It will take a day or two on the road to get used to them, but after that you'll be fine.

IMHO, the manufacturers should use steel brake lines on the bikes from the factory, forget the rubber ones!
Mike
Ran into this a while back and had to laugh, I like how well it sums things up.CrazyCam wrote:In terms of the character of the bike, I came across part of a write-up on the Hornet from a Pommie bike mag, which sums up the beast rather nicely. "....Officially, this is a bike that will potter. It will trickle around fluidly, whirring away happily, turning in easily, stopping gently....... But, let's be honest, it hates it. And in a voice as clear and authoritative as the devils in Charlie Manson's head, it screams 'Ride me like you're made of Kevlar, and have spent all morning drinking cider mixed with cheap cough syrup'. So you do."
That's a great quote.Sevulturus wrote:Ran into this a while back and had to laugh, I like how well it sums things up.CrazyCam wrote:In terms of the character of the bike, I came across part of a write-up on the Hornet from a Pommie bike mag, which sums up the beast rather nicely. "....Officially, this is a bike that will potter. It will trickle around fluidly, whirring away happily, turning in easily, stopping gently....... But, let's be honest, it hates it. And in a voice as clear and authoritative as the devils in Charlie Manson's head, it screams 'Ride me like you're made of Kevlar, and have spent all morning drinking cider mixed with cheap cough syrup'. So you do."
Skier wrote: Also, why do the rear brake line? If/when I do the one on my Hornet, it will get an OEM line because I don't need the rear brake any more sensitive for my ham-fisted (footed?) control.
TMW
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