and welcome, nice pics and nice quad too.
North east of England maybe but north of the wall you're all Southerners to us

B
Moderator: Modsquad
Hi bru,gbru2505 wrote:Just had the large screen added myself. Big improvement in riding comfort and protection from the rain but I'm getting a lot of buffeting and air leakage into the helmet. Modular helmet is noisy both up and down. It's fine at 30mph, but on the 40mph stretches by the coast into a headwind, my motosafe earplugs are completely ineffective and I can't enjoy my sounds. Going to have to have a rethink. The wind is buffeting in from the sides to fill the void behind the screen. Pulls my loose hi-vis top forward flapping as well, which is in my line of sight - so I've ordered something adjustable to fit summer and winter wear snugly. Complicated business, larger screens. Staring with the cheapest option of ear muffs. Then possibly venting the screen lower down (don't think this will have much effect at head height though), then possibly a new helmet. Thinking I should have gone for the mid-sized Givi though to maintain a steady blast of air directly into my head.
I have the mra version of that on my versys and wasn't impressed to be honest. Definitely not worth £100+Jge64 wrote:you can add a puig lip deflector that will solve this...revzilla has them.
expensive, but works well
https://www.revzilla.com/motorcycle/pui ... reen-visor
It's a drastic decision cutting it. I think the upright angle of the large Givi means there'll always be drag rather than flow. I don't know if you'd get a smoother flow of air by doing it. I'd be tempted to use a 3"-4" hole saw to cut two or three holes lower down to force some air behind the screen and balance the air pressure. What did you use to cut it with? I was surprised how much the buffeting is affected by the wind speed and direction and how ineffective the earplugs are in dealing with it. Having said that, sometimes it's absolutely great to have - especially in the rain.Davepcx wrote:Also i know the cut isn't perfect as i just drew a line freehand then cut it off, no measuring lol but it rubs down really easy with a bit of wet&dry so will be good as new once i get the height right...Dave
Yeah maybe it's mainly because it's so upright. I'm going to try cutting it down a little more anyway see if it makes a difference.gbru2505 wrote:It's a drastic decision cutting it. I think the upright angle of the large Givi means there'll always be drag rather than flow. I don't know if you'd get a smoother flow of air by doing it. I'd be tempted to use a 3"-4" hole saw to cut two or three holes lower down to force some air behind the screen and balance the air pressure. What did you use to cut it with? I was surprised how much the buffeting is affected by the wind speed and direction and how ineffective the earplugs are in dealing with it. Having said that, sometimes it's absolutely great to have - especially in the rain.Davepcx wrote:Also i know the cut isn't perfect as i just drew a line freehand then cut it off, no measuring lol but it rubs down really easy with a bit of wet&dry so will be good as new once i get the height right...Dave
At it's worst it's a physical force of buffeting air against the helmet, so the noise feels like it's coming in straight through your skull. But then I've read that it's air forcing its way into the helmet too. Adjustable screens are the way forward, but sticking another screen on top of this one won't stop buffeting air coming in from the sides.
I wasn't happy with the size anyway so don't think I would have kept it on as it was too much longer either way.Mel46 wrote:Maybe you should have just ordered the mid high one and left the tall one alone temporarily. It only takes a few minutes to swap out windshields, so you could have tried both at different times of the year. Oh well.
Good to know.WhiteNoise wrote:Dave in ref to your last sentence above, responding time does time out. How many minutes does one have? I'm not sure, but I do know a way around losing all that you type.
When you start realizing that you're writing more more more and that time is fleeing, jump on that "Draft" button, the one just below the reply box (the one you're typing in). Your response will then be sent & saved in your draft file.
Afterwards, go to your profile and look for your draft file. Once found open it. Then open the topic you sent there. You can now complete your response, review it and submit it. Nothing lost.
Did that make sense? It's not as complicated as I write it.
PRINT this if you like.
Give it a try next time. I'm often in a gabby moodso using the draft button has been a savior. You'll find a draft button on most forums. Perhaps you knew this already? If so, fine. Other's might find it New to them. Either way.....
Grab those words before ya lose them! I'll be here ready to read
Thanks for letting me know... i didn't know about thatWhiteNoise wrote:Dave in ref to your last sentence above, responding time does time out. How many minutes does one have? I'm not sure, but I do know a way around losing all that you type.
When you start realizing that you're writing more more more and that time is fleeing, jump on that "Draft" button, the one just below the reply box (the one you're typing in). Your response will then be sent & saved in your draft file.
Afterwards, go to your profile and look for your draft file. Once found open it. Then open the topic you sent there. You can now complete your response, review it and submit it. Nothing lost.
Did that make sense? It's not as complicated as I write it.
PRINT this if you like.
Give it a try next time. I'm often in a gabby moodso using the draft button has been a savior. You'll find a draft button on most forums. Perhaps you knew this already? If so, fine. Other's might find it New to them. Either way.....
Grab those words before ya lose them! I'll be here ready to read
I've not had a "time-out" issue since I checked the "keep me signed in" box when I logged in.WhiteNoise wrote:Dave in ref to your last sentence above, responding time does time out. How many minutes does one have? I'm not sure, but I do know a way around losing all that you type. ...
Most forums usually delete the edit option once a new reply is added...Eiron wrote:I've not had a "time-out" issue since I checked the "keep me signed in" box when I logged in.WhiteNoise wrote:Dave in ref to your last sentence above, responding time does time out. How many minutes does one have? I'm not sure, but I do know a way around losing all that you type. ...
What I do have trouble with is the very short editing time after you've submitted a post. Is there any way to extend that??
True, but I think this forum actually has a timer function? So even if no one's replied you end up locked out of your own post.Davepcx wrote: Most forums usually delete the edit option once a new reply is added...
A good thing in my opinion.
The preview button is useful