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- X-Mailer: m, by Cameron Simpson
- Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2002 14:09:25 +0000
- Subject: aus.motorcycles FAQ, part 2 of 3 [monthly post]
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Followup-To: aus.motorcycles
- Summary: This posting and its companions cover most of the
- common issues raised in motorcycling discussions, with
- Australia specific information.
- From: Cameron Simpson <cs@zip.com.au>
- Reply-To: cs@zip.com.au
- Errors-to: cs@zip.com.au
- Organization: Canon Information Systems Research Australia, Sydney, Oz
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- Archive-name: motorcycles/aus-faq/part2
- URL: http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/aus.moto/FAQ/
- Maintainer: Cameron Simpson <cs@zip.com.au>
- Posting-frequency: monthly
-
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- (Living on the WWW at) \| |/
- "http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/aus.moto/FAQ/" |_|
-
- Overview
- ~~~~~~~~
- The Aus.Motorcycles FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) comes in three parts.
- Part One contains introductory material for learners or new bike buyers.
- Part Two contains specific information about Australian touring, maintenaince,
- bike hire, gear, etc...
- Part Three covers the safety and everything else of clothing & gear.
-
- 1. 2.1 Where to ride, sights to see, nice roads, touring...
-
- 2.
-
- Where to ride, sights to see, nice roads, touring... Also
- see the Group Rides section of this FAQ.
-
- ╖ Can I ride around Australia without carrying extra
- fuel?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in Victoria?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in Western Australia?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in New South Wales?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in South Australia?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in Queensland?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in Tasmania?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in the Northern Territory?
-
- ╖ Where should I ride in the Australian Capital
- Territory?
-
- 2.1 Can I ride around Australia without carrying extra
- fuel?
-
- 2.2
-
- Vic, NSW, Tas will present no problems at all. Just make
- sure you hit smaller towns while the fuel stations are still
- open. In the other states there are deserts to cross.
- Hwy/Fwy 1 is no problem, even across deserts. Always check
- with locals before you leave a town anyway. It is generally
- recomended to carry 5-10 litres spare. Nasty rumours abound
- of dropped bikes going up in smoke from jerry cans igniting
- :-/
-
- 2.2.1 300+km stretches from Darwin to Mt Iza
- 2.2.2
- From Chris Ruskie <ruskie@it.ntu.edu.au>:
- I crossed the Nullarbor way back in '81 (on the main
- highway, not through the dirt tracks) on a Ducati with only
- just over 200 km before reserve. We stopped at all bar one
- petrol stations, but made it without any concerns about
- running out of fuel. Pity we broke down though.... ;^(
-
- From Tony Fathers <a.fathers@uws.edu.au>:
- Some of the desert areas - no way! 460 km from Lyndhurst to
- Innamincka (fuel to fuel)......
-
- 2.3 Where should I ride in Victoria?
-
- 2.4
-
- Black's Spur (Healesville to Marysville), Lake Mtn, Reefton
- Spur (Marysville to Reefton), Great Ocean Rd, Kew Blv (Melb.
- metro area)... Arthur's Seat(Mornington Peninsula),
- Hurstbridge->Kinglake->Healesville.
-
- 2.5 Where should I ride in Western Australia?
-
- 2.6
-
- Round Wongong Dam - short but twisty bits.
- Serpentine Dam, South Dandalup
- Dam->Dwellingup->Boddington->Brookton.
- York, Toodjay, Northam.
- Bridgetown-Nannup-Balingup-Bridgetown.
- Caves Road Yallingup to Margret River.
-
- 2.7 Where should I ride in New South Wales?
-
- 2.8
-
- 2.8.1 Day trips from Sydney
- 2.8.2
- Old Pacific Highway, Hornsby to Gosford
- Bells Line of Road, out Lithgow way
- Putty Road, Windsor to Singleton
-
- 2.8.3 Sydney metro, short but different
- 2.8.4
- Berowra Waters Ferry road
- Galston Gorge, for terminal crazies (especially at night)
- 2.8.5 NSW country
- 2.8.6
- Oxley Highway, Wauchope to Armidale/Walcha (left, right,
- left, right.....)
