Yeah, while not as bad looking as the Japanese sport bikes, the BMW's are not to my liking.
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I've read so many articles in the past week, I can't remember which bike it was. Apparently there's a Japanese bike out there that's a copy of the classic Indian design. Does anyone here know what make/model it is?
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Guess I'll chime in here...
1. Take a class, or have a good mountain road to practice riding on early in the morning when there is no traffic. A mountain road will teach you a lot...it will teach you about how much you can push the bike, how to react to turns, and how nice it feels when the sun comes up. 2. Practice going around obstacles. What I mean is this: You see a car (or other large, immovable object) in front of you. Do you try to stop, or go around it? Practice, practice, practice going around. When you are riding on a deserted road (and do this a lot while you are learning), pick a spot close in front of you. Practice going around that spot. Could keep you out of the hospital. I can tell you that if you try to panic stop at 60 mph, you'll lock up the wheels. I did that, and have had a rod in my right leg since 1979 after it was caught between the handlebars and the gas tank. Can you say femur snap? 3. Biggest bike I rode was an '81 Goldwing. Nice, comfy, kinda like a Lincoln on two wheels. BUT...it was heavy, ponderous, and not at all nice to ride on dirt roads. Best bike I had for that was a '72 Triumph 650. I mention this because at that time I would often spend weekends out at a friend's place in Twentynine Palms, CA, a couple miles off of paved roads. 4. Most important: DON'T let ME, YOUR FRIENDS, or a MAGAZINE ARTICLE talk you into getting one bike if you really like something different! You are the one who has to ride it, ride what you like! (I kinda liked that Harley V-Rod, but that's just me). https://www.motorbikestoday.com/revie...rod_fr_lge.jpg 72 Triumph...found on the web, but very close to how mine looked...https://www.ozarkvma.com/Images/Denny1.JPG Goldwing...not exactly mine (this is a GL1000, mine was a GL1100) but close...mine had no fairing or bags...https://motorbike-search-engine.co.uk...2-goldwing.jpg |
Yes, I am signing up for an official cycle class. The community college down the street holds motorcycle classes on weekends.
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Kawasaki made the "Drifter" version of the vulcan, both a 800cc and a 1500cc version. Jim Like this https://tampa.craigslist.org/hdo/mcy/1682846748.html |
Thanks. my brother in law told me this afternoon.
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Well, after some searching I found this drifter, @ 1/3 my budget...
https://richmond.craigslist.org/mcy/1681544716.html https://images.craigslist.org/3o63pf3...d2e9851ac6.jpg |
Nice looking bike! It's making me want a bike again...
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That model is certainly making me rethink Japanese...
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Back at that time, Japanese bikes were much more reliable. I knew of Goldwings with over 100k on them, I sold my Honda 750 with about 60k miles, and my Triumph, which showed 20k on the odometer (but cable was broken, had been broken a couple years, and the owner said he rode between West Covina, CA and Santa Barbara, CA on a regular basis) looked like it could easily have had 100k on it. |
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