I hate Murphy, as in Murphy's law.
Yesterday I was taking a causal ride to the bank (ours is open on Sunday) on my scooter. On my way back I was heading down a back road with only two cars ahead of me. We had the light at an intersection and I accelerated to get through before it turned yellow. At the the next cross street the car in front of me banked to the right. I made the dumb mistake of thinking he/she was going to turn that way and shifted my scooter to the left in anticipation of a pass. Unexpectedly, the driver hit their left turn signal and turned left. Fortunately I was still behind them, but the action forced he to hit the brakes in what would be my first panic stop.
The wheels locked for a quarter of a second and I released the brakes, but I heard the tires seize in a micro-skid, then I was moving again. I swore at myself for not being back far enough -- you know, two second following distance and all. As I went on I checked my dash and saw that the oil light was on.
I thought that was strange. I did a pre-ride inspection that morning for a ride my wife and I did before breakfast and the oil levels were great. I suppose I should have thought that strange because after my 400 mile service check by my dealer's mechanic the oil levels had been steady for the past 500 miles, but a friend said that was probably because I had synthetic oil in now.
I checked the oil levels when I got home -- high and fine too. I began to wonder if the panic stop jostled something on the scooter forcing the oil light to go on. Later my wife and I went for another ride and I checked the dash - oil light still there. We looked at the dip stick again - high levels, but she said the oil looked dirty and wondered if the oil light was on because of that.
Back to Murphy's law - my dealer is closed on Mondays, and it being Columbus Day I'm not sure if any parts supply shops are open either. I figure I should change the oil and see of the light changes, and if not take it in. I'm still under warranty.
My question is now -- any suggestions for the kind of oil I should use?
-Wolfe