Can I add a question to this????

Great, thanks!
I was wondering while riding in southern FL, (temps in the low 90s) if the oil temp dipstick had any 'influence' from the outside heat. My bike stayed pretty cool all things considered,(200 or so was the high I noticed) the reason I was wondering, is after the bike was parked for a few hours, I was still getting a reading of well over 100*.
We would get up & ride early, come back anywhere from 2-4 in the afternoon, then take off in the truck. At night we would stick the bikes in the trailer.

I ain't skeered to trailer mine. :s LOL, We put them in the trailer overnight because the princess doesn't like to have to sit on a wet seat if she don't have too. :lero And we gotta love the overnight storms that can blow through FL.
So when we would come back to the bikes in the evening, after the bikes had been sitting 5 or 6 hours, I would notice the temp on the oil dipstick. It was in the 90's during the day, when I would return, the temps would be low 80's/high 70's. The bikes were parked in a shaded area and in the open, so they would have the breeze.
Just curious. I never really paid attention to the reading at home in the garage in the evenings after a ride, but maybe I will. :s I was just wondering if it takes that long for the oil to cool down, or if the fact that it was just so hot overall that 100+ is as cool as it gets in those conditions. Unfortunately, I didn't think to look at it in the mornings before we took off after pulling them back out. Just one of those things I got to wonder about in the 8 hours of truck time back to J'ville & the 12 hours or so in the truck on the way back to Ohio. My mind wonders. :bigsmiley22: