To learn the most common #1 reason a carbureted motorcycle runs like crap click the link below. th-cam.com/video/pEb8ivfaapk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=mwhrHrzc_WoiqsyX
@KensWorldRestorations Hey thanks Ken I'm really glad you enjoyed it. This one was a really fun one to put together and turned out to be one of my all time favorites in the end. It was a little disappointing it didn't perform better but it really doesn't matter. I'm only making videos for fun anyway .Thanks again, my friend. Cheers 🍻
Man. This was a masterpiece. Captured so many points we often overlook. Best video yet. Hope this one gets a million views. It deserves it. Happy Father’s Day!
Hey, Links Garage thank you very much .I know you get it 100%.You are a great dad and likely learned how to be one because of your dad . I took my dad for granted so many times and man.. do I ever wish I could talk to him now . Thats why I thought this video may remind people to make the effort and connect with their parents while they can . Thanks again for your super kind comments and I hope you have an incredible Father's day. Cheers my friend 🍻
@@TRyanLearnBikes man. I’ve watched this video 5 times. And sent it to numerous people. Including my dad. This video inspired me to ride on Father’s Day. I shout you out. And I put a link to your channel in the description of the video. I’ll let you know when it’s out. Cheers amigo. Thank you for the content. 💪🏼🍻
@@linksgarage1985 Wow man ,I'm really glad you enjoyed the video and I very much appreciate you forwarding it to friends and to your father . Anytime a video can inspire people in a positive way is pretty much why alot of us put videos out there .You have the same vibe in your videos ,positivity and a genuine interest in helping .Proving my point further you mentioned about putting a link to my channel in one of you future videos ,I cant thank you enough . This youtube game is a challenging landscape to navigate at times but more than worth the effort when I get to cross paths and connect with good souls like yourself .Thanks again ,cheers my friend . 🍻
My pleasure..Im.glad you got something out of this video .It's actually one of my personal favorites. Thank you very much for watching and taking the time to comment. I truly appreciate it . Cheers 🍻
Awesome tribute, and a wonderful message. I do believe that I was blessed to have met a legend, yesterday in Port Dover. Absolutely loved this video, and it was a great pleasure meeting you Terry 👊😁👍
Hey Wayne thank you very much .This video was a fun one to make that hopefully hit home for some. No legend here mate , just like everyone else trying to figure out how to navigate the landscape .Cheers my friend
Thanks very much Eric I truly appreciate your very kind comments and continued support. Wishing you and yours a fantastic Father's day too .Cheers my friend 🍻
Remember when... Profoundly inspirational, Sir. When your kid looks up to you, and asks you if you want to go somewhere... find the time. Those moments will live on and shape the person they become. This video should be on the History Channel. 🎩
Hey Max Well .I thank you kindly for watching and taking the time to craft such a great comment. You obviously understand this video 100% .I'm guessing you must have kids and most certainly have had the influence of a great father figure in your life .Thanks again for your support and incredibly nice comment. Cheers my friend 🍻
@@TRyanLearnBikes Actually, I don't have any children. I only got to spend very little time with my father. And, I had an Uncle and an older brother who kinda filled in... I cherished the time that I spent with my Dad, and luckily it was worth it. Those brief moments, is what I've always used to center myself. My brother was a narcissistic creep, who never wanted me around, and my uncle was tolerant and didn't allow him to beat me to death. I've been married and divorced, she was a really big mistake in my life. I'm 55 and I spent most of the last 10 years, Caring for my mom.. she passed away Three years ago. But, it's not really as bad as it sounds. I'm pretty self reliant.. and, all the crazy azz shit is in the past.
@Max Well Holy Moly man !... You've had a fairly tough go in life ,yet you have an incredibly positive attitude.You obviously come from good stock .I'm sure your father and your mother were fantastic people. Otherwise, you'd Never be who you are today .I'm really glad you have a good solid life now and the future is bright..Thanks again for watching and taking the time to comment so kindly. Cheers 🍻 my friend 👍
Zen and the Art is one of my favourite books of all time. I'm also a lifelong bike nut. Lovley to stumble onto you while dedicating a bike video to your legendary dad :)
Hey Ryan, I agree, what a fantastic book ,one of my favorites too .I'm really glad you enjoyed the tribute video to my dad .Thanks very much for watching and taking the time to leave such a nice comment. Cheers to you good sir 🍻
Hey @mikekearsley2407,thank you very much ,I'm glad you enjoyed it .Always enjoy hearing from people all over the globe .You're the first from Seattle. Hi back to you from here on the north shores of Lake Erie in Ontario. Cheers 🍻
G'day from Western Australia. Gee this is a terrific video! And I loved how you tricked me with the woodruff key! So glad you did actually used the one you made in the 'dream sequence'. I'm still smiling!
