harley wrote:
That shows the power of the new bikes but in some places HD did not upgrade componets as well as they did in the engine area.
As much as I wonder about some of the bonehead decisions MoCo makes, your complaint is an industry standard. When faced with options in development, vehicle manufactures usually pick 'flash' over 'practicality.' The muscle car era is a classic example. After all, a muscle car is really the cheapest car in the line, stripped of just about everything, and then saddled with a huge engine. They handled like a wheelbarrow, and had brakes borrowed from a Schwinn.
We have come to believe that this is the nature of "modification." For every mod I do on my engines, I make a similar investment in the suspension. Sadly, the cutomer has to make that decision, because the manufacturer won't. If you buy MoCo's 120R motor and open the crate you won't find a second front disc brake in the packing peanuts.
But there's another issue. And that's this silly horsepower race. It's like the idea of a nuclear arms race. If your opponent builds a ridiculous motorcycle then it appears normal to push the envelope even farther. For example, my local shop has a dynamometer. One day I see one of the new V-Max bikes in the service writer's bay. The guy completely replaced the suspension and goosed the 200 BHP motor by at least 25 more ponies. I guess the very idea of a suped up Hayabusa was more than he could tolerate.
Oh, I agree we need a better Harley motor. But scalding EPA approved high-horsepower motors is not the right direction. My big bike is fast enough to kill us all and pass the slowest farmer in Wisconsin. It needs to stop better--and just about every current Harley made has the cheapest suspension in the entire world of motorcycles.
Granted, I represent the views of 'older bikers.' I understand that. Jamming huge motors into frail frames is a young guy's fantasy. And truth be told I often joke about selling Betty to a child of privilege with rich parents so the bike can go kill somesome else. But until we squeak about getting better bikes MoCo is going to keep ramping up motors to gain lost horsepower as the result of trying to build a 'green' 1936 motor.
If you tell MoCo that you dislike the swingarms in their current mind-set, MoCo will just hard-chrome an existing one, and then announce with great fanfare about their "new" outlaw suspension and give special doo-rags with each purchase. I talked to a salesman yesterday who agreed that the 'new' Sportster 72 is just a 48 with chrome. The dealership parked one by the front door so all clients could see the masterpiece...