roadking wrote:
If you're running along at a conservative speed and get into a situation where your abilities lean that bike over to keep a line and something starts scrapping then are you guilty of bad form?, yup. but sometimes a man's got to do what he's got to do.
I disagree (politely). And I'll give you a thoughtful rebuttal.
First, The age demographic for Harley riders is the oldest. Yeah, we have a lot of RUBs and every idiot in a cut-off denim jacket thinks he's an Angel, but by and large an HD is not a guy's first bike. The average mean age of our riders is their 40s.
Second, like any other product, the modern HD is built by scores of engineers, machinists, test riders and info added by actual client feedback.
The problem here is that every fudd with a lame idea and a hacksaw thinks he knows better.
Give you an example. Last riding season here in my area got warm real fast. The bikes came out early. I went down to the shop and saw a bunch of Harleys dinged up and sitting in the service writers' area. The reason, all of these "seasoned riders" fell over. Oh, not at speed, but in turning at intersections. The early rains hadn't washed down the grit enough.
We have mentioned "decreasing radius turns." I am familiar, I have to navigate two of them just to go 12 miles to my dealer; one on-ramp and another off-ramp on 39/90/94. You could make a case that it's a bad design, and I would be more apt to agree. But that doesn't change the fact that I have to modulate my speed and keep my wits about me in the correct 'line.'
My final point. Black Betty is a 2004 Dyna. If you are familiar with that make and model then you'll know the original front end is from an outdated Sportster. It should have never been on that bike. I had it yanked off and replaced with the proper model--an inverted fork that first appeared on a 2006 CVO. It's my bike, and it's my responsibility to make sure it functions properly during its use.
Things like grit, poor road designs and substandard parts are a fact of life. But that is not an excuse for faulty user operation.