POLL: Where do you get your scheduled maintenance done?

Started by Goat_Herder, August 17, 2009, 02:25:44 PM

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Goat_Herder

With my 6000/7500 miles coming up, I am contemplating whether to spend the $800 at the Ducati Dealer near by or doing it myself.  I am pretty handle myself and enjoy working on stuff.  Although, I have found some information and videos on how to do the maintenance, doing the valve adjustment for the first time still scares me a bit. 

Just wondering how you guys approach the dreaded schedule maintenance. 

Cheers
Goat Herder (Tony)
2003 Ducati Monster 620 - Yellow SOLD
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Black KILLED
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Red

pennyrobber

I use the money I save by not having services done at the shop to buy tools. There is so much good info here and other places on the interweb that make doing the valve adjustment much less intimidating. One question I would ask is if you are still under warranty. If not, recruit a trustworthy assistant and go to town.
Men face reality and women don't. That's why men need to drink. -George Christopher

vampire

spun out '

The Bacon Junkie

Nick (Speeddog)  at Valley Ducati Service.  I'll do the occassional oil/filter change myself, though.
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Big Troubled Bear

Also not much choice here in South Africa, go to the closest one which BTW is the best one [thumbsup]
Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

RC Fan

I guess I have to go to our only dealership in the area which is two hours away.  I was going to get the first service done elsewhere, but I will need the service indicator turned off.
Cathy

Previous bikes:  2007 Suzuki Bandit 650S & 2009 Ducati Monster 696
Current bikes:  2009 Yamaha XT250 & 2012 Triumph Street Triple R

gregrnel

Here's my take. I take it to a Duc dealer for resale purposes. If I ever sell, I'll probably make up a fair percentage of what I paid for having a bike with all the records. I personally would never buy a Duc that was maintained by a shadetree mechanic, you have no idea how mechanically in/de clined they are.
2003 620ie red, cored stock pipes, Hit -Air jacket, nice deriere.

cyrus buelton

If anyone is in central Ohio or surrounding areas...........


I recommend JD Hord for ALL service.

www.hordpower.com

His shop rate is 40$ an hour and he has a dyno in his garage, and the same labor rate applies.

JD is a former ducati mechanic that opened up his own shop. He is a top notch mechanic.

He was consulted by Larry Pegram when they did the 848 punch out on the 749 motor a few years back. JD was doing this for a local rider named Mark Hattan (I think thats his name).


I swear by JD's service. You get a nice hand written bill with all costs and he charges you to the 1/4 hour.


Metallimonster just used JD and was very pleased with the service.


I would have no problem driving 5 hours to continue to use JD. He is a nice guy and a great mechanic.
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1999 M750 (joint ownership)
2004 S4r (mineeee)
2008 KLR650 (wifey's bike, but I steal it)

metallimonster

^^^

Couldn't agree more.  JD is a great guy and has great prices.  The work he did on my bike was superb and he doesn't pressure you into anything.  Let me know what he thought I needed and worked with me on everything.


If you're in Ohio he is the guy to go to.  Like Cyrus said, I'd take 5-6 hours just to have him work on my bike.
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02 620 Dark- High Mount CF Arrows

NorDog

Poll is flawed.  Should be a choice of...

Go out of your area to the nearest Ducati dealer.
A man in passion rides a mad horse. -- Ben Franklin


Goat_Herder

Thanks for your inputs.  Much appreciated!

Quote from: NorDog on August 18, 2009, 07:32:21 AM
Poll is flawed.  Should be a choice of...

Go out of your area to the nearest Ducati dealer.

New option added.
Goat Herder (Tony)
2003 Ducati Monster 620 - Yellow SOLD
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Black KILLED
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Red

NorDog

Quote from: Goat_Herder on August 18, 2009, 11:27:00 AM
Thanks for your inputs.  Much appreciated!

New option added.

If I hadn't already voted, I would vote that one.
A man in passion rides a mad horse. -- Ben Franklin


jwoconnor

Quote from: cyrus buelton on August 18, 2009, 07:25:17 AM
If anyone is in central Ohio or surrounding areas...........


I recommend JD Hord for ALL service.

www.hordpower.com

He is a nice guy and a great mechanic.

I used to be on the old Hawk GT list with Hord more than a decade ago. He was pretty much the go-to guy back then and I've never heard a bad word said about him. If he was close I'd take my bike to him no question.
2007 BMW R1200GS Adventure
2006 S2R1000

bigiain

Quote from: Goat_Herder on August 17, 2009, 02:25:44 PM
I am pretty handle myself and enjoy working on stuff.  Although, I have found some information and videos on how to do the maintenance, doing the valve adjustment for the first time still scares me a bit. 

It's only "different", not "difficult" - if you'd be happy doing regular shimmed valves on a "normal" motor, you can do the desmo closing shims as well with the assistance of websites like ducatisuite.com (I'm not claiming they're the best site out there, but they're certainly good enough - it was their writeups I obsessed over way back when I first did mine, and it went fine...)

One other point, if you're doing this _without_ a friendly local Ducati mechanic around, you'll need to set aside time or money for shim replacement - I'm lucky to have a local guy who's happy to swap shims with me out of his huge collection, if I didn't have that I'd buy an emsduc.com shim kit (or be prepared to measure stuff up, mail order shims, check they sent the right sizes, then fit the new ones).

gregrnel does have a good point though - dealer receipts for scheduled services _do_ make for easier/higher resale. I never plan of selling mine, so that doesnt matter to me...

big

Goat_Herder

Quote from: bigiain on August 20, 2009, 12:01:25 AM
It's only "different", not "difficult" - if you'd be happy doing regular shimmed valves on a "normal" motor, you can do the desmo closing shims as well with the assistance of websites like ducatisuite.com (I'm not claiming they're the best site out there, but they're certainly good enough - it was their writeups I obsessed over way back when I first did mine, and it went fine...)

One other point, if you're doing this _without_ a friendly local Ducati mechanic around, you'll need to set aside time or money for shim replacement - I'm lucky to have a local guy who's happy to swap shims with me out of his huge collection, if I didn't have that I'd buy an emsduc.com shim kit (or be prepared to measure stuff up, mail order shims, check they sent the right sizes, then fit the new ones).

gregrnel does have a good point though - dealer receipts for scheduled services _do_ make for easier/higher resale. I never plan of selling mine, so that doesnt matter to me...

big

Very good points.  I will keep that in mind as the winter approaches and I will be thinking about the scheduled maintenance.
Goat Herder (Tony)
2003 Ducati Monster 620 - Yellow SOLD
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Black KILLED
2007 Ducati Monster S2R1000 - Red