The_Head wrote:Damn you guys are lucky. Mine seems to run into a wall at 62 mph (indicated). It seems like theres a rev limiter there. I'm at 4,000 feet, I dont know if that matters.
That's tall. Does the seat hump bother you

Moderator: Modsquad
The_Head wrote:Damn you guys are lucky. Mine seems to run into a wall at 62 mph (indicated). It seems like theres a rev limiter there. I'm at 4,000 feet, I dont know if that matters.
not if you sit behind it...you you wrote:That's tall. Does the seat hump bother you
I am at Sea Level (official city elevation is 14 feet, but most of the town is lower than that) and I can only get to 65 mph if I ride in a tuck. Otherwise I top out at 62 mph on flat ground with calm winds. I weigh 165 pounds.The_Head wrote:I can hit 65 mph now, if I tuck in a little bit behind my new windshield. It seems I am about 5 mph slower than most PCX150 owners. I think it is my altitude (4000'). It's not that high, but I think it makes a difference in power.
dinamasu wrote:I am at Sea Level (official city elevation is 14 feet, but most of the town is lower than that) and I can only get to 65 mph if I ride in a tuck. Otherwise I top out at 62 mph on flat ground with calm winds. I weigh 165 pounds.The_Head wrote:I can hit 65 mph now, if I tuck in a little bit behind my new windshield. It seems I am about 5 mph slower than most PCX150 owners. I think it is my altitude (4000'). It's not that high, but I think it makes a difference in power.
My PCX150 is stock, no windshield, but has a Honda top box.
Kind of. Here are the details: Stockton elevation is 0 - 32 feet above sea level. The average elevation is 15 feet above sea level. The elevation at City Hall is 11.5 feet above sea level.you you wrote: Your city is only 14ft above sea level???
dinamasu wrote:Kind of. Here are the details: Stockton elevation is 0 - 32 feet above sea level. The average elevation is 15 feet above sea level. The elevation at City Hall is 11.5 feet above sea level.you you wrote: Your city is only 14ft above sea level???
I live at the eastern edge of the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta, or California Delta, an expansive inland river delta and estuary in Northern California in the United States. The Delta is formed at the western edge of the Central Valley by the confluence of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers and lies just east of where the rivers enter Suisun Bay. The Delta is recognized for protection by the California Bays and Estuaries Policy. The city of Stockton is located on the San Joaquin River on the eastern edge of the delta.
The total area is around 1,100 square miles (2,800 km2), around 70 reclaimed islands and tracts, surrounded by 1,100 miles (1,800 km) of levees surrounded by 700 miles (1,100 km) of waterways. The delta was originally marshland; reclamation was made by the building of levees, by Chinese laborers in the 1850s.
A typical levee was constructed as being approximately trapezoidal, 10 ft (3.0 m) above original ground level, and approximately 30 ft (9.1 m) wide at the base rock armoured on the river side. The construction was a colossal engineering undertaking.
The farm land to my west is lower than the water level of the rivers and sloughs. That is they are below sea level. Only the levees keep those farms from returning to marsh land.
I live about 65 miles or a little over 100 km due east of San Francisco as the crow flies. About 85 miles or 125 km traveling on the roadways.
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Stop calling my country "the colonies" or I'm going to start reporting your posts to mods. It's insulting.you you wrote:There's a Stockton in the colonies too?
Why not have a nice cup of tea, that should calm you down a bit.The_Head wrote:It's insulting.
gn2 wrote: Then get a history book out, one about the British Empire.
You will find that your country owes its very existence to the British colonial system, and its independence to the French.