Jump to content

phertwo

Expired Membership
  • Posts

    179
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Reputation

10 Good

About phertwo

  • Birthday 12/29/1982

Personal Information

  • Name
    Chris

location

  • Location
    Burlington, Canada

Converted

  • City
    Burlington

Converted

  • Home Country
    Canada

Converted

  • Bike Year and Model
    2005 Yamaha Royal Star Tour Deluxe
  1. I have a set of the Ultimate seats. I love it. My girlfriend would always complain about my stock seat and how uncomfortable it was and how she could only ride for an hour. After I got the Ultimate she came on a trip to New Orleans and back, a 7 day venture, 6~7 hours a day. Other than her just saying she was sore, she has never complained about her Ultimate seat. Ever. However, she saw the pillow top and said that that is what she would prefer. They only ever want pillow tops... Too bad they would look nuts on a RSTD I think. Well, at least with an Ultimate driver and a pillow top passenger. I can't speak for the Mustang seat, but the Ultimate is pretty darn good. There aren't many other options out there though..
  2. I was also looking at the Kawasaki Nomad. It was either the Nomad for the RSTD. Honestly you can't go wrong with either bike. But make sure you are aware of the differences. Royal Star Higher RPMs (3000 to 7000 rpm) are fully usable. Excellent powerband from start to finish on every gear. You don't have to change gears as often. Carburetors - require maintenance/syncing (easy enough), but work very well. Cruise control - if the '98 has it that is Vulcans Lower RPMs (vTwin). So you get big torque but not the crazy power ceiling of the royal star Fuel Injectors - does give better fuel economy Really just sit on both, fire them up, take them for a ride or ride as a passenger at bare minimum if you can. And know that you can't go wrong with either of these bikes.
  3. Dammit. That means that I have to go drop another few hundred on replacing my Scala Q2's. I'm blaming you BigLenny!
  4. I bought the Royal Star because of the longevity of its notorious engine. You will have maintenance and the occasional problem part (every bike has them) but other than that this bike is one of the best. You won't wear this bike out, it will keep going and going. A '98 in a royal star is pretty new. Not much has changed on them over the years - same engine, same parts.. Don't worry about higher mileage, in fact its probably a good thing to have a bike that has been rode often. I say go for it.
  5. No no! You guys got him wrong! That's the latest in motorcycle safety. If he falls off he will simply roll to a stop.. I just hope they aren't brickstones or he might have poor handling..
  6. Most everyone? You mean there are some old geezers here that were born after the age of 29? They are the true 1st gen'ers I'm guessing...
  7. 29. Not many of us younger guys around, but from what I can tell we are the mature ones.
  8. stanG, do you know if this radio comes with an antenna, or do you have to get it separately? Thanks!
  9. I really like this radio/amp! Thanks for the post! I'm on an '05 RSTD with Handle bar speakers. The amp is just shoved/crammed in the lower right cowling, which I am not happy with. I have it all wired to an mp3 player that is on a ram mount cradle near my left handle bar controls. I'm also not happy with that setup as its hard to control the volume and change the station/song with gloves on. It also feels gimmicky just floating around there.. Once I get some spare money to burn I think I will get one of these and mount it beside my retro tachometer. What is great is that this unit will fit into the same mounting cup as my tach. This should keep things nice and clean and easy to use. I'll post a pic once I get around to doing this. http://i924.photobucket.com/albums/ad85/phertwo/retro%20tachometer/IMG_8552.jpg http://i924.photobucket.com/albums/ad85/phertwo/retro%20tachometer/IMG_8553.jpg
  10. I had my electrical woes last year. I initially bought a new battery and a new R/R thinking that that was the problem, but it wasn't. It was a burnt out stator in the end. I upgraded it to the higher output stator and I haven't had a problem since. I would start with running the bike, unplug the stator harness and test the AC voltage across each of the leads. The resistance ohm reading on my stator seemed to check out, but it was only until I did a bike running test to see what my stator was actually putting out did I discover the problem. If the stator is putting out equal voltage across each of the leads, then you move on to the next possible issue. If the voltage is out of wack, the stator has turned crispy.
  11. I'm paranoid about this kind of stuff happening. I park my bike at the top of the property near the town while the cottage is way down by the water (out of eye-sight). So I put on a Scorpio Alarm with the motion detection. Anyone walk near the bike and it starts chirping right away.. If they stick around it starts screaming. Theft of opportunity is no longer a worry for me - gives me good piece of mind now. I'd recommend it.
  12. I got the Q2 for myself and my girlfriend. My father also has one. It is invaluable for discussing driving plans while driving in town, and I was a big fan of this system initially. But its starting to get on my nerves. I'm starting to think of it like a cheap walky talky now. The battery life was 8 hours initially, but now its less. It doesn't die, it just starts to crackle uncontrollably. Mind you we both have half helmets so our microphones are exposed to some wind (behind the windshield at least). If we are traveling slowly we can have a conversation, but at most speeds its a challenge. At highway its almost impossible without constantly shouting "WHAT?". The mic has to be planted right on your lips to make it work - something that really bugs me when my girlfriend decides to carry on a conversation and always neglect to have the mic where it should be... Ugh. Its just a frustrating annoyance now. I don't use it to all the functionality that you are looking for, but I'm not really happy with the product overall. It could be way better in my opinion. It is still invaluable for navigating 3 bikes together through cities and traffic, but its a pain on the open road.
  13. It sure is intense driving to and from work with zombie commuters all around you. Thrilling is a good word for it - scary is the other word for it. I know you shouldn't be fearful but its hard sometimes when things move fast. Sometimes I don't mind the traffic jams because there is less of a chance to get hurt when things aren't moving. What I don't like is when commuters go 90kph in a 60 zone, breaking hard, cutting into lanes with no signal... Its a challenge to stay cool and collected. Half of my drive I enjoy an easy scenic lightly traveled route, the other half makes me want multiple straight pipes angled in every direction, maybe even a few machine guns. I don't drive aggressively, I just want rushing commutes to stay away.
  14. I ALWAYS carry an ATV tire repair kit in my saddle bag now. When you are out venturing into those out-of-the-way unpopulated areas you are completely immobilized if you have a deflating/deflated tire. Been there, won't let that happen again. If there is any advise that I can impart to members here, go out and buy an emergency repair kit (make sure it has the co2 tire inflation) at an autostore, walmart, wherever.. They are inexpensive ($20-30) and small. Throw it in the corner of your saddle bag and thank me in the future.
  15. Something else to consider, many accidents go unreported. A simple fender bender involving two cars is technically an accident, but it won't be added to any statistics if the drivers work out the details without getting the cops involved. A simple fender bender with a car and a bike most likely is an accident that will involve cops and EMS since the chances of the rider being hurt and/or the bike being wrecked is pretty high.
×
×
  • Create New...