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mcatrophy

Privileged to ride a 2018 FJR1300AS
Joined
Aug 25, 2006
Messages
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Location
Derby, UK
SWMBO was feeling unwell, got a virus that's debilitating, wasn't going anywhere
bye2.gif
. As the weather was just about tolerable, I decided to take Christmas presents to brother and sister-in-law, going by FJR (of course)
santa.gif
.

When I say the weather was tolerable, temperature was forecast as 2 to 4C (that's about 35 to 39F), sunny and dry. Sounded good to me.

So I wrap up warm (3 sweaters under my jacket, two pairs of socks in my boots, balaclava under my helmet
balaclava.gif
) and off I go.

The first 190 miles are all motorways and good A roads. Progress was excellent. However, I was heading south and south-west, and the sun was low over the horizon, mostly right into my eyes. What with this and the salt spray off the roads, visibility was difficult. I do have black tape stuck to my helmet's sun visor, this helps, but I still had to clean the visor whenever I stopped.

One scary event on the motorway. There were some illuminated signs saying "50". Normally these signs are used for fog, accidents or roadworks, but they are usually left on long after they might have been useful, so most drivers ignore them. Anyway, after passing the third one of these, I noticed a high visibility jacket on the hard shoulder. Its wearer was holding something up, looking at the traffic. My immediate thought was a radar speed meter, but I subsequently realised it was a video camera. He was concentrating on the road, I was concentrating on him.

When I finally looked in front again, I saw a piece of what I took to be a vehicle loading ramp lying right in the middle of my lane. It was perhaps four or five feet long, eight inches wide, and was of a channel section, perhaps two or three inches deep.

Luckily for me it was end on, I was able to avoid it with a mere twitch of the bars, missing it by a few inches. Had the man videoing this not been there, I'd have seen it well in advance. Another lesson or two learnt.

The last 50 miles were on roads that deteriorated from dual carriageways through single carriageways, then to tiny little country roads through farmland, where the farmers believe in protecting the tarmac surface with a layer of a mixture of mud and cow dung. All blind corners, slow tractors and trailers (which they use for said layer depositing), and car drivers that don't know where they're going and don't care when they get there.

Made it safely to the bottom of the road that goes to Brother's house. This "road" is steeply uphill from the main road ("main" is a relative term), and has a sharp right-hand dogleg 15 feet up. The surface is old tarmac through which grass is growing.

So, I do the wrong thing, I try to go up in bottom gear without slipping the clutch. As most will know, on the AS (or AE if you prefer) as the bike slows below a certain engine RPM, the clutch disengages. When this happens there is no drive. On a steep up-hill hairpin, the bike just stops its forward motion, but goes into its tipping motion. With the steep road camber conveniently on this bend, there is no possibility of holding the bike up.

A phone call to Brother saying
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"help" , he comes down and between us we right the bike. Damage? The right-hand pannier scratched, the mirror bent (I can't adjust it fully). The slider took a lot of the weight; I've yet to investigate the damage further, but I think the main panels escaped.

Anyway, packages delivered unscathed (even though the big one was strapped on the back seat, extending almost to the width of the panniers).

Next morning, I set out for the return journey, starting with a very careful descent of Brother's drive, luckily without incident. Temperatures ranged from a balmy 6C (43F) to a positively hot 12C (64F), weather started damp and misty, visibility limiting progress almost as much as traffic.

Made it to the motorway, proceeded at normal speed, until I saw a car's hub-cap, rolling toward me in my lane, gently crossing from one side to the other, then blowing across again. This time I saw the hazard with some time to react. Because I had no idea which way to avoid it (in any case all lanes of the road were fairly full), I braked. Hard. I hoped there was nothing immediately behind, there hadn't been the last time I looked.

In the end, I judged I could go by it on one side of my lane, and passed it safely. Curiously (or possibly as might be expected), no other vehicles seemed to react. I have to say I was very impressed by the FJR's brakes, its ABS, and the way I held the braking on the verge of the ABS operating, all on a road surface that was damp with varying levels of grip. (Well, if I don't beat my own drum, no-one else will beat it for me.) Very forceful retardation and no drama.

No further incidents of note. On the way down, I'd only seen a couple of motorcycles, going back I saw perhaps a dozen (one unfortunate parked on the motorway hard shoulder, its rider sitting 30 feet up the bank, watching the world go by as he waited for his rescuer).

A few statistics:

- According to my odometer, total journey was 494 miles, my Tomtom said 480 miles. A 3% difference, near enough the speedometer error? Or cumulative error in the mapping data?

- Average (moving) speed: 60 mph (according to Tomtom).

- Overall fuel consumption: 52.3 mpg UK (43.5 US).



(click on any image for a larger view)

(The temperature shown on the dash has soaked from the engine, never above 12C on the road.)