@stevezodiac575 Hi Steve Thanks very much for such a great comment. I'm glad you enjoyed this video. It is actually one my personal favorites .Very cool to hear from someone on the other side of the planet. Thanks again for watching and taking the time to leave such a nice comment. Cheers to you good sir 🍺
@@TRyanLearnBikes G'day again, just to add, it also struck a chord with me too - I'm an older dad and have for many years been trying to teach my now almost 17 year old son about practical skills such as these. Sadly youngsters these days are easily distracted by phones and social media. But he's getting there.. I also liked how your video title reference to my favourite book! I look forward to watching more of your videos. The three I watched yesterday were terrific! Thank you! Cheers Steve 🍻
@@stevezodiac575 Hi Steve , You make a great point about young lads today being easily distracted and may be missing out learning lots of practical skills older generations routinely passed along . The things our dads taught us were nuggets of gold that we somehow knew were valuable . One of my favorite books too ,I wondered if anyone would catch the reference .The fact that you did is fantastic , I truly appreciate you commenting about it . Thanks very much for taking the time to comment back to me .If you do end up watching more of the channel I hope the videos are equally entertaining . Its a learning process for me so the style and quality varies as I go . Cheers to you good sir 🍺
Loved it. My dad taught me everything I know about working on things. It that a KM100? The street legal version of a KE100? If so I have the same bike.
Thanks very much .Yes it is a little KM 100 , nice catch . I also have the street legal KE100 . It's a great little pit bike to run about during a track day .
Top video man I don’t know how I missed it, oh hold up perhaps I do now thinking about it. When this video came out I was somewhat preoccupied with a funeral interstate. I lost one of my niece’s to Covid, she was only 36. Anyway and again good video man and a top way to work in your father, you have done him justice in this video and I think many can relate to having a father & son relationship similar to what you have expressed here, I know I did. And cool bike for the kids buddy what is it?
Oh Damn, Roland I'm terribly sorry to hear about your niece .That is absolutly gut wrenching . What a tragic loss for all concerned . This fathers day tribute video is poorly timed for you in Austrailia as it falls in September , December in Thailand ,August in Brazil and here in June. While the timing is off the message is consistent . If you're luckey enough to have a good relationship with your dad ,its priceless . Sounds like you and I were very fortunate in that regard . The bike in the video is a 1976 Kawasaki KE 100 . I have two of them , the little mucker in the video and a more polished unmolested version that comes out once in a while just to stretch its legs . Thanks as always for watching and your continued support . Side note ...I will start shooting the Killer Thong video scene soon and get that sent your way shortly .Its been a busy summer so far but I will sort something out when I get a chance . Cheers buddy .
@@TRyanLearnBikes Without the markings on the bike I just couldn’t work out what it was, it looked familiar but it just didn’t come to mind. Back in that day I had a 1976 Suzuki TS 185 but really I should of got a 1976 Kawasaki KD175, as the Kawasaki was a far lighter feeling bike to ride and I reckon it went better than the Suzuki. That will be cool when you get something together for the Thong but there is still time to go yet, so no stress man. Enjoy your summer while you can as given here man, who knows what type of winter you will get this year. And Yeah with my Niece it was very sudden and unexpected as to what happened to her as she had a lot going for her, she was an environmental scientist working in the rare-earth elements of things. However we are all here for a good time, not a long time and this she knew, as she partied hard and worked harder. She was suffering what they call long Covid and was doing so for some 18 months, still working though and on the day of her death she was on a day off doing her washing, she just hung it out on the line walked inside and collapsed with major heart failure form her blood suddenly becoming to think to pass through her heart, case number 23,000 odd here this year. Crazy stuff indeed.
@@rolandkeith5322 Holy Moly man , Your niece sounds like she was an incredible person .A scientist with a live life to the fullest attitude . A rare combination for sure .I just can't imagine losing a family memeber like that .The phrase "here for a good time ,not a long time " is easy to say but hard to grasp how brutally real it is , for all of us .Memento mori . Your Suzuki TS185 must have been heaps of fun to rip around on .Back in the 70's all of those two stroke machines were quite similar .As kids it did'nt much matter what we were riding just that we were riding something . Some of my best early biking memories was on a wreck of a machine with no gas tank or seat .We just filled the carb bowl and push started it , then went only a short distance until the carb emptied . Sounds rediculous but man it was so much fun . I'm betting you can relate to that type of stuff as a kid .
