Zeldman
Touchdown! Greaser!
I told my wife I would never ride anything with only 2 wheels....
Lastly - you guys are all bad influences. Especially that @Morgan3820. Now I'm secretly looking at a BMW G310GS or a Yamaha YZF-R3 (and leaning toward the R3. Don't tell my wife.
How’d you like the CSC?......considering an RX4 for Teresa as her summer Moto (rides a BMW F650GS twin in FL)
If you're really concerned about your wife not wanting you to have a motorcycle, here's what you do. Go buy the bike, but don't keep it at home. Keep finding excuses to go out and ride. Sneak out occasionally and go for a ride, but don't ever tell her about it. See if you can find some friends who also like to ride, and set up group rides. Use your cell phone to do this and rather than putting their full names in on your contact list, just their initials. Eventually she'll be convinced that you're having an affair and will confront you about it. Then you can tell her that you're not, that you just bought a motorcycle. She'll be so relieved that she won't care about the motorcycle.
I looked at motorcycle gear again today. Can motorcycle boots be dual purpose with hiking boots? What makes motorcycle boots special? I am not a big boot person. I am more of a sneaker guy but I recognize that sneakers are a definite no. I do hike occasionally so I already have some over the ankle leather hiking boots.
I looked at motorcycle gear again today. Can motorcycle boots be dual purpose with hiking boots? What makes motorcycle boots special? I am not a big boot person. I am more of a sneaker guy but I recognize that sneakers are a definite no. I do hike occasionally so I already have some over the ankle leather hiking boots.
From a Honda brochure I still have...
That Super Hawk was truly lust-worthy at the time! 99 MPH!!!
I looked at motorcycle gear again today. Can motorcycle boots be dual purpose with hiking boots? What makes motorcycle boots special? I am not a big boot person. I am more of a sneaker guy but I recognize that sneakers are a definite no. I do hike occasionally so I already have some over the ankle leather hiking boots.
I think once you put your hands on some those boots, you'll be pleased with the protection they provide. They may not be entirely comfortable when they are new, but my boots always broke in nicely and felt great eventually.
Here's couple safety tips. Your clutch and brake levers have a little ball on the end of them. If that ball ever breaks off for whatever reason, replace before the next ride, it could stab you if you don't. Your grips may degrade eventually and the rubber that covers the end of the handlebar might come off, saw a 16 year old kid lose a finger when the handlebar acted like a cookie cutter on his hand.
Crazy, WTF things can happen when you think, "oh, I'll be fine, I'll order that part later, after this ride."
I looked at motorcycle gear again today. Can motorcycle boots be dual purpose with hiking boots? What makes motorcycle boots special? I am not a big boot person. I am more of a sneaker guy but I recognize that sneakers are a definite no. I do hike occasionally so I already have some over the ankle leather hiking boots.
keep your equipment in good order. Take care of the small stuff. Just like a plane.
Covering the front brake is in no way a distraction....once it becomes second nature (shortly) it is actually a distraction not to....and it clearly lowers one’s response time.If you're doing things correctly there will be no such thing as a panic stop. I don't think I've had one in all the years I've ridden. You should have identified whatever the conflict is well before it becomes a conflict. As soon as there is a potential conflict one set of fingers goes to the brakes, the other to the clutch. Can't do one without the other. I think covering the brakes all time is a bad idea, takes your focus away from what's in front of you. That said, ride your ride. I'll ride mine. I took a motorcycle course one time to get out of a ticket. I don't recall any particular wisdom gleaned from it.
If you're watching ahead, absolutely. I've yet to be surprised by wildlife or motorists. My one get-off was because of very limited visibility. Can't avoid what you can't see. Situational awareness is everything on a bike. You should be watching everything all the time. If you're surprised by stuff on the road you're doing it wrong. I have to admit though, I don't make a habit of riding on country roads in the dark, which is when most wildlife strikes occur.Covering the front brake is in no way a distraction....once it becomes second nature (shortly) it is actually a distraction not to....and it clearly lowers one’s response time.
Agree with the idealized world of identifying and minimizing risks to panic stops, but really?....do you always know when/where Bambi will jump out in your path?
Covering the front brake is a great technique for trail braking too....but that’s a whole other discussion there...
Covering the front brake is in no way a distraction
Covering the front brake is a great technique for trail braking too....but that’s a whole other discussion there...
If you're watching ahead, absolutely. I've yet to be surprised by wildlife or motorists.
Micheal, you're a decent person in person, but on the net you're either totally full of bovine excrement, or a master baiter. Can't decide which...
Anyone who puts in big miles on two wheels, no matter how good they are at watching ahead, is going to eventually be surprised by a road situation. How you handle that surprise determines the outcome.
Micheal, you're a decent person in person, but on the net you're either totally full of bovine excrement, or a master baiter. Can't decide which...
Anyone who puts in big miles on two wheels, no matter how good they are at watching ahead, is going to eventually be surprised by a road situation. How you handle that surprise determines the outcome.
Micheal, you're a decent person in person, but on the net you're either totally full of bovine excrement, or a master baiter. Can't decide which...
I chased oil leaks and coolant leaks for months. I swear, the only fluids the Brits know anything about are tea and beer.
I think I heard somewhere that the reason the British never developed a robust computer industry is that the engineers were never able to figure out how to make a server leak oil.
Sadly, in Iron Butt competitions BMW rear drive failures have been way too commonplace. At 80,000+ miles, my 1999 has been through one rear drive so far.
My buddy who has a R1200GS that clicked over 100,000 miles has gone through a rear drive as well. To your point, it appears that it's a common problem.
A final drive over 100,000 or 10 sets of chains and sprockets over 100,000mi, pick your poison.
Having ridden both, I kind of prefer the chain and sprocket setup, but I think it is a prejudice type thing. My Honda handled well and was sprocket. My biggest complaint was that I had a seal failure and it was a rather expensive repair. I like the simplicity of the chain and sprocket, and I also like the ability to swap out final drive ratios.
I think I heard somewhere that the reason the British never developed a robust computer industry is that the engineers were never able to figure out how to make a server leak oil.
LOL!
Tomato, tahmahtoe. It's nice not to have to adjust and lube a chain every 500mi. I've had plenty of both, but at this stage of my riding career futzing with chains is something I can do without.