- Buckett's Way (Hexham? to Taree via Gloucester); the run
- from Singleton (above - Putty) to Dungog stitches up nicely
- to this.
-
- 2.9 Where should I ride in South Autralia?
-
- 2.10
-
- Up the BelAir road through Coromandel Valley, to Clarendon
- then Meadows, MAcclesfield, Strathalbyn, Ashbourne, Bull
- Creek, back to Meadows.
- Up the Gorge Road to Gumeracha then Birdwood. Check the
- Motor Museum out, then home the same way or via
- Hahndorf/Freeway. Basically, head for the Adelaide hills
- and go nuts :)
-
- 2.11 Where should I ride in Queensland?
-
- 2.12
-
- Mt Glorious - good for a quick fang. Nice windy roads,
- coffee shops, scenery. Can go down the other side to the
- Wivenhoe Dam. Downside is that a lot of people are killing
- themselves on that road, and the police are doing more speed
- traps. Mapleton Pub - rip up the Bruce Highway, maybe stop
- into the Ettamogah Pub on the way, then swing up high for a
- nice lunch and view. Ride back through Montville and
- Maleny. Stanthorpe - for a longer ride (read overnight) go
- west to Stanthorpe, stay the night in a national park. Drop
- down through NSW to Glen Innes to wave at the friendly
- bikers, then come back up past Byron and the Gold Coast.
-
- Mt Tamborine through to Springbrook (via the Russ Hinze Dam
- Road)
-
- A perfect day ride from Brisbane includes Mt. Glorious to
- Esk via Somerset. From Esk head to Toowoomba (the road gets
- a a bit thin here, but still bitumin). At Hampton turn right
- and head to Yarraman. This section of the road is ideal for
- big speeds, no cops. At Yarraman head back towards Brisbane.
- At Kilcoy head towards Somerset again.
-
- Gillies highway near Cairns.
-
- 2.13 Where should I ride in Tasmania?
-
- 2.14
-
- See also Kevin Gleeson <kevin@imagine-it.com.au>'s
- Tassie Touring Tips
- http://www.imagine-it.com.au/ausmoto/tassie.htm
-
- Where? Everywhere! Tasmania has some of the curviest roads
- in Australia. For the most part they are bitumen, but
- narrow. Some of the "traditional" frequently used sections
- are: Grass Tree Hill Road, Channel Highway, East Coast
- Highway, Lyell/Murchison Highway (beware at Hellyer Gorge,
- those 100m straights are not really enough to overtake on)
- Main hazards in Tassy are: log trucks, occasional bad
- camber, log trucks, lack of use of indicators by cage
- drivers, and log trucks.
-
- Hobart area: Grasstree hill road ( Risdon vale - Richmond
- ) 1 Hour
- Mud walls road ( Campania - midland highway ) 1 Hour
- old Huon Road (Ferntree - Huonville) over Mount
- Wellington. 2 Hours
- Cygnet - Verona Sands road 1/2 day
-
- East coast, 1 day ( maybe two ) Elephant Pass (check out
- the pancake shop at the top)
- St. Mary's Pass
- the Sidling (Scottsdale - Launsecton)
-
- Strathgordon road, 1 day return Devonport-Forth-Cradle
- Mountain (some dirt), 1 day return
-
- Lake Leake Road from just North of Swansea to Campbelltown
- in the midlands.
-
- 2.15 Where should I ride in the Northern Territory?
-
- 2.16
-
- Everywhere as fast as you can :)
- [INDEED. Well, after Humpty Doo turn-off anyway. - Radley
- Jones <rdj@senet.com.au>]
-
- Try Litchfield Park for a day trip from Darwin (visit all 3
- Falls).
- For a quick 3 hour trip try Fog Dam, get there for Dawn or
- Dusk (usually no-one there at Dawn, listen to the
- birds/silence.) - Radley Jones <rdj@senet.com.au>
-
- 2.17 Where should I ride in the Australian Capital
- Territory?
-
- 2.18
-
- The Uriarra/Cotter loop is a fantastic stretch of road, with
-
- wide variations in road 'style' and landscape type. Start on
- the Cotter road, turn off at Coppins Crossing, then head
- onto Uriarra road. Follow Uriarra until the Turn-off back to
- canberra, and it will take you back onto the Cotter road
- just before Cotter Pub. Continue along Cotter road to
- Tuggeranong, and return to canberra along any viable route.