@@TRyanLearnBikes Memento mori, good reference. Well she was still single mainly because of her dedication to her career but she was no geek, I think she had not long plateaued in her career and was just entertaining the concept of a long term relationship with someone. But that’s how things go at times. At least she was five years older than my wife was when she died as she passed away when she was 31, and at that time I had a new born and a 15 month old boy. With the bikes yeah they all were very similar in the under 200cc class. LoL no seat or gas tank….yup them were the days and mine were similar I started out at 9 years old with a mini bike called a Tasman, I can’t find them on the internet so they must have been before records were kept. The engine was very sick and ended up getting pulled out by me and a friend at the time and we bolted in a Suzuki 75cc centrifugal clutch that went well but kept shaking itself to bits with mounting bolts falling out all of the time, so much so that through a day’s riding you ended up looking for some sticks to poke through the mounting holes to keep the engine from falling out…lol Then I progressed to a 1960 Suzuki 80 Model K10 79cc, man I had hit the big time with that bike, it stayed together and you could go for a good 15 minutes before the fuel would drip out of the rust holes in the tank, but hey I was good with that.
@@rolandkeith5322 Damn Roland man !You have experienced some serious life changing stuff . Raising two very young children on your own is bloody huge man ,WOW .When we look at events that shape our lives and measure our character ,you good sir were dealt a very tough hand to play. Massive respect to you . Your young'ns are extremely fortunate to have you as their dad . The ability to swap out engines ,use sticks for engine mounting bolts and endure leaky gas tanks shows mechanical imagination and improvisation many kids today will never know . We were so so lucky to have grown up before computers took over .
To learn the most common #1 reason a carbureted motorcycle runs like crap click the link below.
th-cam.com/video/pEb8ivfaapk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=mwhrHrzc_WoiqsyX
Great video, pace, style, editing, values... Only need viewers to enjoy it now
Very kind of you to say @Orakwan . It's really nice of you to take the time to comment so positively.I truly appreciate it .Cheers 🍺
I love this one the most. I don't care what YT thinks, this is the greatest video ever made.
@KensWorldRestorations Hey thanks Ken I'm really glad you enjoyed it. This one was a really fun one to put together and turned out to be one of my all time favorites in the end. It was a little disappointing it didn't perform better but it really doesn't matter. I'm only making videos for fun anyway .Thanks again, my friend. Cheers 🍻
Man. This was a masterpiece. Captured so many points we often overlook. Best video yet. Hope this one gets a million views. It deserves it. Happy Father’s Day!
Hey, Links Garage thank you very much .I know you get it 100%.You are a great dad and likely learned how to be one because of your dad . I took my dad for granted so many times and man.. do I ever wish I could talk to him now . Thats why I thought this video may remind people to make the effort and connect with their parents while they can .
Thanks again for your super kind comments and I hope you have an incredible Father's day. Cheers my friend 🍻
@@TRyanLearnBikes this is what it’s all about.💪🏼🍻
@@linksgarage1985 You know it 👍
@@TRyanLearnBikes man. I’ve watched this video 5 times. And sent it to numerous people. Including my dad. This video inspired me to ride on Father’s Day. I shout you out. And I put a link to your channel in the description of the video. I’ll let you know when it’s out. Cheers amigo. Thank you for the content. 💪🏼🍻
@@linksgarage1985 Wow man ,I'm really glad you enjoyed the video and I very much appreciate you forwarding it to friends and to your father . Anytime a video can inspire people in a positive way is pretty much why alot of us put videos out there .You have the same vibe in your videos ,positivity and a genuine interest in helping .Proving my point further you mentioned about putting a link to my channel in one of you future videos ,I cant thank you enough . This youtube game is a challenging landscape to navigate at times but more than worth the effort when I get to cross paths and connect with good souls like yourself .Thanks again ,cheers my friend . 🍻
Thank you for this. You've reminded me not to take things for granted. Not with my dad. Not with my children.
My pleasure..Im.glad you got something out of this video .It's actually one of my personal favorites. Thank you very much for watching and taking the time to comment. I truly appreciate it .
Cheers 🍻
It is clear the qualities you appreciated in your Dad live on in you! A thoughtful video and message. Enjoy your grandchildren. All the best.
Thank you very much I really appreciate your kind words. Cheers my friend 🍻
Awesome tribute, and a wonderful message. I do believe that I was blessed to have met a legend, yesterday in Port Dover. Absolutely loved this video, and it was a great pleasure meeting you Terry 👊😁👍
Hey Wayne thank you very much .This video was a fun one to make that hopefully hit home for some.
No legend here mate , just like everyone else trying to figure out how to navigate the landscape .Cheers my friend
I just re watched this one I love this one .
