I rode trials and things when I was younger and when I was old enough to drive I did. I wanted something different and have never had my own bike on the road.
But now I want one as the itch needs scratching. The weird thing is that although I like small, fast, raw cars I'm not sure that seat-of-the-pants experience is what I want from a bike.
I rode a 1920's AJS last week, weighs nothing, less than 20bhp, girder forks, tiny drum brakes and loud as hell. I loved it, hand gear change an all. Proper back to basics stuff.
The whole Harley thing is a bit tragic, brand loyalty, and for what? Image..
Though at the risk of a lynching I've been looking at a late eighties Sportster 1200. No chrome, no tassles, no airbrushing. It's got flowed heads, lumpy cam, firmed up suspension etc. It's not fast but it is quick, I like it.
I'm a Harley fan, I've rented a few, but never owned one. There was a nice XR1000 at Cadwell a couple of weeks ago, looked and sounded great.
Greatest experience ever was when I was 21 riding my Kawasaki Ninja; I was unbelievably brave then.
Nowadays road riding is my buzz.
The whole Harley thing is a bit tragic
I'm reasonably sure that most people who buy Harleys do so because they like polishing things. That and they live in a country that doesn't have bends.
redsox - MemberThe moment of realisation came about 10 minutes ago, a guy at work just bought a new bike (Honda Hornet) and I was having the usual look around/sit on it. Nothing felt right about it at all and all I could think was how alien it felt.
If you've not ridden one before, how else would it feel? I remember my first ride on my bike- I'd had a 125 for a couple of years, done my direct access, but even then jumping on my SV was weird, it was a funny shape and the throttle was snatchy and none of the mirrors were right and I couldn't get it round slow corners, horrible. I ended up doing 50000 miles on that thing, took it on track more times than I can think, won prizes with it, tuned the baws off it, even managed to get its wet weight to be almost exactly what Suzuki claimed its wet weight was. If it had any orifices that weren't jaggy or rusty or full of dubious chemicals I'd probably have ****ed it. But day one, it was orrible, and why would it not be? There's nothing really intuitive or instinctive about motorbikes, and road bikes are different enough from pushbikes that it's kind of unhelpful.
Of course it will feel strange if you've never sat on one before. What did you expect?
Do your CBT it won't cost the earth and you'll get a taste for a small bike and then one a bit bigger if you opt for direct access.
Millions of people ride bikes every day, they survive in much the same way that most car drivers do. You don't have to ride like a nutter, well, not all of the time anyway.
I'm reasonably sure that most people who buy Harleys do so because they like polishing things.
If you like polishing you dont need a Harley. I have a 78 Honda GL1000 with plenty of chrome anyone is welcome to visit and ploish any time. I'll put the kettle on! Its a flat 4 too so doesnt sound like a tractor!
Its a flat 4 too so doesnt [s]sound like a tractor![/s] have a soul
We have Europe's biggest Harley get-together here every year - around 3,000 bikes. Many turn up on trailers, towed by motorhomes, fully covered when they arrive and only ridden for the shirt distance of the ride-outs.
It's got to be a great place to be if you suddenly needed surgery or financial advice though.
Many turn up on trailers, towed by motorhomes, fully covered when they arrive and only ridden for the shirt distance of the ride-outs.
Thats because they'd break down!
Its a flat 4 too so doesnt sound like a tractor! have a soul
Get over 90mph on it and its got something, not soul maybe, but something.
On the autobahn obviously!
Get over 90mph on it and its got something, not soul maybe, but something.
Great, so in order to have fun you need to be in licence tossing territory? Nein danke.
V-twins: nice noise, great engine braking, fun [i]below[/i] 90 on the back Scottish roads... 😆
Yours was your dads wasn't it A-A? I'd keep it too in that case 
Great, so in order to have fun you need to be in licence tossing territory? Nein danke.
No actually get up to those speeds and the gargantuan weight in combination with 1970's frame technology and any sortbof bend or road imperfection makes it pretty scary!! It is far more fun at about 60 and it looks bloody great.
I would love to go back to a big single for twisty roads. Could have some real fun on the old F650 beemer I had.
Back to the OP.
If it didn't feel a bit "alien" at first then it wouldn't be as exciting and rewarding in the long term.
As a recent returnee to motorcycling I'd agree with the v-twin idea. They tend to be narrow, well balanced and remarkably easy to drive due to the torque delivery.