-
- You can continue from the Cotter Pub south down past
- Murray's Corner and Tidbinbilla to Tharwa and back up the
- Monaro Hwy. The bit through the pine forest past Murray's
- Corner is a bit prone to slow/unpredicatble traffic and
- gravel on the road but once it opens up, its quite good, and
- makes the ride about twice as long.
-
- A quick fang up Coppins Crossing is always fun.
-
- Heading down the coast via the Clyde mountains is an
- interesting ride with lots of twisties in the later
- sections, and the ride up the coast from Batemans bay to
- Sydney (through the national park south of sydney) is a
- great alternative to the highway (if you have a few extra
- hours to spare)
-
- The road down Brown Mtn (between Cooma and the coast) is a
- vastly better road than Clyde Mtn. Every time I went down
- Clyde Mtn (admittedly a long time ago), the road surface was
- shocking. Of course, both Brown Mtn and Clyde Mtn are in
- NSW, not ACT.
- 3. 2.2 Bike hire? Bike Shops?
-
- 4.
-
- Bike hire? Bike Shops?
-
- ╖ Where can I get my bike dyno'd?
-
- ╖ Where can I hire a motorcycle?
-
- ╖ How should I go about importing a bike to Australia?
-
- 4.1 Where can I get my bike dyno'd?
-
- 4.2
-
- Most states should have one or two performace shops that
- offer this service. Look out for their Dyno Days in AMCN
- (Aus MotorCycle News) Ring around and ask, shouldn't cost
- you more than $10-$15 a go.
-
- Vic - Dynobike
- WA - SuperCycles
- NSW - Parry's
- SA -
- Qld -
-
- 4.3 Where can I hire a motorcycle?
-
- 4.4
-
- Also see
- my bike hire page
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/hire.html
- and Adam Vaughan's <adamv@ozemail.com.au> most excellent
- Australian Motorcycle Rentals
- http://www.ozemail.com.au/~adamv/bikes/rentals.html
-
- Victoria Motorcycle Hire and Sales: 606 High st
- Kew East 3102
- Ph: (03) 817 3206
- Mobile: (015) 314 970
- Fax: (03) 817 3662
-
- 3 bike shops in Brisbane that do guaranteed buy-back
- prices:
- Shogun Honda (07) 808 7850 - Knew what was going on,
- very helpful.
- Phil Beaumont (07) 252 2115 - Knew what was going on,
- dubious shop.
- Springwood Suzuki (07) 208 7999 - Helpful, will do buy-
- back but no system, negotiable.
-
- Outrider Rentals in Sydney c/-
- http://magna.com.au/~advtours/atbthome.html
-
- 4.5 How should I go about importing a bike to Australia?
-
- 4.6
-
- From Roy Armstrong <roy@mlb.dmt.csiro.au> Thu Apr 13
- 22:10:22 1995:
- We recently imported two bikes from the USA after a 7 week
- holiday there. There are many avenues open to importing
- bikes into Aus. The first and most IMPORTANT step is to
- contact the:
-
- Department of Transport
- GPO Box 1553
- Canberra
- ACT 2601
- Fax: +61 6 274 6013
- Tel: +61 6 274 7506
- +61 6 274 7111
-
- If you contact them first you should have no problems
- importing bikes into Aus. You may even find that they will
- not have to comply with Australian Design Rules (ADR).
- The Federal Office of Road Safety will send you the
- information that you need about importing bikes to Aus.
- There are a number of different classifications that a
-
- bike may fall into. Approval can take up to 3 weeks and
- costs $50.00 per application. You can put more than one
- bike on an application. With the info you get from
- Canberra there is also a list of people who can issue ADR
- plates in different states. This may solve any problems
- but as with all services you will have to pay someone
- something. Once you get the bike imported you then have
- to sort out registration in your state. Below is an
- extract of relevant information from the booklet that the
- Federal Office of Road Safety will send out.
