azblackbird
Pattern Altitude
Once you ride enough you'll understand. If you wanna survive close to a million miles of riding, you learn real quick to take an aggressive approach to combating traffic."Weave my way ..." Sounds safe enough. Not.
Once you ride enough you'll understand. If you wanna survive close to a million miles of riding, you learn real quick to take an aggressive approach to combating traffic."Weave my way ..." Sounds safe enough. Not.
well I have seen 2 motors in line on drag Harleys, also there has been at least 2 built as 3 cylinders. you can google 3 cylinder Harley.. Got it! Do two Harley engines side by side, connect them, make it a V-4!
I wonder how these battery packs will deal with sitting for a year at a time between those April 22/23 weekends.
I've probably spent 500-1000 mile son an FJR1300. It is a very nice bike and it's good for putting the miles on, with or without a passenger. I think the most I've ridden it in a day with a passenger is probably about 250 miles. Actually that's probably about the most I've ridden it in a day.
Things I didn't like about it:
1) The radiators blow hot air right onto your legs. Nice in the fall and winter. In the summer, it melts you worse than any Harley air-cooled engine
2) No cruise control, just a throttle lock
3) Engine sounded and felt like a sewing machine. Made lots of power from any RPM, but it was just completley uninspiring. There was absolutely nothing in terms of interesting sounds or visceral sensations that came from it. For some that's what they want, but for me it was a real turn-off
4) This is an issue with any sport touring bike, but I'm really a fan of having highway pegs. That requires a cruiser or full dresser of some sort, and of course it's ergonomics so it's a personal thing
I felt like they should've made the FJR with the V-Max engine. I had a V-Max and it was an awful motorcycle because it wouldn't turn or stop. But that engine was fantastic.
I also felt like the FJR was not the ideal bike for riding in warm climates just because of the radiators. It would be great for riding if you never got much above 75F while riding.
I believe the Gen II model of the FJR has some improvements made in the fairing that direct the radiator heat away from the rider (unless wanted) and the Gen III has cruise control as well. I've also seen some highway pegs that guys have added that seem to work alright, but most are not ideal due to the limited places to mount with the fairing in the way. That said, I agree on the V-Max engine. Ideally I'd love an FJR with a VMAX engine, unfortunately the VMAX is no longer a model option and from what I heard, a lot of that was due to the engine not being particularly EPA-friendly in a manner that would allow them to adapt it. That engine was a beast and had a mean sound. I would accept the sound of the sewing machine for the other benefits, vs the typical lopey v-twin, but that's just me.
Yeah, it's still available, but they haven't made any changes to it since 2016. There's been quite a lot of talk "from insiders" that the engine doesn't meet Euro-4 regulations that were slated to go into effect after 2017. So it's basically just surviving on dwindling US-sales and probably whatever remaining production stock they can build. If they decide to revamp the VMax with a new engine, that's great, but I doubt the muscle-bike niche is much of a high-volume producer for them. The range on it's smaller fuel tank has been a pain point for people as well. I think a small redesign to bring it into 2020 with an engine in the same spirit as the existing model would be fantastic. It's not really known for much handling prowess, either, so that could be improved a bit without tarnishing it's "bruiser" reputation. It's only equal is probably the Ducati Diavel, and there aren't a ton of those running around, either.
Exactly. The first long trip we did after putting the Mustang seat on ours was a 700-mile ride. As we were unloading at the hotel, my wife remarked that she could have easily gone a couple more hours. The fully loaded bagger, pulling a trailer isn't "flickable"... but we also weren't hating life by the time we arrived.To each his own. I rode my VTX 1800 830 miles in a day, and could've made the full 1,000 for an iron butt recording. I've ridden sport bikes and sport tourers hundreds of miles in a day as well.
If I'm going on a longer trip, I like having the lounger touring bike.
Depending on where you live. In the warmer climates you won't see much of that. Where I am (Midwest) even during the winter months there's seldom a 30 day stretch where you're not able to get some riding time in.
I was telling my wife again just last night that my problem with everything going electric is that at some point those batteries become nothing but toxic waste. Yeah, in theory they can be recycled - but in real life that's just not going to happen.
I was telling my wife again just last night that my problem with everything going electric is that at some point those batteries become nothing but toxic waste. Yeah, in theory they can be recycled - but in real life that's just not going to happen.
I wonder how these battery packs will deal with sitting for a year at a time between those April 22/23 weekends.
I was telling my wife again just last night that my problem with everything going electric is that at some point those batteries become nothing but toxic waste. Yeah, in theory they can be recycled - but in real life that's just not going to happen.
I am all for recycling as long as it is easy for me and doesn't cost me anything. Otherwise forget it.
And there's some work about how to recycle them.All you have to do is leave it plugged in to an outlet in your garage and it should be fine. It's heat that kills Lithium batteries, not cold. Even better would be to charge it to 80% and then turn it on once a week and plug it back in when it hits about 30% and repeat. I'm guessing they won't have the cellular network features and such that the electric cars have, so the phantom drain could easily make that 50% last all winter even unplugged if it's done right.
How long they last while being ridden really depends on whether the manufacturer has good battery management: The ability to stop charge at a less-than-full state (which is also good if you're going to be leaving it plugged in), temperature control, charge and discharge limits, and such.
Also, what about all the engines that sit all winter? It's not good for them either...
