2013 Ride Report from FJR first timer

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littlefish

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Just got back to Tampa from D&H in Cullman, Alabama. No pictures to speak of my friends, you've seen every angle of the bike and this one looks exactly the same as the others. I tried to stay on back roads but wound up on I-65 and I-10 for a small part of the trip. I predominantly ran US 31, 98, 331, 52, 88, 81 and FL SR 19 for the bulk of the miles. By the time I parked it wet and dirty in the garage my new cruise missile had 640 miles. My observations? Before I write those, allow me to tell you what my past rides were. In order of ownership:

I've owned and severly tortured the following bikes:

Kawasaki ZRX1109 - 140 rwhp / 80 ft/lbs

Suzuki SV650 - track bikes with Penske shocks

Yamaha R6 - track bike

Aprilia Falco 118 rwhp

Triumph Sprint ST 1050

BMW GS1200 - 2008 Ohlins shocks, scotts damper, motor tweaks

KTM 990 - with pro dyno tune setup

KTM 525 EXC - pro setup

Yamaha FJR 1300

Here is a brain dump after JUST getting in the door:

Even staying within break-in parameters, this motor is strong. I passed folks like they were standing still and I didn't exceed 4099 rpms.

A 540 mile day is bearable on the stock seat using an Alaska Leather sheep skin pad. ( I
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sheep! )

After 600 miles, I ran the tach up to 6000 rpms a few times, all I can say is YOWZER! ( I
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warp speed )

Cruise control stops working on mine at 82 mph and I can see uses for this at these "excessive" speeds.

The electrically adjustable windscreen is un-freaking-believable because it creates a calm pocket of air at every speed. Yamaha is the first OEM to get this right that I have many miles on a ton of brands. ( I
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adjustable screens! )

The tupperware on this cruise missile provides good weather protection. I had to ride through rain and spray and I stayed dry w/o rain pants and a mostly water-resistant jacket.

I shipped 38 lbs of gear and gadgets to D&H so I wouldn't have to carry it on the plane. The luggage was able to ingest most of the stuff I didn't wear w/o breaking. The factory liners are pretty cool and VERY useful. (Some had to go in a waterproof duffle bag, but that strapped nicely onto the tail and stayed put using Knot Bone bungies and a Rox strap.)

The headlight was adequate and the bright light setting must have been signaling aliens. I officially apologize for blinding them before they could land and take over earth. If you are heading home at night on a new one, I would adjust them down 5-10*.

The dash is pretty cool. I liked the average and instantaneous mpg and outside temp. Average MPG over the total 645 miles was around 41 mpg.

The heated grips work very well. My vented, short, full on summer gloves were fine at 56F as long as I turned on the heat.

When I first got on the bike, it wanted to fall into turns. After more riding, that tendency went away. The handling is very neutral for me now.

The stock suspension settings from Nick at D&H worked great for me. Plush and planted. I think I hit two pavement anomalies that made me go "OUCH!". I liked the settings very much.

The mode switch is effective. For times when I wanted to be lazy with the throttle, Touring mode worked great. When I wanted precise control, Sport mode punched the ticket. Neither stuttered. The fueling was amazing and I have been on bikes eddy-current dyno tuned using 4 gas analyzers that weren't as good as these two modes. I will say my favorite is both! I think Touring mode can be compared to a 1/2 turn throttle and Sport mode a 1/4 turn. Small inputs get noticed using Sport mode and Touring mode allowed me to concentrate on other things going on in the ride w/o turning her into a bucking bronco.

I need to get my Passport X50 hooked up quick or I won't have a license for long.

My apologies if this is long and drawn out, but in short, I think I'm in
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!!!

 
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That was just excellent. Beautifully written, wonderfully descriptive, and a pleasure to read. As far as apologizing for a long and drawn out report, don't bother. I was hoping you would go on for another page or two. I am very glad you got your new FJR, I hope you enjoy it.

 
Thanks for your impressions. They mirror mine almost exactly. Sport mode is one crazy ***** of a ride and touring is smooth as butter.

 
Thanks for the comments on the review, glad I wasn't out of line. With respect to the windscreen, I consider them a success if they don't beat on my head like a little drummer boy. Bonus points go to low or no noise, wind protection about the torso and shoulders and finally weather protection.

