same same.Went for a little rip today, but by the look of the weather forecast, that'll be it for a while.
same same.Went for a little rip today, but by the look of the weather forecast, that'll be it for a while.
I have the absolute worst sense of direction, so even on familiar trails I carry my trusty Garmin GPSMAP 64sx, a spare set of batteries, and mark my starting point.I got lost 2-3 more times in the dark and eventually came up on some sorry mountain biker using his phone's flash as a light. I offered to stay behind him to provide him with light from my headlight in exchange for him getting us both back to the main trail.
Oh it was a a must-have for me. I bought and installed them. I had mid-controls on my 2006 V-Rod for five years and they were fine because that's an overall bigger bike. But the Sportster is such a small little thing, with such a low seat height (so minimal seat to peg space) that mid controls started getting uncomfortable after five minutes. I think this only moved the foot pegs maybe 7" forward but I'm now much more comfortable.
There's another thing I'm... cautious to share, but, here it goes and we can put it to the myth-busters out there:
To me it feels like handling is easier with the forwards. And I totally get that that should not be the case for motorcycles.
The Iron 1200s a little different though, in my opinion, because on most motorcycles you have a gas tank you can lock your knees to, helping you to leverage the bike, but on the Iron 1200, with the stupid skinny peanut tank, your knees don't touch the tank, your knees don't touch anything, they just flail in the wind.
When I was on the highway with mid controls and the skinny tank, with my little knees flapping in the wind, it was like "oh, this reaaaaaally sucks". With my feet slightly more forward, my weight spread around a bit more of the bike, it makes me feel like I have a little more leverage to compromise for my knees/hips not being "locked in" like they would be on/around a traditional motorcycle/tank.
Maybe it's because I'm only 165 lbs. Maybe it's only in my head that I feel like I have more leverage over the bike with the forwards and can now use my body more to steer it... but then again, riding is 80% mental, so if all it really does is make me feel less shaky, that's still a plus, right?
Like I said, I'll leave it up to the myth-busters to pick apart that one.
@mimico_polak you seeing this.Honestly, drag bars and forward controls worked perfectly for me. When I upgraded to a different sporty with mid controls, I got highway pegs which helped but, I preferred having controls up front. lol.
The upgrade was a Roadster with larger tank and mids but, I preferred the lay out of the classic. Meh! Still rode the heck of them and enjoyed them. The classic got the looks and probably should have kept it.
Here is my cold weather look on the Sporty. Open face helmet with neoprene face mask.
The chrome was blinding but, she handled pretty well for an overweight cruiser.
I’ve got these bendy arms that can go into your tank and maybe grab it…Went out for an enjoyable tour around some favourite spots for a few hours yesterday. Topped her up again on the way home. Thought I'd better replenish the stabilizer with another little splash. When I opened the bottle the little cardboard gasket popped out of the lid and fell right into my fuel tank! I siphoned fuel out and tried to spot it with a dentist's mirror, hoping I might be able to retrieve it. No such luck. Damn. Its gonna be in there for a while.
Does the cardboard float? If it does, fill the tank almost to overfilled and shake it around till it finds it's way to the filler neck.Went out for an enjoyable tour around some favourite spots for a few hours yesterday. Topped her up again on the way home. Thought I'd better replenish the stabilizer with another little splash. When I opened the bottle the little cardboard gasket popped out of the lid and fell right into my fuel tank! I siphoned fuel out and tried to spot it with a dentist's mirror, hoping I might be able to retrieve it. No such luck. Damn. Its gonna be in there for a while.
It immediately sunk like a rock. The tank was full to a quarter of an inch from the neck.Does the cardboard float?
That happened to me a few years ago. It immediately sank out of sight and it's still in there somewhere, that is if it hasn't completely disintegrated by now.Went out for an enjoyable tour around some favourite spots for a few hours yesterday. Topped her up again on the way home. Thought I'd better replenish the stabilizer with another little splash. When I opened the bottle the little cardboard gasket popped out of the lid and fell right into my fuel tank! I siphoned fuel out and tried to spot it with a dentist's mirror, hoping I might be able to retrieve it. No such luck. Damn. Its gonna be in there for a while.
Siphon as much gas as you can, then use an inspection camera to see if you can figure out where it's lying? Then MAYBE you have a shot at grabbing it with one of those things that @mimico_polak describes. I have an inspection camera at the cottage I could bring down and you could borrow, and I'm sure there's many users more local that have them too.It immediately sunk like a rock. The tank was full to a quarter of an inch from the neck.
This is what I have:Thanks for the offer. I can't see it so have no idea where it is. It's a V Strom. The tank shape is the worst for this. I'm gonna have to remove it, but that isn't happening for quite a while.
There's also ones that have a tiny LED light at the grabber end. If they made one with a tiny camera at the end, I'd buy that in a heartbeat.Highly recommended.