It was all summed up nicely by Hunter S Thompson in Song of the Sausage Creature.
PP, the internalization is killing you. Just get the damn Harley, I'm sure you'll find a way.
Had a good look at the Indian lineup at Apex a few weeks ago. Very impressive build quality.
I'm with you - some folks buy stuff to make a statement or because it makes them fee part of something -- not me, I don't give a flying fart what others think about my cars or bikes -- I drive and ride what I like and decide based on my needs and desires.I've never said never (anyone who's been here for a while will recall me saying such about HD's), but I'm far more likely to buy a metric again for my next bike. The Star Venture TC is almost certainly to be my next one...
Or one of these...
Money or brand isn't the object. I'll ride whatever I like, fits my needs, and puts a smile on my face. I couldn't give two ***** about a brand, an image, stereotypes, or a "need" to fit in with a certainly (sometimes particularly stuck up) crowd. I don't subscribe to the walking advertising billboard routine, either.
It's the same reason I've had GM's, Chryslers, a re-branded Daewoo, and now a Hyundai in my driveway - I've always just bought what fits our needs and makes me happy, not some overpowering need to adhere to someone else's opinions on what I should own because they think they're higher class and everyone else is to be looked down upon. That's the same reason you're unlikely to ever see any overpriced luxury "cachet" brand car in my driveway, either.
Think about how much farther you'll be able to travel once you pull the stick out.
I'm with you - some folks buy stuff to make a statement or because it makes them fee part of something -- not me, I don't give a flying fart what others think about my cars or bikes -- I drive and ride what I like and decide based on my needs and desires.
There are 2 or 3 HD's I would love to own right now they don't fit my needs so they would just be garage queens.
Awesome. My only gripe with most tourers is that most of them put the footpegs too far forward and all your weight is on your spine.I have a riding buddy with one - he's put nearly 100,000KM on it in 3 years of ownership and says he still loves it. His only gripe is the fact he needs to go to Barrie for warranty work as it's the closest "certified" dealer - he did have a problem with his cruise control and it took 2 trips there and back to fix it - once for diagnosis, then back again when the parts came in.
In the grand scheme of a bike that seldom sits still and has really only had a single issue requiring said warranty, that's no biggie IMHO.
Awesome. My only gripe with most tourers is that most of them put the footpegs too far forward and all your weight is on your spine.
BMW is the only manufacturer that gets it right. You can stand up without needing a death grip on the bars.
I'd make space in my garage for a Rune.As far as the local Tim Hortons to pose all day with all the other HD's?
Yup.
The closest thing to a "Garage queen" I'd ever buy would be a Honda Rune. It's always intrigued me. And although it would be the last bike I'd hop onto for an iron butt or a trip across the continent or anything like that, I'd certainly ride the wheels off the thing for day trips....it most certainly wouldn't sit because I was scared to put mileage or wear and tear on it, that's for sure.
My VTX was a garage queen when I bought it. 12 years old and just over 10,000KM on the odometer. I fixed that right quick, it'll be rolling over 100,000KM early next season. And literally the only thing I've had to do to it is tires, a new set of plugs, a few new air filters, and a front master cylinder - was cheaper ($40 on eBay) to replace vs rebuild. Zero complaints.
I have an antique GL1500, its a GoldWing in a UJM package, not a cruiser. I had a 2000 GL1500 AE and a Suzuki M50 -- both were comfortable and a solid performers -- just nothing about them you could really fall in love with. I kinda feel like that about all cruisers -- except maybe a Diavel, Vmax or Vrod.Never liked the ergos on the wing. What saved the bike for me was the passenger seat (it was our bike) and the 125 ft/lb of torque.
Not without using your arms to pull yourself up by the handlebars you can't, is physically impossible.... I can and have raised myself up and out of the seat when I see a massive pot hole or whatnot....