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Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I tested the iPhone RAM Mount/Aquabox setup out today on my tagging expedition(s) and it was a partial success.

The upside: the phone's display was visible, the Navigon app worked, and the audible directions were dutifully relayed from the iPhone to the helmet mounted Midland BT2-D headset speakers via A2DP/Bluetooth.

The downside: the ~20 degree weather and constant app/Bluetooth/GPS use made the iPhone's battery life absolutely suck. How bad? Try one hour until it automatically shut off (thankfully after I'd snapped the photos of me at the tag site). It regained some life magically after being warmed up in my pocket but that level is totally unacceptable.

The solution is to power the iPhone off of the bike, of course, but how to achieve this? My bike already has two sets of additional leads coming off its battery terminals. One is for the heated gear's controller. The other is for a Powerlet (aka, BMW-style) connector that currently is unused.

I first thought that I'd string together a Powerlet -> cigarette lighter adapter -> iPhone car cable series of cables and somehow waterproof the whole mess. This seemed clunky, not cheap, and prone to failure given that it'd be exposed to the elements. Thankfully there exists a ready made solution, a 36" long Powerlet -> iPhone dock connector cable with a tiny voltage regulator in-line. Booyah.

http://www.pashnit.com/product/powerlet/wire_ipod.html <-- first product



Needless to say one is ordered. With this cable then my iPhone GPS solution (Navigon + RAM Mount/Aqua Box + Midland BT2-D) is actually pretty decent! It has multiple waypoint capability with savable/retrievable complex routes, audible directions beamed to my head, a waterproof handlebar mount with power, and is not in any way dependent on cell reception (all maps live on the device in its memory). I suppose there is the niggling flaw that I have to take my gloves off and take the phone out of its little waterproof box in order to change any settings. :D Other than that it rocks. Heh. It's still a hell of a lot cheaper than a Garmin Zumo 550…
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
It turns out my bike's power plug isn't a Powerlet so that cable that I ordered is useless. Whoops.

In other news I hacked up an installation of Wee-Strom handguards on my Versys. Some of the longer bolts that I needed were available at the local Lowe's hardware store such as the socket head M8 x 1.25 x 40 mm that now secures the handlebar end weights. Some of the other hardware isn't available locally, in particular a socket head M8 x 1.25 x 30-35 mm bolt that I'd use to secure both the mirror and the medial portion of the left handguard.

I didn't let this stop me, however, and hacked up a "solution" involving a much longer hex head bolt, some washers, and much ugliness: the top of the mirror extenders is angled so the force directed through the washers is also unfortunately at an angle. It's a compromise but I think it'll hold for the time being.


Final product as viewed from the front



Comparatively clean right sided mount, on the medial side using a longer, special bolt provided with the handguards replacing the clutch lever pivot bolt. The gap between the grip and the weight is a bit messy but I don't have anything that'd fit there off hand.



Ugly left sided mounting setup with hex head bolt outside its intended recess and a bunch of washers. The left mirror stem fouls the windshield on full lock now since the mirror extender is pointed forward, but I don't think this should cause much of a problem.


Finally, I'm a bit of an idiot and had been using the motorcycle cover backwards. I thought it was just too small for the medium sized windscreen, tall front end, and wide mirrors, but it was simply reversed. Now it covers down to the "waterline" much better.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Nonartistic phonecam pics from an unexpected trip into the city:



My old apartment building. This is where I spent years 5-9 of my life, up on the 30th floor.


This red building in front of my old building didn't exist at all back in the day.


My elementary school. Very snooty, upper East Side. We were bused in from the non-snooty mid West side. :D


Under the George Washington Bridge on the NJ side. Palisades Park.


Finally, looking towards Times Square on the way back to the Midtown Tunnel.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
First off, photo-geekery: ISO 6400, f/5.6, 1/15 to 1/80 or so, pushed 0 to 2/3rds of a stop. Cropping on the pseudo-macro shots and lots of noise reduction in Lightroom&#8230;



Old bolt included with mirror extenders on left, new bolt from McMaster-Carr on right



Previous setup with hex bolts, washers on top. Note the angled top surface of the mirror extender forcing everything askew.