Ahh ..thanks Kev .Ya its one of my favorites, too. Dad's are the best, aren't they .
Cheers buddy 🍻
This is probably my favorite video of yours. Happy Father's Day to you and your pops.
Thanks very much Eric I truly appreciate your very kind comments and continued support. Wishing you and yours a fantastic Father's day too .Cheers my friend 🍻
Happy Father's Day!
Thanks very much William Happy father's day to you too good sir.
Remember when... Profoundly inspirational, Sir. When your kid looks up to you, and asks you if you want to go somewhere... find the time. Those moments will live on and shape the person they become. This video should be on the History Channel. 🎩
Hey Max Well .I thank you kindly for watching and taking the time to craft such a great comment. You obviously understand this video 100% .I'm guessing you must have kids and most certainly have had the influence of a great father figure in your life .Thanks again for your support and incredibly nice comment. Cheers my friend 🍻
@@TRyanLearnBikes Actually, I don't have any children. I only got to spend very little time with my father. And, I had an Uncle and an older brother who kinda filled in... I cherished the time that I spent with my Dad, and luckily it was worth it. Those brief moments, is what I've always used to center myself. My brother was a narcissistic creep, who never wanted me around, and my uncle was tolerant and didn't allow him to beat me to death. I've been married and divorced, she was a really big mistake in my life.
I'm 55 and I spent most of the last 10 years, Caring for my mom.. she passed away Three years ago. But, it's not really as bad as it sounds. I'm pretty self reliant.. and, all the crazy azz shit is in the past.
@Max Well Holy Moly man !... You've had a fairly tough go in life ,yet you have an incredibly positive attitude.You obviously come from good stock .I'm sure your father and your mother were fantastic people. Otherwise, you'd
Never be who you are today .I'm really glad you have a good solid life now and the future is bright..Thanks again for watching and taking the time to comment so kindly. Cheers 🍻 my friend 👍
Zen and the Art is one of my favourite books of all time. I'm also a lifelong bike nut. Lovley to stumble onto you while dedicating a bike video to your legendary dad :)
Hey Ryan, I agree, what a fantastic book ,one of my favorites too .I'm really glad you enjoyed the tribute video to my dad .Thanks very much for watching and taking the time to leave such a nice comment. Cheers to you good sir 🍻
Fantastic, Hi from Seattle
Hey @mikekearsley2407,thank you very much ,I'm glad you enjoyed it .Always enjoy hearing from people all over the globe .You're the first from Seattle. Hi back to you from here on the north shores of Lake Erie in Ontario. Cheers 🍻
You have an amazing talent for this youtube / video production thing. Very happy to come across your channel!
Thank you very much for your very kind comment. I truly appreciate you watching and taking the time to respond. Cheers to you🍻
G'day from Western Australia. Gee this is a terrific video! And I loved how you tricked me with the woodruff key! So glad you did actually used the one you made in the 'dream sequence'. I'm still smiling!
@stevezodiac575 Hi Steve Thanks very much for such a great comment. I'm glad you enjoyed this video. It is actually one my personal favorites .Very cool to hear from someone on the other side of the planet. Thanks again for watching and taking the time to leave such a nice comment. Cheers to you good sir 🍺
@@TRyanLearnBikes G'day again, just to add, it also struck a chord with me too - I'm an older dad and have for many years been trying to teach my now almost 17 year old son about practical skills such as these. Sadly youngsters these days are easily distracted by phones and social media. But he's getting there.. I also liked how your video title reference to my favourite book! I look forward to watching more of your videos. The three I watched yesterday were terrific! Thank you! Cheers Steve 🍻
@@stevezodiac575 Hi Steve , You make a great point about young lads today being easily distracted and may be missing out learning lots of practical skills older generations routinely passed along . The things our dads taught us were nuggets of gold that we somehow knew were valuable .
One of my favorite books too ,I wondered if anyone would catch the reference .The fact that you did is fantastic , I truly appreciate you commenting about it .
Thanks very much for taking the time to comment back to me .If you do end up watching more of the channel I hope the videos are equally entertaining . Its a learning process for me so the style and quality varies as I go .
Cheers to you good sir 🍺
I love this one
Another very nice video. Reckon I will gradually work my way through all your videos!
Very nice of you to say so ,I genuinely appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment. Cheers my friend 🍻
Good boy !!
I love ya brother
Thats a comment we all cant hear enough .Love ya too my brother . You made my day .Cheers
Nice
Thank you very much ,I appreciate the kind comment. Cheers 🍻
Loved it. My dad taught me everything I know about working on things. It that a KM100? The street legal version of a KE100? If so I have the same bike.
