY.
Yesterdays ride in Sprain Ridge Park.
In my recent efforts to increase my health and fitness levels I upgraded my mountain bike and put a Garmin 500 cycling computer on it. Here is the result of a quick workout Theo and I did in Morristown this morning.
This is the second one of these that I have installed. The first was on my 2002 GSXR750 and this time it’s on my 2000 SV650. Both bikes are setup as track/race only and I only require the start and kill/run/don’t-run abilities of the wires in the bundle coming from the bike. During both installs I had the help of my garage therapist Theo. The first time installation on my 750 it seemed to be a breeze (thanks to Theo). Not so much on the SV but I don’t have the 750 anymore to make the comparison. It’s no different of an install but for some reason we didn’t get it right the first time and it was giving me fits. That’s the reason for this post. Hopefully, when someone needs to, they may find this and benefit. First tip: do not assume you have it right and then solder it all up nice and tidy and shrink-tube it before you know its proper. I did this and ended up having to cut it all apart and start over. The result of my doing it wrong was that the starter would run and the stop/run button worked fine, the bike would turn over and fire but would not run. After ruling out a number of other thing, we determined it had the be the wiring. So below is the proper configuration (using less wires than I originally was).
Switch Side: < to > Bike Side:
Black Orange/Black
Blue (either one) & Orange Orange/White
Black/White Yellow/Green
So on the switch side you will use 4 of the 6 wires. On the bike side you will use only 3. All other wires can be cut down or taped off.
And now I have a properly functioning kill/starter to compliment my racing throttle.
SSH is the sysadmins tool that never gets dull or worn out. I came across this excellent post on a number of useful tips and tricks on ways to use SSH and these are not the ones you’re used to seeing.
Just another endeavor that has its roots in geekdom. I’ve loosely followed the progress of the Internet Archive over the years and find their work seems tedious but fascinating. This week I stumbled across one of their current projects; saving the soon to be lost free hosting accounts existing on fortunecity.com. I noticed that they had some tools available for volunteers to use to help their cause so I joined in. I wonder if any of this will be important in the future.
I post these every once in a while just because I’m a geek.
michael@X:~$ uptime
13:39:30 up 379 days, 13:47, 2 users, load average: 5.00, 5.00, 5.00
mhanson@X:~$ uptime
13:40:41 up 314 days, 37 min, 1 user, load average: 1.00, 1.00, 1.00
michael@X:~$ uptime
13:40:58 up 303 days, 20:34, 1 user, load average: 1.00, 1.01, 1.05