If you want to push your luck through a corner then at least buy a bike suitable to the purpose.
If you want to push your luck through a corner then at least buy a bike suitable to the purpose.
I agree with you on your main views, but he didn't say 1000 cc Harleys. He said Harleys and 1000 cc bikes, meaning all the other litre-or-so pocket rockets.
Interestingly, David Golightly Insurances, who specialize in bikes, have also noted that a lot of their claims are for litre-or-so bikes.
Having said all that, getting it wrong like this person seems to have just gives the establishment more ammunition to fire at us, and ACC more justification for upping my levies.
Cringe.
You're quite right, they need to be ridden within their parameters. One of the reasons I don't own a sportsbike (apart from their hideous aesthetics and intolerable riding position) is because when I have a light, agile, fast bike I can't resist the temptation to thrash it. Therefore I think I'll live longer on a Harley. Like their four-wheeled counterparts it is that agricultural feel and engineering that appeals to me. You don't go rallying in a Caddy but fuck they're cool.
I rode to Wellington a couple of years ago behind a Harley crowd who had spent the weekend at the Kaikoura Seafood Fest. I was travelling up from Christchurch, and caught up with them just north of Kaikoura.
I sat behind them for a while, but it became clear fairly early one that sooner or later, one of them was going to bin. Crap entries to corners, braking in bad places, overtaking in blind spots. Basically I overtook just to get out of their way.
When we got to Picton, we all ended up in the marshalling yards together, waiting for the ferry. I saw them riding around with confederate flag handkerchiefs on their heads, fingerless gloves, ye gods, it was a shambles. Lets face it, we all have some degree of rebel in us, or we wouldn't ride. But trying to look like Wild Bill Hickock is just too much. I guess I just don't get it.
Harley has probably the best marketing in the motorcycle world, and it had attracted people back to riding with a rush. Trouble is, there doesn't seem to be the same amount of effort going into getting these people skilled.
Mind you, same can be said of most of us, I guess.
That's exactly right and just waht I was outlinging to Headbanger. HD's need to be ridden within their paramaters and those buying them tend to forget the market they were designed for. On gentle twisties, hills and long straights; magic. Come to a corner and treat it with respect, it's the nature of the beast. If you can't suss that out in the first fifty k's, get off the bike!
Those aspects of Harley ownership and Harley owners themselves is, frankly, fuckin' embarrassing. I have sfa HD memorabilia about the place, I can't handle bandannas (or is it bad nanas?) the flags and the tassles (sorry SD) it makes me wanna puke. I liken it to sports bike riders wearing full leather suits with Yamasaki or whatever written all over them and helmets with more graphics than a signwriters hard drive, they look like right fuckin' cocks. No problem with a plain leather suit or helmet, but jeez, what a bunch of mobile lollipops.
I scrape both sides of my chubby W/g with monotonous regularity, but only just. I know how far it'll go (safely) and yes, there's more speed to be had by twisting the throttle but there's not a lot of point if it's not gonna make the corner, right? On top of that, it'll do a couple-a-hundred k's flat out but with forward controls you're riding like a parasail, so why bother with that either? It's a comfy ride with gobs of torque, great for touring and it suits my see-bones. It's a fine tool for the job and I don't blame it for anything.
Originally Posted by Peasea
Oh bugger, oh ouch, ouch. I misread that as "I'm much more in touch with my morality now" and I laughed so much that I fell out of my chair.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
I hate to say this this but - There is a an element of truth to this article, being releativley new to the biking scene(3 yrs) I see a lot of riders who ride like dicks. Whilst I may not be the that quick, my aim when I go out on the bike is to get back in one piece, and not treat the roads as a race track.
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