Thanks very much .Yes it is a little KM 100 , nice catch . I also have the street legal KE100 . It's a great little pit bike to run about during a track day .
Top video man I don’t know how I missed it, oh hold up perhaps I do now thinking about it. When this video came out I was somewhat preoccupied with a funeral interstate. I lost one of my niece’s to Covid, she was only 36.
Anyway and again good video man and a top way to work in your father, you have done him justice in this video and I think many can relate to having a father & son relationship similar to what you have expressed here, I know I did. And cool bike for the kids buddy what is it?
Oh Damn, Roland I'm terribly sorry to hear about your niece .That is absolutly gut wrenching .
What a tragic loss for all concerned .
This fathers day tribute video is poorly timed for you in Austrailia as it falls in September , December in Thailand ,August in Brazil and here in June. While the timing is off the message is consistent . If you're luckey enough to have a good relationship with your dad ,its priceless . Sounds like you and I were very fortunate in that regard . The bike in the video is a 1976 Kawasaki KE 100 . I have two of them , the little mucker in the video and a more polished unmolested version that comes out once in a while just to stretch its legs . Thanks as always for watching and your continued support . Side note ...I will start shooting the Killer Thong video scene soon and get that sent your way shortly .Its been a busy summer so far but I will sort something out when I get a chance . Cheers buddy .
@@TRyanLearnBikes Without the markings on the bike I just couldn’t work out what it was, it looked familiar but it just didn’t come to mind. Back in that day I had a 1976 Suzuki TS 185 but really I should of got a 1976 Kawasaki KD175, as the Kawasaki was a far lighter feeling bike to ride and I reckon it went better than the Suzuki.
That will be cool when you get something together for the Thong but there is still time to go yet, so no stress man. Enjoy your summer while you can as given here man, who knows what type of winter you will get this year.
And Yeah with my Niece it was very sudden and unexpected as to what happened to her as she had a lot going for her, she was an environmental scientist working in the rare-earth elements of things. However we are all here for a good time, not a long time and this she knew, as she partied hard and worked harder. She was suffering what they call long Covid and was doing so for some 18 months, still working though and on the day of her death she was on a day off doing her washing, she just hung it out on the line walked inside and collapsed with major heart failure form her blood suddenly becoming to think to pass through her heart, case number 23,000 odd here this year. Crazy stuff indeed.
@@rolandkeith5322 Holy Moly man , Your niece sounds like she was an incredible person .A scientist with a live life to the fullest attitude . A rare combination for sure .I just can't imagine losing a family memeber like that .The phrase "here for a good time ,not a long time " is easy to say but hard to grasp how brutally real it is , for all of us .Memento mori .
Your Suzuki TS185 must have been heaps of fun to rip around on .Back in the 70's all of those two stroke machines were quite similar .As kids it did'nt much matter what we were riding just that we were riding something . Some of my best early biking memories was on a wreck of a machine with no gas tank or seat .We just filled the carb bowl and push started it , then went only a short distance until the carb emptied . Sounds rediculous but man it was so much fun . I'm betting you can relate to that type of stuff as a kid .
@@TRyanLearnBikes Memento mori, good reference. Well she was still single mainly because of her dedication to her career but she was no geek, I think she had not long plateaued in her career and was just entertaining the concept of a long term relationship with someone. But that’s how things go at times. At least she was five years older than my wife was when she died as she passed away when she was 31, and at that time I had a new born and a 15 month old boy.
With the bikes yeah they all were very similar in the under 200cc class. LoL no seat or gas tank….yup them were the days and mine were similar I started out at 9 years old with a mini bike called a Tasman, I can’t find them on the internet so they must have been before records were kept. The engine was very sick and ended up getting pulled out by me and a friend at the time and we bolted in a Suzuki 75cc centrifugal clutch that went well but kept shaking itself to bits with mounting bolts falling out all of the time, so much so that through a day’s riding you ended up looking for some sticks to poke through the mounting holes to keep the engine from falling out…lol
Then I progressed to a 1960 Suzuki 80 Model K10 79cc, man I had hit the big time with that bike, it stayed together and you could go for a good 15 minutes before the fuel would drip out of the rust holes in the tank, but hey I was good with that.
@@rolandkeith5322 Damn Roland man !You have experienced some serious life changing stuff . Raising two very young children on your own is bloody huge man ,WOW .When we look at events that shape our lives and measure our character ,you good sir were dealt a very tough hand to play. Massive respect to you . Your young'ns are extremely fortunate to have you as their dad .
The ability to swap out engines ,use sticks for engine mounting bolts and endure leaky gas tanks shows mechanical imagination and improvisation many kids today will never know . We were so so lucky to have grown up before computers took over .