@woot That exhaust is crazy looking. I love it!
Looks like a Scambler perhaps a Spcramblerster?
Looks like a Scambler perhaps a Spcramblerster?
@woot That exhaust is crazy looking. I love it!
Looks like a Scambler perhaps a Spcramblerster?
A sportster isn't my idea of a great time either. But as Peter Fonda said in a movie a long time ago....."do you own thing in your own time man".
@ReSTored are they that bad?
Alrighty....well GTAM has once again saved me from what sounds like a bad decision. I’ll just see if I can rent one when Harley starts that up again before moving forward.
Alrighty....well GTAM has once again saved me from what sounds like a bad decision. I’ll just see if I can rent one when Harley starts that up again before moving forward.
Alrighty....well GTAM has once again saved me from what sounds like a bad decision. I’ll just see if I can rent one when Harley starts that up again before moving forward.
Agree with the "buzz" comment, I switched to a v-twin from an i-4, for that very reason. However I did not stray from the Japanese connection. The i-4 was from Kawasaki and the v-twin was from Suzuki.Not to get you confused or anything, but given the choice between a CB500x and a 1200 Sportster, I would take the Sportster. It's a bike that will last forever if you take care of it. If it breaks down parts are quickly available. Also, the vibration on a Harley beats the 'buzz' you get from a lot of offshore plastic bikes - the buzz that makes your hands go numb. It doesn't happen on a Harley because the V-twin vibration is a low frequency vibe. Sportsters like all Harleys are solid, with very little plastic.
It depends what you are looking for in a bike. If he wants to cover a lot of miles in a day, the 500x is the better choice by miles. I've had a bike that was 100 km between fill-ups and 1000km days were punishing. If he wants to cruise around on a good looking bike that people recognize, the sporty is in the lead.Not to get you confused or anything, but given the choice between a CB500x and a 1200 Sportster, I would take the Sportster. It's a bike that will last forever if you take care of it. If it breaks down parts are quickly available. Also, the vibration on a Harley beats the 'buzz' you get from a lot of offshore plastic bikes - the buzz that makes your hands go numb. It doesn't happen on a Harley because the V-twin vibration is a low frequency vibe. Sportsters like all Harleys are solid, with very little plastic.
I'm sure you know this, but you can always stop over at a Tims or whatever and chat some sportster owners up, get some info.so many bikes out there. Saw so many sportsters.
I’m doing it wrong....when I go for a ride I don’t stop until I get home...need to learn the Harley code.I'm sure you know this, but you can always stop over at a Tims or whatever and chat some sportster owners up, get some info.
I know if it has the Evo engine it's quite liked by the HD crowd.
It depends what you are looking for in a bike. If he wants to cover a lot of miles in a day, the 500x is the better choice by miles. I've had a bike that was 100 km between fill-ups and 1000km days were punishing. If he wants to cruise around on a good looking bike that people recognize, the sporty is in the lead.
dont forget the suspension upgrades he'll needI agree, but there's no rule saying you have to get the peanut tank on a Sportster. The bigger tank will net you 200km, and there's a batwing fairing available for it that gives you much better protection that that silly strip of plastic on the CB500x. The ride gets a lot less tiring with better wind protection.
200 km range still sucks if I want to go far. 400+ makes me happy. Honda 500's can do that.I agree, but there's no rule saying you have to get the peanut tank on a Sportster. The bigger tank will net you 200km, and there's a batwing fairing available for it that gives you much better protection that that silly strip of plastic on the CB500x. The ride gets a lot less tiring with better wind protection.
Phff..I have no idea what that mean's either, normally I just ride past those groups all the time.need to learn the Harley code.
dont forget the suspension upgrades he'll need
At this point he might as well buy a whole new actual purpose built bike instead of trying to tweak the bike to fit his needs