New setup with lovely recessed socket head bolt. Washers live below because the bolt is a bit too long (and McMaster-Carr didn't have it in 5 mm length increments, only 10 mm so I had to shoot long rather than short). Also note that the mirror extender has been rotated 90 degrees, so that the mirror now clears the windscreen even at full lock!

Completed product:

 

DaveW

Space Monkey
Jul 2, 2001
11,160
2,685
The bunker at parliament
Offroad adventure bikes tend to have quite a hard life.... If you look hard enough you can find pics of pretty much every make of bike smashed up like that.
Unlike a trail bike the adventure bikes are big heavy things and when you slam them about into rocks boulders or the like offroad with that mass eventually something will give.
Metal fatigues ya know. ;)
My neigbour at the house I just sold had the same thing happen to his Honda transalp
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
The people in the thread came up with at least 6 examples of this happening to the F 650 GS. Furthermore, BMW slipstreamed a new, beefier fork leg design during the summer of 2003, so it seems like the problem had come to their attention one way or another.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Tip of the day: don't "test" your heated gear battery harness while installing other electrical stuff right before a ride by inadvertently shorting the positive and negative pins with a single multimeter lead. It makes for a cold ride.

/me is teh dumb, and is glad there was an inline fuse!
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Some scumbag stole my motorcycle cover and the bag it came in last night, ie. clearly intending to use it for himself. I hate my neighborhood, and I'm unsure whether to replace the cover now lest his buddies start helping themselves to the plenty in turn.
 

Barbaton

Turbo Monkey
May 11, 2002
1,477
0
suburban hell
prolly thinks his newish Piaggio MP3 should be covered.

sorry to hear it. move into a condo with semi-effective security like ours?

Some scumbag stole my motorcycle cover and the bag it came in last night, ie. clearly intending to use it for himself. I hate my neighborhood, and I'm unsure whether to replace the cover now lest his buddies start helping themselves to the plenty in turn.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Our housing here is so cheap, tho&#8230; $850ish pretax with all utilities included and a walking commute.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
If Jessica were working full-time as a teacher then we'd be able to live somewhere else but now her Starbucks wages basically just cover her clarinet lessons, if that, and, as you know, a resident's salary isn't much when there are student loans, life/disability insurance, the unexpected Fit payment, and sundry unanticipated costs to cover.
 

Barbaton

Turbo Monkey
May 11, 2002
1,477
0
suburban hell
yeah I hear that. i just get by cuz i have a sugar mamma for the moment...

If Jessica were working full-time as a teacher then we'd be able to live somewhere else but now her Starbucks wages basically just cover her clarinet lessons, if that, and, as you know, a resident's salary isn't much when there are student loans, life/disability insurance, the unexpected Fit payment, and sundry unanticipated costs to cover.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I need this:

Asphalt and Rubber: MotoSafe: Safe Parking for Your Motorcycle and Gear



Based out of the UK, MotoSafe is a name that implies exactly what you’re thinking…it’s a safe for motorcycles. While presumably you could use a MotoSafe for your private residence (think apartments & condos), the real benefit of MotoSafe comes in the form of safe paid-for-parking in metropolitan areas. With room for not only a bike and gear and for a small fee, MotoSafe could provide the city rider with all the peace of mind they need.

Made from stout galvanized steel, lock doors, and ground anchors, the MotoSafe is designed to be a safe haven for motorcycles. Using a six-point electric locking system, the MotoSafe is powered by 12-volt DC system that is fed by a solar panel for power, and is assisted with a battery back-up.

Depending on the model used, there is internal lighting and work benches available, along with a variety of sizes for scooters, street bikes, and long wheel-based motorcycles. The larger models even offer the ability to store riding gear, incase you don’t want to lug around your helmet/luggage/passenger all day.