I think it's a lot more likely to happen with the bigger batteries than with the consumer stuff. Nobody turns in their lithium AA's when they wear out, they throw 'em in the trash (with all their CFL bulbs!) and that's that.
With something bigger like this, even somewhat worn-out batteries have value. Ask a scrap yard that gets a Nissan Leaf for example - People are building their own e-bikes and such with them. A friend of mine bought a Leaf battery from a scrap yard, used some modules to build an e-bike, and sold the other modules to other people he knows that do similar things. One of them ended up powering a (formerly gas) lawn tractor. The worn-out batteries can also still be used as storage for solar installations and such.
And we haven't even talked about recycling them yet, just reuse! I think that the economics of recycling will still be favorable, and if not, government needs to address that and tax disposal until recycling becomes favorable.
Bingo. Gotta make doing the right thing the best thing.
I did a big bore upgrade on my '03 Ultra. 88 to 95, with cams and .030 head gaskets to bump the compression very slightly. It was a big improvement over stock, but if you can spend the money on head work I hear it would be well spent. I don't know for sure whether the 96" heads are any better than the stock 88 was, but probably not... and they really can breathe better. Having the work done well doesn't come cheap, though.This thread has gotten me thinking about the big bore kit for my '09 Ultra Classic. Currently a 96", it looks like 110" is the biggest I can go, but that comes with a bump to 11:1 compression and I could always put in different cams and heads for more power.
I did a big bore upgrade on my '03 Ultra. 88 to 95, with cams and .030 head gaskets to bump the compression very slightly. It was a big improvement over stock, but if you can spend the money on head work I hear it would be well spent. I don't know for sure whether the 96" heads are any better than the stock 88 was, but probably not... and they really can breathe better. Having the work done well doesn't come cheap, though.
That reminds me... I still have a couple of the special tools required to do the cam work. One is the oil pump alignment pins; not using them properly is a great way to end up with an engine that has problems. There was another one, don't recall what it was for though. I did the work in '06 or so.
Loud pipes annoy people.
And I’d bet most of those lugnuts don’t goose it in their own neighborhoods, just in others.
And there's some work about how to recycle them.
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/cen-09728-cover
One challenge is that there are a number of Li battery chemistries as the batteries are improved.
As long as Lithium mining kills someone else's Yak or Llama, it is easy to pretend that we are doing something good for the environment by diving head first into battery powered mobility.
Lithium isn't usually "mined" from a traditional mine. If you've seen the meme that's been passed around Facebook of a "Lithium mine", well, that's actually a copper mine.
Lithium is "mined" mostly by extraction from salt water.
...We have an camper we barely use. A boat, it's sitting in the water a few hundred feet from the house, that doesn't get used like it should. I think I've fished twice this year. WTH?
Your life is not complete. You need to own a plane you never fly. That'll fix the situation.
Correct would be to say that some of the world supply comes from alkaline brine operations. Most of it is extracted in surface mining for Spodumene ore.
If Nickel, Cobalt and Lithium had to be mined in the Hamptons or if it harmed a single spotted owl, we would operate our cellphones with hand-cranks and drive cars exclusively powered by dead dinosaurs. The reality is, mining for those three minerals is a messy process and we have outsourced it to places nobody seems to care much about.
Kind of like the other raw materials used to make all the other crap we like to buy.
The reference I was looking at the other day said it's currently 87% from brine, 13% from mines... And now I can't find it! Doh!
H-D CEO just said he's surprised and disappointed that the Livewire isn't selling to the younger generation. He has no plans to offer sales incentives but does recognize that H-D needs to appeal to a younger generation. He also says he knows there are less expensive bikes with better prices and performance available but doesn't think H-D is competing against them.
This guy has his head in the sand.
The KTM Superduke I rode the other day was an $18K bike, a lot of the Bmers go for well north of that, and I bet a full dressed Goldwing goes of that as well. Lots of bikes sell for wha the Livewire is going for. Not so certain Harley won't find a market.
The difference: My bike goes 200+ miles on a tank at extra legal speeds, and "recharges" in two minutes at the gas pump. Oh, and the price difference between my bike and a Livewire buys 150kmi of gas.
No market. Young people will go for a Zero if they want electric or just a regular gas bike, and the Harley faithful want a vibrating rumbling V-twin. No market.
Actually, they're trying. Whether they succeed will be seen. They've already rolled out smaller displacement lighter bikes for the training and overseas markets. I've seen mockups of a Streetfighter that look gorgeous (thought the specs I saw would make it heavy and slow) and I've heard they're making an adventure bike while they're at it. Indeed they're supposed to be unveiling quite a few new models in the coming years.All true. But that's not HD's real problem. Their customer base is dying off and they're not replenishing it.
Not before they get a bailout from Washington to give them bit of life support. You watch. "Iconic American Brand"Yup, H-D survives on the existing customers and selling a "Biker Image". If people were buying solely based off of value and performance per dollar, there aren't many H-D bikes that would ever sell. People want the look/sound of an H-D, that's why many stick with them. They try and transfer that image to electric motorcycles which is 99% a group of sub-40yr olds who don't give two hoots about the H-D biker image and charge top-dollar for it, and it's an instant failure. Who couldn't see that coming? Lol. I don't wish H-D ill will, but they've refused to branch out of anything but the cruiser market and perform little innovation. They will likely go belly-up along with their large dealership network, and it's nobody's fault but their own. Maybe they can just be an apparel company.
Not before they get a bailout from Washington to give them bit of life support. You watch. "Iconic American Brand"