-
- THE MOTOR VEHICLE STANDARDS ACT
-
- The Motor Vehicle Standards Act 1989, which came into
- effect on 1 August 1989, makes it an offence to import a
- new or secondhand vehicle unless:
-
- ╖ it meets the safety and emissions standards applying
- to vehicles to be used on Australian roads (the ADRs)
- and has a valid Australian compliance plate fitted;
-
- or
-
- ╖ arrangements are in place, by way of written
- agreement, for an organisation holding Compliance
- Plate Approval from the Federal Office of Road Safety
- to modify the vehicle to meet the ADRs and to fit a
- compliance plate, after its arrival in Australia
-
- The importer will require a Vehicle Import Approval from
- the Federal Office of Road Safety to obtain clearance at
- the port of entry. The vehicle cannot be given into your
- possession without this approval and any delays may prove
- costly.
-
- Import approval will be granted if the above two
- requirements are met. Import approval will also be granted
- if:
-
- ╖ you obtained a letter of compliance from the
- manufacture
-
- or
-
- ╖ you have owned and used the vehicle overseas for a
- continuous period of not less than three months, you
- are of driving age and are an Australian citizen or
- migrant holding permanent residency in Australia
-
- or
-
- ╖ the vehicle was manufactured before January 1974 (for
- vehicles other than motorcycles small trailers,
- trucks and buses), or 1 July 1975 (for motorcycles),
-
- or 1 July 1988 (for small trailers less than 4.5
- tonnes ladden weight). These will be known as
- `specified dates' for the remainder of this brochure.
-
- Before importing a vehicle it is essential that you ensure
- it will be allowed into Australia. Otherwise you may have
- to export or scrap the vehicle, or be penalised with a
- fine of up to $12 000. Potential importers should check
- with the Australian Customs Service for requirements
- relating to tariffs and quarantine.
-
- EXEMPTIONS
- There are vehicles such as agricultural and earthmoving
- equipment, competition, display, farm and evaluation
- vehicles which are not subject to the Motor Vehicle
- Standards Act. Contact the Federal Office of Road Safety
- for further advise on these vehicles as an import approval
- may still be required to gain clearance at the port of
- entry.
-
- REGISTRATION
- These guidelines relate to the import of vehicles before
- first registration. If some of these requirements are not
- met at the time of importation, then they must be met
- before registration. A vehicle must also meet the
- registering authority's requirements for registration,
- such as roadworthiness.
-
- NOTE: Not mentioned in the main text of the book but on
- the Application for Vehicle Import Approval:
- APPLICATION FOR VEHICLE IMPORT APPROVAL
- Part 4 - Date of manufacture
- Was the vehicle manufactured:
- * 15 or more years ago? or
- * before 30/6/88 for trailers under 4.5t ATM?
-
- | Y | | N |
- Go to Part 10 Go to Part 5
-
- This means that if your motorcycle is 15 or more years old
- then it may not be required to have an ADR to obtain an
- Import Approval.
- 5. 2.3 Cleaning your bike
-
- 6.
-
- Cleaning your bike Somebody asked us "How do i get all that
- oil and grease off my engine, rims and the like? Can i use
- that cheap degreaser? What works and how well?"
-
- Summary:
-
- ╖ the $2 spraycans of degreaser from The_Reject_Shop have
- been used with good results.
-
- ╖ kerosine in a pump pack works well
-
- ╖ use an old paint brush, you can cut the bristles right
- back for a good scrub. Toothbrushes are good too.
-
- ╖ Spray_&_Wipe is good for steel wheels
-
- ╖ Mr_Sheen is good for painted alloy rims
-
- ╖ Autosol, Gumption etc.. for the other bits, thinners
- for carbies.
-
- ╖ Detergent for paintwork followed by polish.
- 7. 2.4 Other clues on the Information SuperRacetrack :)
-
- 8.
-
- Other clues on the Information SuperRacetrack :) Are you
- running a useful a.m service? Send me your URL now!