Every screen I've had until now has drummed on my helmet. I can find a spot using the electric adjuster where this drumming is gone. None, nada, zip, zero. This was possible no matter how I sat in the cockpit. Over 600+ miles, I tried crouched low-shoulders slumped, straight back and arms, straight back-bent arms, no hands on the bars-sitting straight up while using cruise control. IMHO, I can now echo what Fairlaner said to me, "Yamaha got it right".

Noise. IMHO, this is dependent on traffic, prevailing winds, phase of the moon and type of helmet. My Arai was fairly quiet, but I found I could make it silent if I blocked the wind into the bottom of the helmet using a gloved hand. Helmet Halo springs to mind as one of the existing products accomplishing that mission. I will not blow smoke up your bloomers, it did get noisy at enthusiastic speeds with the screen adjusted for no buffeting. I wear good earplugs and it didn't bother me too much.

Wind protection. I've ridden a couple/few un-faired bikes and they are great here in FL due to inevitable hot and steamy temps. For me, the problem with that style of bike is getting beat up by the wind on long highway stints. If did 200 miles on the highway, I'd come home and feel like I'd spent the day wresting kids. I'm very happy to report I feel great after 500+ miles on the bike in one sitting and I did not do a slow-trot home. I'm calculating the average speed in my head and it wasn't slow. I'm very pleased the bike took such good care of my body as I wrestled semi-trucks, strong winds and goofy motorists.

Rain protection. As mentioned, I didn't wear any rain gear on my lower half, although I did have good goretex boots on. My jacket is an older Olympia AST and it has been OK over a few seasons. I like it because of the well-placed CE armor and the fact it has a ton of vents. The flip-side is a ton of vents offer more water entrance points I ran through some moderate rain, no frog-strangler rains and I stayed dry. Even the infamous "Did you pee yourself?" crotch area was dry and UN-embarrassing. I did get a lot of rain on my helmet, even with the screen all the way up. Will the 2013 Touring screen eliminate that condition? I may try and find out. To be honest, it gave me a chance to clean the bugs off my shield without stopping. Now, if you are the type who like to ride with a just doo-rag, be prepared to have to stop and fix yourself after encountering moist conditions.

Temp protection was good too, again down to 56F. All I needed was a under armor T-shirt underneath the Olympia. I did pop in the liner after dark, but that was in case it got a lot colder. It didn't and I really didn't need it. With the stock screen all the way down, I got good airflow to the chest area. This should be VERY nice in the hot summer months. I didn't test the side vents to control heat. I did play around with the closed and open position and left them closed. I wanted the motor heat! I noticed my draggin-jean shod legs stayed just on the warm side, but not hot.

The windscreen and motor were the two most important things in choosing this bike. If I keep in mind this is supposed to be a sport touring bike, I give the windscreen a 10/10, because it allowed me to eliminate buffeting in any condition I ran across. The screen earned 8.75/10 on ancillary features. The deduction was due to the amount of rain getting to my head. I could duck down and get out of it, but that is not a riding position I can hold for very long. The motor rating will wait until I can pin it. So far, I am NOT disappointed with the1298cc mill. It should be a winner especially if I can have my top-speed fun and 40+ mpg.

 
Thanks for the input. I look forward to any other evaluations you may have, as you get to know the bike better.

 
When I first got on the bike, it wanted to fall into turns. After more riding, that tendency went away. The handling is very neutral for me now.

The stock suspension settings from Nick at D&H worked great for me. Plush and planted. I think I hit two pavement anomalies that made me go "OUCH!". I liked the settings very much.
Thank you for the comprehensive ride report (which was enhanced by the listing of your previous bikes). At this point I am most interested in how the 2013 handles when ridden in a sport mode down a twisty road. Kevin Ash was pretty critical of that aspect in his review and the other testers that had limited rides did not seem to give high marks either. My personal experience (when I went from an 05 with suspension upgrades to a 08) was that I was very happy with the OEM suspension on the 08 until I tried (unsuccessfully) to keep up with some good riders on twisty roads.. The first time I blamed myself for poor riding, the second time I was riding behind riders that I knew were not any faster than I was so I concluded that it had to be the bike's soft suspension that was holding me back. This was confirmed as soon as I transferred my 05 suspension upgrades to the 08.

 
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Thanks for your first impressions. It's nice to hear from a lot of folks, that Yamaha did good right out of the box. Be interesting to hear how the new suspension holds up after a few miles.

Enjoy the new ride.