Pricing ranges from £930-£1,125 ($1,450-$1,750), so the MotoSafe isn’t cheap; but for a city, the possible revenue from a secure parking spot could mean dollar signs for the municipality.
It's not even that expensive! Well, the municipal model with pay-per-use features above probably is, but the pricing above (up to 1150 GBP or so) is accurate for the personal-use ones. I wonder if NUMC would object if I put one of these in my "parking space"... heh
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Yamaha Supere Ténéré

1199 cc, 108 hp, and 575 lbs wet. Definitely aimed at the R 1200 GS, what with its shaft drive, 1200cc twin, 19" front wheel, spoked wheel setup, and factory hard bags. With regard to this bike's weight, I'll be interested to see how much the Ducati Multistrada 1200 actually weighs on reviewers' scales, as its claimed weight is much lighter&#8230;





http://www.asphaltandrubber.com/bikes/yamaha-xt1200z-super-tenere/

With its latest bik[e,] the Yamaha XT1200Z Super Ténéré, Yamaha is stepping up its game and getting serious about the adventure-tourer motorcycling segment. The Dakar inspired Super Ténéré is a ground-up production for Yamaha, making it the first Japanese manufacturer to get serious about this emerging (and very profitable) market segment.

With 1,199cc under the hoood, the XT1200Z Super Ténéré is aiming its sights on the class-leading BMW R1200GS and new-comer Ducati Multistrada 1200. The powerplant features a parallel twin motor with four valves per cylinder, and makes 108hp @ 7,250 RPM and 84lbs&#8226;ft @ 6,000 RPM. Read more about the Yamaha XT1200Z Super Ténéré after the jump.

For a wiz-bang factor, the Super Ténéré features a bevy of techno-goodies like ride-by-wire throttle control, three-mode linked & ABS brakes, dual-riding modes (street and touring), and Yamaha&#8217;s traction control system (YCC-T). Ensuring that the fun doesn&#8217;t stop is the bike&#8217;s 6.07 gallon gas tank, which should make all the die-hard adventure/touring folks very happy. However, the bike&#8217;s 575lb wet weight is likely to turn a few upside down frowns the wrong way around.

As was done on the YZF-R1, Yamaha seems to be taking the lessons learned on the MotoGP race track, and is applying their cross-plane crankshaft design (if you can call it that on a two cylinder motor) to the Super Ténéré. The 270° crank allows the Super Ténéré to deliver its power pulses in a manner that allows for better traction between the tire and road, which has a huge benefit in off-road situations.

No price has been announced yet, but expect it to undercut the KTM, BMW, and Ducati&#8217;s of the world&#8230;and for real bad news, the Super Ténéré has not been confirmed for the US market.
 
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Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Comparative quickness data points over the 1/4 mile, sources for each linked in the text:

1998 Vespa ET4: 0-60 in 19.2 seconds, so probably 1/4 ~22@55.

Hummer H1: 19.6@67.

2009 Honda Fit: 17.9@76.

2003 Hummer H2: 17.3@80.

I can't find an actual Vespa GTS 250 1/4 time. Plugging in 22 hp and 530lb scooter + fluids + rider + gear weight into this calculator yields an estimated 16.8@80, which sounds a bit optimistic, frankly, given that that's basically the scooter's top speed given infinite distance.

2009 Honda Accord EX [4-cylinder]: 16.6@85.

2009 Honda DN-01: 15.4@87.

2003 Mini Cooper S: 15.4@92.

Suzuki Burgman 650: 15.2@85.

2005 Harley-Davidson Sportster 883: 15.0@89.

2008 Nissan Maxima 3.5 SV [V6]: 14.7@96.

2009 Pontiac G8 GT [V8]: 14.1@101.

2008 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution MR: 13.9@99.

2010 Ford Mustang GT: 13.5@104.

2007 Harley-Davidson FLHRS Road King Custom: 13.4@96.

2008 Kawasaki Versys: 13.0@99.

2004 Harley Davidson XL1200C Sportster: 13.0@100.

2004 Honda Gold Wing GL1800A: 12.7@103.

2010 Tesla Roadster Sport: 12.6@103.

2005 Harley-Davidson VRSCR Street Rod [V-Rod]: 12.1@115.

A crazy, modified drag scooter from UK: 11.9@104.

2009 Nissan GT-R: 11.5@120.

2009 Corvette ZR-1: 11.2@130.

2007 Honda CBR 600RR: 10.9@126.

2007 Suzuki GSX-R1000: 10.0@147.

2006 Kawasaki ZX-14: 9.5@152, given enough tries at it, heh.

Can you tell that I'm bored because I can't ride due to all this snow? :x The point: fast bikes are fast by any measure, and scooters are as fast as plebian cars, which is probably fast enough.
 
