So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

Message
Author
User avatar
Gummiente
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3485
Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 11:34 pm
Real Name: Mike
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 38
My Motorcycle: 03 Super Glide
Location: Kingston, ON

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#51 Unread post by Gummiente »

ceemes wrote:ouch.
YOU'RE one to talk, mister. :P :laughing:
:canada: Mike :gummiente:
It isn't WHAT you ride,
It's THAT you ride
User avatar
BRUMBEAR
Legendary 1000
Legendary 1000
Posts: 1227
Joined: Sat Feb 04, 2006 3:27 am
Real Name: Dave
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 40
My Motorcycle: 2009 Buell 1125 CR
Location: in limbo

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#52 Unread post by BRUMBEAR »

there aint nothin like it
User avatar
JC Viper
Legendary 2000
Legendary 2000
Posts: 2198
Joined: Mon Apr 03, 2006 9:12 pm
Real Name: JC
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 7
My Motorcycle: 1984 Kawasaki GPz900R
Location: New York, NY

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#53 Unread post by JC Viper »

Wasn't there a Sportster that had a 4 gallon tank which was a tear drop instead of the peanut version? Besides the Sportster got around 50 - 55 MPG which still made long distance doable even on the 3 gallon tank, at least when you consider sports bikes tend to have a 160 mile range average.
One thing you can count on: You push a man too far, and sooner or later he'll start pushing back.

Image
User avatar
Gummiente
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3485
Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 11:34 pm
Real Name: Mike
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 38
My Motorcycle: 03 Super Glide
Location: Kingston, ON

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#54 Unread post by Gummiente »

JC Viper wrote:Wasn't there a Sportster that had a 4 gallon tank which was a tear drop instead of the peanut version? Besides the Sportster got around 50 - 55 MPG which still made long distance doable even on the 3 gallon tank, at least when you consider sports bikes tend to have a 160 mile range average.
The Roadster model of the late 80's-early 90's had a tank much like the Super Glide, IIRC. But the issue with touring on a Sporty isn't about gas mileage, it's about comfort. I did three cross-Canada trips on my '86 XLH 1100 (4-speed, chain drive) and, trust me on this one, it did NOT make for a good touring bike. The new ones with the rubber mount motors are probably better, but like I said before a Sporty is not designed for long distance touring in the first place.
:canada: Mike :gummiente:
It isn't WHAT you ride,
It's THAT you ride
TorontoBoy
Elite
Elite
Posts: 197
Joined: Sat Oct 09, 2004 2:35 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#55 Unread post by TorontoBoy »

The difference between the Sportster 883 Low and the Sportster 883 is the lower seat height. Low has mid controls and other Sportsters may have mid or forward controls. Other than that the bikes are identical. I think all Sporster Customs have forward controls.

The Sportster is a fun bike to ride but really not for long distance. I did not feel it had a comfortable riding position for a couple of hours in the seat. I also agree that the peanut tank is very odd, and would not think twice about getting the larger tank.
koji52
Legendary 500
Legendary 500
Posts: 506
Joined: Sun Apr 15, 2007 12:59 pm
Sex: Male
Location: Trenton, NJ

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#56 Unread post by koji52 »

Gummiente wrote:
JC Viper wrote:Wasn't there a Sportster that had a 4 gallon tank which was a tear drop instead of the peanut version? Besides the Sportster got around 50 - 55 MPG which still made long distance doable even on the 3 gallon tank, at least when you consider sports bikes tend to have a 160 mile range average.
The Roadster model of the late 80's-early 90's had a tank much like the Super Glide, IIRC. But the issue with touring on a Sporty isn't about gas mileage, it's about comfort. I did three cross-Canada trips on my '86 XLH 1100 (4-speed, chain drive) and, trust me on this one, it did NOT make for a good touring bike. The new ones with the rubber mount motors are probably better, but like I said before a Sporty is not designed for long distance touring in the first place.
+1 on this...

You can replace the seat for a more comfortable ride, it's the vibration in the bars that will get to you (you do feel much less vibrations in a rubber mounted XL as compared to a frame mounted XL). 5-6 hours of it is fine. Anything more and you'll feel vibrations in your bones for a week. You can tour with it, but you had better be conditioned to the vibrations. There are definitely bikes better suited to that kind of riding.
2008 HD VRSC-DX Night Rod Special
2008 Buell 1125R
User avatar
HYPERR
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3159
Joined: Wed May 21, 2008 11:13 am
Sex: Male
My Motorcycle: Year/Make/Model
Location: CT, USA

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#57 Unread post by HYPERR »

Gummiente wrote:my '86 XLH 1100 (4-speed, chain drive) and, trust me on this one, it did NOT make for a good touring bike
I bet. That was not one the better Sportys by any stretch of the imagination. The last of the solid mounted Shovel in a configuration(1100) that was never a happy engine and ill matched to a mediocre 4 speed. You should have waited until the Evo 1200 came out shortly thereafter. :twisted:
2008 Ducati Hypermotard 1100
2006 Kawasaki KLX250S
2004 Honda CBR600RR
2002 BMW R1150R
1996 Ducati 900SS
User avatar
Gummiente
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3485
Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 11:34 pm
Real Name: Mike
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 38
My Motorcycle: 03 Super Glide
Location: Kingston, ON

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#58 Unread post by Gummiente »

HYPERR wrote:The last of the solid mounted Shovel in a configuration(1100) that was never a happy engine and ill matched to a mediocre 4 speed. You should have waited until the Evo 1200 came out shortly thereafter. :twisted:
The '86 XLH 1100 is an Evo, dude. And it was never a "Shovel" motor in the old XL's... it was an "Ironhead".
:canada: Mike :gummiente:
It isn't WHAT you ride,
It's THAT you ride
User avatar
HYPERR
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3159
Joined: Wed May 21, 2008 11:13 am
Sex: Male
My Motorcycle: Year/Make/Model
Location: CT, USA

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#59 Unread post by HYPERR »

Gummiente wrote:
HYPERR wrote:The last of the solid mounted Shovel in a configuration(1100) that was never a happy engine and ill matched to a mediocre 4 speed. You should have waited until the Evo 1200 came out shortly thereafter. :twisted:
The '86 XLH 1100 is an Evo, dude. And it was never a "Shovel" motor in the old XL's... it was an "Ironhead".
:oops!:
2008 Ducati Hypermotard 1100
2006 Kawasaki KLX250S
2004 Honda CBR600RR
2002 BMW R1150R
1996 Ducati 900SS
User avatar
Gummiente
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3485
Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 11:34 pm
Real Name: Mike
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 38
My Motorcycle: 03 Super Glide
Location: Kingston, ON

Re: So I went to the Harley Dealers yesterday and ..........

#60 Unread post by Gummiente »

HYPERR wrote::oops!:
You were right about the transmission, though... it had some wonky ratios in it and I spent a lot of time rowing the shifter pedal in traffic. What irked me was they came out with a 5-speed in '88 and then belt drive and a bump up to 1200cc shortly afterwards. Still, that ol '86 Sporty was one of the best bikes I've ever owned and I do still miss it after all these years.
:canada: Mike :gummiente:
It isn't WHAT you ride,
It's THAT you ride
Post Reply