I hope the gay police will allow me to scrape some of the dirt off the bike and clean out the radiator.





Did I enjoy the trip? Because I dropped it, no. Even if I hadn't dropped it, I would have said it wasn't enjoyable, but was certainly interesting. The motorway parts were pretty boring apart from the two scary moments, but those nasty 50 miles near Brother's were certainly challenging, not so much in "how fast could I go?", more things like the obvious "Can I see if traffic is coming before I overtake?" to the less obvious "Can I find enough grip on the other side of the road to accelerate past the vehicle I'm overtaking, avoiding the muddung lining the centre of the road and both traffic lanes?". The FJR behaved impeccably, the only slight slip I had was riding up Brother's drive on the grassy stuff (probably too tense after the spill).

Would I do it again? Yes. I wouldn't drop it (touches wood, I know how to cope with the situation, I just didn't practice what I preach!). But the very technical slippery roads were a challenge that I would like to repeat.

Next Christmas?

 
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No one ever said Brits ain't got stones the size of grapefruit. Often enlarged from hours of kicking Lucas ignited (occasionally) vertical twins, but otherwise swollen from year long traffic engagements in sucky weather. I applaud ya mate.

 
I'm sorry to hear about going down. But heartened to hear that going down doesn't mean going out. You finished the delivery and lived to type about it. From the pix, it looks like things worked out OK enough to fix on your own terms.

At the risk of highjacking this thread, I get the impression that maybe the "AE" functionality may have played a role, by not being responsive enough to you inputs (?) I had a chance to buy a '07 AE, but chose a '04 "regular" because I was concerned by the lack of control. I've had vehicles with clutches (2 and 4 wheel) since I started driving. Except in stop and go traffic, I've always preferred the control and predictability of working the clutch and shifting myself.

I'd welcome the chance to hear your thoughts.

Again, glad to hear it wasn't too bad. Happy Christmas.

Oh, and what type of cover do you have over your radiator?

 
QUOTE (radman @ Dec 19 2008, 03:33 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

... hours of kicking Lucas ignited (occasionally) vertical twins ...

Actually a single, a Tiger Cub.

QUOTE (Vesparado @ Dec 19 2008, 04:19 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

... I am never going to bitch about my commute ever again ...

My commute is a mere 3 miles through heavy city traffic.

QUOTE (rogdeb @ Dec 19 2008, 08:25 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

... Sounds like Derbyshire is a lot like Liverpool ...

The nasty part was Devonshire, but Derbyshire is as bad. You aren't talking of Liverpool in the UK, are you?

QUOTE (Jon T @ Dec 20 2008, 01:02 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>

... maybe the "AE" functionality may have played a role ... Oh, and what type of cover do you have over your radiator?

it was an "AE" (or "AS" where I am) issue. As you slow, the clutch automatically disengages at 1300 rpm. I was going up a steep hill, pulling, but slowing. When the clutch disengages, all of a sudden there's no drive. The bike's leant over in the corner. Bam.

What I should have done, and I've done it many times, was slow sufficiently for the clutch to disengage before the corner. It's then easy to take up the drive with a slipping clutch, the corner is no longer a problem. My own stupidity. But, owing to a left little finger joint that's agony using a clutch lever, without Y-CCS I wouldn't be riding.

The only extra cover on the radiator is mud (and I do have a fenda-extenda, just visible in the side view pictures) - remember the Gen II rad is different from the Gen I [edit] there is a plastic stone guard, don't know if it's on a Gen I.

I've just edited this. It's 2:40 AM here now, can't sleep. Got the virus my SO had. Maybe I was beginning to get it and that affected my judgement?

Further edit, 20 Dec 08 12:50 Just to show radiator detail,

Before cleaning . . . . . . . . . . . . . After cleaning



(Click on image for full size, cropped at 800x600)

A merry Christmas to one and all, and a happy New Year.

 
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Nice report, just wondering where you did 86mph? Is there a private track on the way to your brothers?

Not wanting to be a harbinger of doom but I know 'plod' reads these forums and was there not a prosecution made from You Tube footage?

Whenever I write a report like this I balnk out my max speed; not that I was over the limit you understand...

Later

Dave

 
Nice report, just wondering where you did 86mph? Is there a private track on the way to your brothers?...

Dave
Of course I wouldn't do 86 on a public road. I think if you look again you will find there's been a case of dislexia somewhere. In any case, my Tomtom would need calibrating under the exact same conditions at which that value appeared in its memory, and as far as I know, we don't know where that was, even if we knew when it occurred. My Tomtom doesn't even know all the roads I went on!

And what about the effects of momentary satellite obscuration by bridges, reflections going through towns; who knows what perturbations might have occurred?

 
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