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Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Today's ride, to West Neck Beach Town Park. Some sandy roads and snow-laden speedbumps on the way there. The bike stepped sideways in turns a few times on the sand. The most treacherous part of the ride probably was reparking the bike, as there's compact snow/ice where my front wheel lives near my favored locking-pole…



 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I whipped together some data about automobile curb weight and MPG over the years, as I wanted to see for myself whether the perception that cars have become thirstier and larger is true. It turns out that the latter is most definitely true but not necessarily the former.

Side note: Making these charts forced me to learn how to properly format charts in Excel with multiple Y-axes, a skill that probably will come in handy for other, more useful endeavors in the future. Data were sourced from Edmunds and Fueleconomy.gov.













Not as easy to read but workable. Note the big step backwards of the 4.6L 1994 Mustang GT :rofl: . Whoops, Ford…
 
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Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Tonight's route:



http://tinyurl.com/yklkfqm

Roads were clear and dry initially, and I quite enjoyed doing a little roll-on power wheelie in 1st. :D Then it started to rain/snow lightly and I had to back off a lot. The bike did a little shimmy on the freeway when going along a tar line that ran parallel to the lane but was otherwise very well behaved today.

This was a warmup of sorts for Sunday, when I plan on heading up past Bear Mountain with a few other riders: the other, local Versys guy and at least one other person on a KLR 650. The season begins! (at least for some)
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I've had two rides on the Respro Foggy mask now.



I wore eyeglasses for the first ride and it was near freezing. In these conditions the mask frankly didn't work that well. I had recurrent fogging of the right lens of my glasses and had to ride with the visor cracked open much of the time. Riding this way is annoying because of the noise and because the visor slams itself shut every time I go over 35 mph.

I didn't wear glasses for the second ride, tonight, instead donning contacts. This made all the difference! I was able to ride in 35 degree weather for over two hours without opening my faceshield at all, even at stoplights! The only time I opened it was when stopping at the gas station.

Verdict: it works if one uses contacts or has uncorrected good vision. Even it's not good enough to keep eyeglasses from fogging up.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549




Near Harriman State Park. Lots of riders out today, pirates and squids and ADVwhores alike.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I shot some "official" promo shots for Jessica tonight. She's soloing with her former orchestra back in Seattle in a year and needed a portrait w/clarinet so I bust out the 135/2 and the off-camera flash and had some fun. Net result:



A few more here with goofy expressions: five faces of jessica.

Photo-nerdery: 5D Mk II, 135/2L at f/2.0, ISO 1600, off-camera 420EX at -2 EV triggered via ST-E2.
 

Westy

the teste
Nov 22, 2002
54,225
20,003
Sleazattle
I shot some "official" promo shots for Jessica tonight. She's soloing with her former orchestra back in Seattle in a year and needed a portrait w/clarinet so I bust out the 135/2 and the off-camera flash and had some fun. Net result:



A few more here with goofy expressions: five faces of jessica.

Photo-nerdery: 5D Mk II, 135/2L at f/2.0, ISO 1600, off-camera 420EX at -2 EV triggered via ST-E2.
I'm only a pretend photo nerd (hell, I own an Olympus) but why would you shoot WFO for a portrait? Obviously for depth but why would you want that effect for a portrait? Unless you are trying to hide scratches in the clarinet why wouldn't you want the shot to be as sharp as possible?

Not trying to criticize, I like photography but lack good subjects to shoot and learn from.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I was "taught" to keep only the eyes in focus, throwing the hair, ears, nose, clarinet in this case, everything else out of focus. I'm not sure why people do it other than that they can, but I like the look.

Besides, stopping down doesn't yield a huge amount of depth of field (10 cm at f/8, 2 m subject distance, 5D Mk II sensor, 135 mm focal length vs. 2 cm when wide open) and it loses the bokeh for which we pay so dearly&#8230;

http://www.dofmaster.com/dofjs.html
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
That's a beautiful vista, Dave. :thumb:

I logged about 45 miles tonight, trying to get some saddle time in before leaving for Japan on Saturday. Left at 10:30 after karate practice (which kicked my ass--tonight was day 1), got back around 12:30. Long Island is nice when no one else is around! The roads are finally swept for the most part, the pavement good, and the corners fun. I'm becoming more comfortable with the bike each day, with actions becoming unconscious and things feeling "normal."

