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Nice morning for a ride!
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 09:23:30 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 11/4/15 5:43 PM, John H. wrote: I figure mine will last until I can't ride any more - or *hit a bridge abutment doing about 80mph*. -- That'll do it, and no need for a viking funeral. Practice a few times and you are sure to get it right. Someone has to question your lies, eh Krause? I know you're wishing hard though. Vietnam, red barn, owls, boats, what else? -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
Nice morning for a ride!
On 11/5/15 5:10 PM, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 09:23:30 -0500, Keyser Söze wrote: On 11/4/15 5:43 PM, John H. wrote: I figure mine will last until I can't ride any more - or *hit a bridge abutment doing about 80mph*. -- That'll do it, and no need for a viking funeral. Practice a few times and you are sure to get it right. Someone has to question your lies, eh Krause? I know you're wishing hard though. Vietnam, red barn, owls, boats, what else? -- I wouldn't expect a dimwit like you to "get it." My disdain for you has nothing to do with anything more than your racism and hatred for people whose ethnicity or skin color differs from yours. You're the one who brought up hitting a bridge abutment. I'm simply encouraging you to do it. Try to do it outside of rush hour, though. |
Nice morning for a ride!
John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet
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Nice morning for a ride!
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 14:45:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet Even that old 850T would leave Harleys in the dust in the twisties. -- Ban idiots, not guns! |
Nice morning for a ride!
On Thursday, November 5, 2015 at 6:28:18 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote:
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 14:45:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that.. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet Even that old 850T would leave Harleys in the dust in the twisties. -- Ban idiots, not guns! That's one thing about European motorcycles. They were build for handling. My 500 Triumph Daytona, was quite the dancer but light. The Ambassador was much heavier but regardless, it was really nimble. |
Nice morning for a ride!
On 11/5/2015 9:26 PM, Tim wrote:
On Thursday, November 5, 2015 at 6:28:18 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote: On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 14:45:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet Even that old 850T would leave Harleys in the dust in the twisties. -- Ban idiots, not guns! That's one thing about European motorcycles. They were build for handling. My 500 Triumph Daytona, was quite the dancer but light. The Ambassador was much heavier but regardless, it was really nimble. The bigger Harleys were never designed for handling or to be "fast". They are designed for highway cruising with a bit of comfort. Other than a couple of small Hondas when I was young (a 305 "Super Hawk and a Honda 350), the motorcycles I had were all Harleys .. a couple of Softails and a couple of Ultra Classics. Then, about 5 years ago, I acquired a completely restored 1974 Norton 850 Commando. (I traded a 1965 Volkswagon mini bus for it). I rode the Norton twice ... to the guitar shop and back. Not for me. A Norton is a young man's bike, not an old fart used to big, fat Harleys. I sold it to a Norton collector who still rides it. |
Nice morning for a ride!
On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 18:26:24 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote: On Thursday, November 5, 2015 at 6:28:18 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote: On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 14:45:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet Even that old 850T would leave Harleys in the dust in the twisties. -- Ban idiots, not guns! That's one thing about European motorcycles. They were build for handling. My 500 Triumph Daytona, was quite the dancer but light. The Ambassador was much heavier but regardless, it was really nimble. Triumphs were pretty popular back in the olden days but I never had one. (Marlon is riding one in "the wild one") Those old Triumph Bonnevilles had a bad habit of being made into choppers in the 70s. People took a pretty good street bike and made scary to ride choppers that looked pretty parked in a shop window. That was where the capacitor trick came from (lose the battery and you can lower the seat) Fortunately the fad didn't last long. I went straight from a Benelli 250 dirt bike to a Harley |
Nice morning for a ride!
On Fri, 6 Nov 2015 01:22:02 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 11/5/2015 9:26 PM, Tim wrote: On Thursday, November 5, 2015 at 6:28:18 PM UTC-6, John H. wrote: On Thu, 5 Nov 2015 14:45:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: John, I think the 850t was the same engine as the old Eldorado with slightly larger valves, carbs, and maybe a hotter camshaft but not sure if that. At least the cam part. It was a great rock solid engine that was perfect for their sport format which they didn't really have...yet Even that old 850T would leave Harleys in the dust in the twisties. -- Ban idiots, not guns! That's one thing about European motorcycles. They were build for handling. My 500 Triumph Daytona, was quite the dancer but light. The Ambassador was much heavier but regardless, it was really nimble. The bigger Harleys were never designed for handling or to be "fast". They are designed for highway cruising with a bit of comfort. Other than a couple of small Hondas when I was young (a 305 "Super Hawk and a Honda 350), the motorcycles I had were all Harleys .. a couple of Softails and a couple of Ultra Classics. Then, about 5 years ago, I acquired a completely restored 1974 Norton 850 Commando. (I traded a 1965 Volkswagon mini bus for it). I rode the Norton twice ... to the guitar shop and back. Not for me. A Norton is a young man's bike, not an old fart used to big, fat Harleys. I sold it to a Norton collector who still rides it. Ah a "Snortin Norton" We had one with a cracked jug ear we got pretty much for free. I knew a guy with a "heliarc" shop who was able to weld it and ground it down so it looked normal. We put it back together and got a grand for it. I'm with you, not my kind of bike. |
Nice morning for a ride!
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