This channel is all about outdoor activities. I have 3 things that I love the most: mountain biking, snowboarding and motorcycling. I don't get enough time to do all of them but I am trying.. I am a passionate DIY and trying to teach myself to handle most of my toys maintenance.
I am coming from a previous experience where I didn't check and I buried my KLX300 waist deep. SO with this new bigger bike better check than sorry. Plus I am ridding all alone, 200km away from home on some forest fire road.
We all started somewhere. Only 3 months since I got my licence and riding a motorcycle. I already had a it is just a puddle experience where I went waist deep with my klx300.
Trails look good, but probably not top of the list for driving 1 1/2 hours out of the GTA right? edit: Nevermind you just answered my question in the video
cool video! I don't ride bikes, but I plan on in a few years, so I gotta ask you this how do you straighten yourself out when you lean too much to one side of the bike during turns? does pressing one of the brakes make a difference?
increasing speed will level the bike but also doing counter steering so literally if you're leaning left you push handle bars to the left, that is why you can't lock your handle bars and always have some room to push. This is what you do while doing figure 8
My HH3000 doesn't have an SFP module installed. Does this affect anything, or should I simply follow all steps and skip steps related to the SFP module?
@@Outdoor_Wanderer Yes there is a phone cable going inside. I have a router attached and working with wifi. Is this good enough for things like servers and NAS?
Looks like It could still work I'll just scoot it ahead a little further then you lol thanks for the build video I've been trying to figure something out for mine for the whole year and just couldn't bring myself to spend 2k on an actual boat trailer.
I don't know what to say. It is a bit harder to get out on the mtb this year with all the rain. Also I did most of the trails in Ontario and it takes a lot of will to put the bike in the car and travel to a trail that I already been to. To travel in Quebec it takes time and preparation. With the moto is easier to just get out for a 1 or 2 h ride. Also I can spend more hours on motorcycle on the trails or paved roads and travel further. But I will try to get out at least to my favorite trails.
Am I to understand that I can use my VPN for geo location changes to eliminate sports blackouts?? Bell will know nothing of the change to my own router ? Thank you for the great video. It was very informative for set up. 😊 * for those having a hard time pulling the SFP, out the little clip you pull, is also a key of sorts to unlatch the SFP. I had to use a very tiny screw-driver to push on the little area under the clip to unhinged it. You'll see that it's moves up slightly to allow it to slide out easily if you find it stuck.
If I understand correctly this video assumes you have a fiber-optic connection coming to your house? Can we bypass the Bell Hub 3000 if we have a standard copper wire connection coming to the house? If so, do we need other equipment than was mentioned in the video?
If by copper you are referring to DSL you are correct. This procedure doesn't work. The only thing you can do is bridge the bell hub. Connect your router to one of the bell network ports and then you can set up your own router as in the video. Then turn off bell wifi from the configuration and that is pretty much it.
No. If DSL is what you have then the only thing you can do is to bridge the bell router and connect your own router to bell network port and then follow the video of setting up.
@@Outdoor_Wanderer Thanks Marius for your fast reply! I watched your video carefully. It is my understanding that even if I bridge the modem, there will still remain a constant wifi signal coming from the modem. Someone famous mentioned a signal of 900 mW/m2. I'm sensitive to such signals. Is there any other way to stop those signals?
Great Vids! where do you park? Do you know any good parking spot to access Durham trail, I heard Walker Woods are no longer free now ($6 parking for non resident)
Nice to see that you've got your season up and running early. 👍 I was aiming to get out to DF that same weekend but time was against me and it seems like I missed out because the group that I ride with were out Friday, Saturday and Sunday before the weather turned again. Good luck with the upcoming races. Will you be doing the 24 HR at Hardwood? Oh, and what happened to your night ride group? Do you still ride with them? Sounds like it was some really fun times.
Heard lots of good things about the DF trails. Have yet to make it out, but maybe this season. As for HAFTA, most difficult in SW Ontario, by far.....but only when there is no snow! 😅
Graet video your commentary took me back to exactly how I felt riding there the first time...25+ years ago. I now ride there 3-4 times a week and agree with Steve other trails networks are now boring. We host a regular group ride Wednesday nights at 6. We'd be happy to give you a tour and you'd find it much easier following the wheel of someone who knows the lines. BTW the trail you thought you were going the wrong way on is the Den, it's not directional but I find the direction you went "easier"...
Great work, I ride her four or five days a week. It gets easier and you learn how to find the flow over the rocks. Riding anywhere else just gets boring after riding HAFTA day in and day out. Amazing work, your lines were great. Probably just need a lower gearing and a little air pressure out of the tires. BAckwards on Xanadu is like the hardest trail in there too ;)
Well done! It’s the toughest trail system. I love hiking in there and even that is challenging. There are a couple of new trails you might enjoy. Outta Gas and Down n Dirty. The bugs are really nasty in there!
I like it a lot. Big improvement to the stock one. Bluetooth connection is fast and the sound is so much louder. The only thing that I don't like is that the startup time is a bit slow, mostly first time in the day and when you are in a hurry and reverse camera doesn't come up right away. It takes like 10s -20s.
I'm thinking of riding in that trail which i have never been so wanted to see what others do in terms of protection. This gave me a good idea.thanks. @@Outdoor_Wanderer
An alternative for those that are wondering; you can use your router through the Home Hub 3000 by turning on DMZ and also checking Advanced DMZ. You will need to add your routers MAC address by typing it in. Note that there is a LAN MAC as well as a WAN MAC. You want the WAN MAC and you may have to look for it by logging into your router. The last digit is usually one digit or letter higher than the LAN MAC. Here's the part where myself and others got stuck; Plug your router into the Home Hub 3000 LAN1 port, not the WAN. After setting up Dynamic IP in the router, it finally obtained an IP address. Good luck. PS. Thank you for your video. I may go this method at some point to move the radiation out of the room.