- [ Web Sites | Picture Archives and making your own | Group
- Rides and info | Books and magazines ]
-
- 8.1 Web Sites
-
- 8.2
-
- Moto FAQs at www.faqs.org
- http://www.faqs.org/faqs/motorcycles/
- Home of the FAQ
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/aus.moto/FAQ/
- Beginner Motorcyclist Information
- http://vger.rutgers.edu/~ravi/bike/docs/beginner.html
- Cameron Simpson's pointers to various aus.moto pages
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/aus.moto/
- Kevin Gleeson's Pointers to various aus.moto pages
- http://www.imagine-it.com.au/ausmoto/
- Aus.Moto faces page
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/aus.moto/faces/imindex.html
- Cameron Simpson's Moto Page
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/
- Mike Cutter's upcoming events
- http://ledoux.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/~mtc/moto/motorbike.html
- A Guide to Motorcycle Parking in
- Australian Universities
- http://www.phys.unsw.edu.au/~atm/bikepark.html
- The Rec.Motorcycles Index
- http://www.halcyon.com/moto/index.html
-
- 8.3 Picture Archives
-
- 8.4
-
- ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/pics/vehicles/motorcycles
- ftp://nic.funet.fi/pub/pics/vehicles/motorcycles
-
- I know there're heaps more. Try starting at
- Cameron's Pic Links
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/moto/index.html#pics
-
- 8.4.1 How do I scan photos & piccys so they look great?
- 8.4.2
- The trick in my experience is to not scan at too high a
- resolution. If my original is large enough, I will scan at
- 75dpi in 24 bit. Any higher and you pick up the texture of
- the paper and it looks all speckled. If the original is
- small and you'd like to try and enlarge it then try scanning
- at higher resolutions.
-
- Always scan at more than you'll want to put on your page
- (i.e. at the maximum res you can without showing the grain).
- Keep the originals (on your home machine, on a tape,
- whatever) and post resized (smaller) ones to your web site
- if you have bandwidth or storage costs.
-
- Image format? Avoid wasteful image formats like TIFF or BMP
- (neither has any compression). Choose JPEG format usually.
- Avoid GIFs for full size images - the colour quantisation
- ruins the image (but see thumbnailing, below)..
-
- Indexing? Don't include the full-size pic in your page.
- Include thumbnails and attach HREFs to the full-size pic to
- the thumbnail. Do make real thumbnails. Novice web authors
- sometimes use the size attributes of the IMG tag to include
- a resized-very-small inline image of the original simply by
- pointing at it. This is bad, as the whole original is
- downloaded by the browser and only then resized. So the
- page takes forever to load anyway. Use GIFs for the
- thumbnails, quantised to few colours (i.e. 16, 32 or 64
- instead of the default close-to-256); you'll get good
- compression this way, better than JPEG for thumbnail-sized
- images.
-
- Tools? I use
- im2html
- http://www.zip.com.au/~cs/im2html/
- for my image galleries. You just throw the images into a
- directory and run the script. You can use the thumbnail
- script supplied with it standalone if you want the
- thumbnails but prefer a different web page layout scheme.
- Anyone got other good tools?
-
- 8.5 People to contact for group rides, info, etc...
-
- 8.6
-
- Just post to aus.motorcycles. NSW, Vic, Qld, SA & WA are
- all into net rides, so you'll get some response. Mailing
- lists also exist for several regions. Check out the
- Australian Local Ride Mailing Lists
-
- http://ledoux.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/~mtc/moto/comingup/html/mailinglists.html
-
- 8.7 Books and magazines
-
- 8.8
-
- Motorcycle tuning: chassis - John Robinson Redwood Press
- Limited, Melksham, Wiltshire ISBN 0 7506 0798 X
-
- AMCN (Australian MotorCycle News) magazine
-
- Two Wheels magazine
-
- David Minton - The Motorcyclist's Handbook. a little dated
- in some areas (written in 1982) but brilliant on defensive
- riding, clothing, basic maintenance, and intro to motorcycle
- sport.
-
- The Illustrated Encyclopaedia of Motorcycles by Erwin
- Tragatsch.
-
- Another book to have a look at is 'A twist of the wrist' .
- Ed II. These books are limited in there scope, more on
- advanced riding techniques for racing rather than the road.
- Written by Keith Code. Look it up, it's put out by the
- Californian Superbike School. "
-
- "
- "
- "
- " " "
- "
- " " " " "
- " " " " " " " " " " " "
-
-