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It's much safer just to look ahead and go rather than riding with traffic and being concerned about being run over in all directions.
I had an experience very much like this in Albuquerque, circa 1998. I was invited to make a ride with some friends to Madrid for a green chile cheeseburger at the Mineshaft. They all rode late model (and heavily customized) Harleys; I rode a '60 BMW R60. When I arrived, they all had a big (preplanned) laugh and asked, "will it go 55?" "Sure," said I. We took a route through the Sandia Mountains (the Turquoise Trail) and I dusted them all as soon as we cleared town. Its not that I was going particularly fast, but all those HDs dragged their undercarriage badly and those guys HAD to slow down for curves. But the real insult came at the restaurant...that old Rubber Cow got ALL of the attention...
Stop worrying, it will not be long until they are gone. There sales and profits are still plummeting according to yesterdays MPN Dealer magazine.
I rode the Turquoise Trail around that same time, as part of a side trip off Route 66 up to Sante Fe and back, on my 1996 Road King, following a Ducati and a Honda much of the route, and I don't recall having any trouble. The FLH line back then had pretty decent lean angles, some of which became compromised in the later 90s and early 00s, but mostly still are capable of turning. But there have always been Softails and Low Riders/Dynas that were lower and cornered less well.<shrugs>
What is this? 1982?
Allrighty, I'll get sucked in. It's not the bikes, there are some really nice models. It's the majority (not all) of clowns that "ride" them. That's why I sold my Harley police bike years ago. Just didn't want to be associated. You really want a good laugh, head down to Wildwood, NJ, this weekend for the "Roar to the Shore".
yeah, IMHO the safest speed on a motorcycle is 2 20 mph faster than traffic. I prefer to be closing on them rather than the other way round.
It's surprising to me that folks dwell on something that may last at best 10-15 minutes of an occasional ride Pass or don't pass....you can't really change other people's behavior unless you have a chance to talk with them and explain it to them. Remember the words of Bruce Lee: Don't let OTHERS control YOUR emotions!
I don't get the avoiding a bike you might like because you don't want to be "associated" with some perception or image. Face it, the vast majority of people don't ride and can't tell a Harley from a Honda. We're all basically "associated" with the same image in most people's minds.And having spent at least as much time on and around Harleys as BMWs and Guzzis and other brands I definitely disagree that most objections in this thread apply to the "majority" of Harley owners/riders. Sure their are some anti-social delinquents on Harleys, but by and large I meet genuinely nice folks that are a cross-section of our population.Hell Sunday I was out on the Sporty scrubbing in a new tire and stopped to get some photos along some abandoned railroad tracks that cross the road I was on.