Author Topic: HL500  (Read 117493 times)

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Offline crash n bern

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Re: HL500
« Reply #300 on: January 10, 2013, 08:49:36 am »
Couldnt agree with you more Bill, most disapointing motorcycles I have ever riden, I rode them in the daylight though so it appears to not matter when you ride one.

Gee you blokes are harsh.  I've been riding those old boat anchors for 35 years.   
Your missing a few points.  Slow, well compared to a turbocharged Hyabusa, everything is slow.  Most people don't put Harley's into perspective, the original design is to carry two people and a lot of luggage ( Hence torque over eye watering acceleration.) for thousands of miles comfortably across American highways, and they do that very well.  If your trying to cut fast lap times or compare them to something they are not, you will be very disapointed. 
Go take a new Street glide for a  run up the highway.

The irony is, I like them because they feel like the big road bike version of my favourite old dirt bike, the TT500.





Offline mick25

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Re: HL500
« Reply #301 on: January 10, 2013, 06:48:47 pm »
Couldnt agree with you more Bill, most disapointing motorcycles I have ever riden, I rode them in the daylight though so it appears to not matter when you ride one.

Gee you blokes are harsh.  I've been riding those old boat anchors for 35 years.   
Your missing a few points.  Slow, well compared to a turbocharged Hyabusa, everything is slow.  Most people don't put Harley's into perspective, the original design is to carry two people and a lot of luggage ( Hence torque over eye watering acceleration.) for thousands of miles comfortably across American highways, and they do that very well.  If your trying to cut fast lap times or compare them to something they are not, you will be very disapointed. 
Go take a new Street glide for a  run up the highway.

The irony is, I like them because they feel like the big road bike version of my favourite old dirt bike, the TT500.





Bloody spot on dude  ;) you buy a bike to suit your needs and purpose  ;) you wouldnt buy a macio 490 to round up the cows to milk ;D

Offline mustanggrahame

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Re: HL500
« Reply #302 on: January 10, 2013, 07:13:26 pm »
A Maico wouldn't be reliable enough. The cows need to be rounded up at the same time of the day everyday.
Cheers, Grahame
RT1, DT1F, MX100A, TY80A, YZ80D, DT125E, CR125RE, 1982 KTM125RV, 1985 Can Am ASE, 1989 YZ250WR, 1991 YZ250WR

Offline crash n bern

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Re: HL500
« Reply #303 on: January 12, 2013, 07:57:18 am »

[/quote]Bloody spot on dude  ;) you buy a bike to suit your needs and purpose  ;) you wouldnt buy a macio 490 to round up the cows to milk ;D
[/quote]


The irony in that is my TT500 and my Canam Sonic were both originaly bought by farmers to round up cows.

Offline shoom

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Re: HL500
« Reply #304 on: April 21, 2019, 10:25:35 pm »
While I agree there is a bit too much levity in some of these vintage racing classes, and especially what the "was a big name back in 19xx" are allowed to get away with.

I think certain concessions need to be made to certain parts on the big that don't necessarily  make the bike go faster, but are needed to make a decent replica. Things like Fox air shocks, forx , simons forks etc are unobtanium for us mere mortals. only so many were made in the first place and you definitely don't see them popping uop on ebay all the time. Sure certain big names will build a bike and have all those trick parts on them, but they tend to be only passed about the 'in crowd' when they do come up for sale.

They should allow thing like mid 80s YZ for example 43mm forks or whatever the other big 3 makes have that fits easily. rear shocks should be free, I think the air shocks are actually worse than a normal shock because as they get hotter the spring rate increases. so a good dialed in set of ohlins could actually be better here. Things liike brakes should be whatever you can fit / adapt as if something makes a bike safer, it should not be a controlled item. I agree some of these bikes are looking silly with their way-higher-than-original suspension stance, and the worst offender I saw recently was a poweroll kitted 74 XL350 that looked like it was trying to immitate a CR 500..

But I digress,

more bums (including some of us LOL) on seats out there can only be good for the sport no matter whatg the bike looks like.

Some of these bikes for us are like living our dreams with the steads that our heroes rode back in the day, that we couldn't afford back then, and still really can't now lol

Take it easy all