Bikes are still one of my passions. Through the years I have owned a few and just like cars have regretted selling some of them.
This in my second bike, a Yamaha Maxim X, 700cc, five valve, liquid cooled. Pretty peppy for a 700, especially at higher RPM.
img20230403_13381901 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
I went back and forth with having a bike and not having one. My wife was concerned I would kill myself and both of us would die if she road with me. This is one of my three little reasons for selling this bike.
img20230403_13423301 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
My 1988 or 1989 GL500, I am not sure on the year. Nice low center of gravity but had all the aerodynamics of a school bus. At highway speeds you really felt like you were hitting a brick wall. Terrible fuel milage, not great handling but nice for long road trips.
img20230403_13465229 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
Ten years without a bike and this is what I bought. My 1998 VMAX. Great engine, terrible bike. Handling or braking was not confidence inspiring. Tach was way down low on the fuel tank, so it wasn't safe to look at while accelerating.
img20230403_16284146 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
One of my favorites, a 2000 BMW K1200LT. This bike looked great and rode great. Very comfortable, lots of options like an AM, FM, weather band and 6 disk CD player that took up so much room in the side case I removed it. Cruise control, heated seats front and rear, heated grips, electrically adjustable windshield and reverse. the downside was BMW required maintenance, like an all-day job to remove all the plastic and fuel tank, just to replace an air filter. BMW wanted $500.00 for 6,000 mile service and like $1,000 for 10,000 mile service. I bought the shop manual and a pneumatic motorcycle lift. I put over 40,000 miles in about five years also took some fantastic cross-country trips.
IMG_1497 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
This is what you need to remove to get to the engine air filter. The straw that broke the camels back, I needed a new rear tire before I took a trip down to Memphis. I ordered the tire well in advance, but it was backordered from Germany and there were no substitute tires available at the time.
IMG_0387 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
I bought my 2005 Harley Road King so I could take the trip. A comfortable reliable bike. Air cleaner can be removed in 5 minutes, hydraulic valve lifters, no adjustments required. Spark plugs can be replaced in five minutes. Harley dealers are everywhere, a plus while on the road. I put well over 40K trouble free miles on this bike with only fluid changes, tires and plugs.
IMG_1749 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
My 2010 Yamaha VMAX. This 2nd generation VMAX had to be ordered as dealers did not stock them in the beginning. I ordered it in November, it arrived in January. The dealer delivered it to my house in a snow storm. That winter was mild and I was so excited I put on almost a 1,000 miles in February and March. By comparison I have only put about a 1,000 miles on this bike since 2018. This bike is a real adrenaline rush and a rocket ship. Good for 0-60 in 2.5 seconds and will hit a 100 in 5.9 seconds. You need to be absolutely focused when cracking open the throttle on this machine. Despite its weight it corners really well and has incredible brakes, dual six piston front calipers. This bike can also be ridden nice and slow for comfortable cruises, good since I am an old man.
Me on the bike, only a couple days after delivery.
IMG_1890C by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr
1700cc, 197 crankshaft horsepower, gobs of torque at any RPM. Even though this design goes back to 2009, there are only a handful of bikes today that are faster 0-60.
More bikes to come.
IMG_2731 by
Lawrence Alexander, on Flickr