...replacing all the bolts so you can overtorq them and not strip the threads...have ya ever thought the threads were made to have a fail point so you didn't damage things? Retorq the bolts every so often makes stress failure eventually even if torqed correctly...
... I can also remember asking if overpowering the motor kicking in peddlin for an extra boost of speed hurt the motor with several people saying it didn't hurt...it does over revving any engine is not a good thing.
just wanted to throw some change your way, george (my two cents worth.)
i don't think the chinese had "shear loads" in mind when they built these. i can't think of one scenario where i'd want the threads to strip. seems to me, the chinese "fail point" is as soon as you pick up a screwdriver.
i replace all the bolts with grade 8 allen head socket caps, because the stock hardware is junk. for one, i dunno what kind of screwdrivers the chinese have, but out of the dozen or so i have, none of them fit the slots properly, and strip out the screws. in time, the cheap hardware works itself into the cheap alloy, and i don't want to drill and tap a new hole just because the slots of the screw can't take the pressure of a snap-on screwdriver.
a bolt with a good quality allen head, applied with anti-seize, will almost always come back out with no problems at all.
and they look way cooler.
also, i don't retorque anything after the initial break in. i "heat cycle" the head bolts, exhaust and intake a few times, then leave them alone. motor mounts i check after the first ride. once in a while something looks loose, so i'll check it. but if it doesn't turn, i don't force it.
and i
never use loctite. never needed to, and i've beat that argument to death elsewhere.
as far as pedaling with the motor on, i do it to maintain speed, and to build up speed to take pressure off the motor. if it's already winding out, i probably can't pedal that fast anyway.
and finally, i'm 40. i'm not done pushing engines to the limit yet. if i wanted to go slow, i'd get a rascal power chair
.