 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
I'm about 12 hours away from being home after 11 days of being on the road. I'm tired, and won't even get to work on the 10 gb of photos and bids until Thursday. I'd say poor me except that both Japan and San Diego (conference) were pretty cool. Both Jessica and I even pretended to be normal people in that neither of us brought our instruments. We don't have a concert for another month and I didn't want to deal with finding space in which to practice throughout Japan...
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Just in case anyone doesn't check the lounge:

Japan and San Diego pics

toshiclark.com usually does from 25-250 MB/day, 50 or so being typical. Yesterday it did 2347 MB thanks to all my gallery-whoring. :thumb:
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Interesting aesthetic that that guy has. I'll page through it a bit later.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
This is one of the things I've been working on:


me said:
In this movie sequential slices of the reference Talairach brain are shown. Plotted upon these slices are foci that have been implicated by various authors as having reduced or increased fractional anisotropy (FA) via diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) MRI when comparing groups of children with autism versus groups of controls.

1. Each circle/sphere's color is determined by the study it came from.
2. The volume of each implied sphere is proportional to the number of voxels in each reported region of interest.
3. The opacity or translucency of each sphere is determined by my ranking of each study's statistical soundness. Lower p-value or correction for the multiple comparisons problem warrants a more opaque blob of color.

This is original content by this author, Toshi Clark, that will be used as part of a presentation at the 2010 American Society of Neuroradiology meeting. The full presentation, explaining background and methods in much more depth, is available upon request.
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
On another forum someone asked the following question about the Kinkaku-ji shot:



Nice. Any digital darkroom work? After watching a content aware fill CS5 demo in all it's amazingness, I'm growing suspect of pictures...
My reply:

Nothing I post is straight from the camera--no camera can read my mind as far as metering, white balance, contrast and color tone curves, etc. even my pricey 5D Mk2. I do all my adjustments globally in Lightroom, however. No cloning and explicit manipulation of small elements in Photoshop--hell, these days I don't even have a working copy of Photoshop installed on my computer. Lightroom is that good, and I am that lazy. It'd be different if someone were paying me to fix tiny details. :lol:

As for this particular photo: it was shot in RAW format so that I could choose "developing" options after the fact, on the computer, instead of being stuck with a jpeg "printed" by the camera. The intense reflection is courtesy of a circular polarizer. The camera's metering was a bit under for my tastes so the exposure was pushed +0.28 stops. I actually shot this one with a straight-enough horizon but if it were a degree or two off I would have rotated it to fix that. White balance was as shot, as the camera correctly (imo) picked a WB very near that of sunlight. No highlight recovery was applied (a fabulous feature, btw!) but I did add +9 of "Fill light" to lighten up the brown wood on the house. I never mess with the "Brightness" and "contrast" sliders since I adjust exposure, tone curves, and shadows/highlights directly elsewhere. Vibrance and saturation both were bumped a bit to +10. The contrast point curve was set to "Strong contrast." Finally, the camera color calibration profile was set to Canon's "Camera Landscape." Overall these are pretty hands-off settings, nothing too crazy.

It might be easier to parse screenshots of the settings in Lightroom instead of my words:



[minirant]
IMO a photographer is responsible for making the photo as good as he/she thinks it can be. For some people that involves posting whatever their camera spits out, whether rotated, exposed incorrectly, with the correct white balance and a pleasing level of contrast, or whether miraculously "correct" via the whims of the gods. For others that involves cranking contrast so that shadow detail is lost and saturating until one's eyes bleed. I prefer a slightly more subtle approach but certainly don't leave things to fate or the camera's (or RAW converter's) default settings.
[/minirant]
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
Here's where I rode today. Straight bits at the bottom of the map are no fun. Twisty bits up top are.

 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,029
7,549
The fruits of my labor over the past few days (in between fixing and rebuilding my computer):


HDR Kinkaku-ji.


HDR meningioma on a head CT.

My assertion in the project this is destined for is that these two "extended dynamic range" techniques are analogous. Implied is that both techniques can create some weird-ass looking images that seem unnatural. I created the brain CT technique out of whole cloth for this project, for the record, which is why you may be unfamiliar with seeing colored CT images that show brain, soft tissue (tumor in this case), and bone detail at the same time.