--G

 
When I first got on the bike, it wanted to fall into turns. After more riding, that tendency went away. The handling is very neutral for me now.

The stock suspension settings from Nick at D&H worked great for me. Plush and planted. I think I hit two pavement anomalies that made me go "OUCH!". I liked the settings very much.
At this point I am most interested in how the 2013 handles when ridden in a sport mode down a twisty road. Kevin Ash was pretty critical of that aspect in his review and the other testers that had limited rides did not seem to give high marks either. My personal experience (when I went from an 05 with suspension upgrades to a 08) was that I was very happy with the OEM suspension on the 08 until I tried (unsuccessfully) to keep up with some good riders on twisty roads.. The first time I blamed myself for poor riding, the second time I was riding behind riders that I knew were not any faster than I was so I concluded that it had to be the bike's soft suspension that was holding me back. This was confirmed as soon as I transferred my 05 suspension upgrades to the 08.
I think FL has 3 or 4 turns, I forget the exact number. So, I am probably not the guy to resolve this for you. With that said, I'm right around 700 miles now and the roads are drier and the tires are not so green. I've been trying to precisely carve out low speed left and right turns to check out behavior and I have no issues with tip-in and cornering stability. Very neutral feeling so far. I haven't had the opportunity to get into any quick transitions, so again, no help. I can only guess the suspenders need to be a bit more compliant before a good rider can start throwing this missile around in corners.

 
Thanks for your first impressions. It's nice to hear from a lot of folks, that Yamaha did good right out of the box. Be interesting to hear how the new suspension holds up after a few miles.

Enjoy the new ride.

--G
I've gotten a chance to put a few more miles on and run it through some L-R-L stuff. It's pretty soft. Okay, very soft. I'm going to play around with the adjusters a tad and see what effect they have. Personally, I don't like the bike wallowing a bunch while leaned over.

With that said, several years ago, I had a chance to follow an AMA racer around Road Atlanta while there at a riding school. I'm definitely not trying to brag about my skills, I suck. I am trying to let you know the AMA guy left me for dead while riding a box-stock, brand new SV650, fresh out of the Suzuki truck and me on my "race ready" SV650 (penske, racetech, jetting, piped, etc). Very humbling and definitely let me know it ain't the bike.

 
I've gotten a chance to put a few more miles on and run it through some L-R-L stuff. It's pretty soft. Okay, very soft. I'm going to play around with the adjusters a tad and see what effect they have. Personally, I don't like the bike wallowing a bunch while leaned over.
Good feedback, it sounds like the 2013 is going to be a great touring bike but probably needs some heavier springs and re-valving to live up to its "sport" potential. The suspension guys are going to happy with the new business.

 
Good feedback, it sounds like the 2013 is going to be a great touring bike but probably needs some heavier springs and re-valving to live up to its "sport" potential. The suspension guys are going to happy with the new business.
FWIW, I haven't played with or even checked the settings, I trusted the setup guy at D&H. So, I'm hopeful a little tweaking will get her close enough for road work. There will be no track days on this bike. I'm really hoping I don't need to see a suspension doctor. :D

 
Good feedback, it sounds like the 2013 is going to be a great touring bike but probably needs some heavier springs and re-valving to live up to its "sport" potential. The suspension guys are going to happy with the new business.
FWIW, I haven't played with or even checked the settings, I trusted the setup guy at D&H. So, I'm hopeful a little tweaking will get her close enough for road work. There will be no track days on this bike. I'm really hoping I don't need to see a suspension doctor.
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Did D&H do anything with the settings? I doubt it. I bet you will find they are in the factory settings as outlined in your owner's manual.

 
My personal experience (when I went from an 05 with suspension upgrades to a 08) was that I was very happy with the OEM suspension on the 08 until I tried (unsuccessfully) to keep up with some good riders on twisty roads.. The first time I blamed myself for poor riding, the second time I was riding behind riders that I knew were not any faster than I was so I concluded that it had to be the bike's soft suspension that was holding me back. This was confirmed as soon as I transferred my 05 suspension upgrades to the 08.

You *******!!!!

Don't start costing me $$$$ I can't afford! The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09.

 
My personal experience (when I went from an 05 with suspension upgrades to a 08) was that I was very happy with the OEM suspension on the 08 until I tried (unsuccessfully) to keep up with some good riders on twisty roads.. The first time I blamed myself for poor riding, the second time I was riding behind riders that I knew were not any faster than I was so I concluded that it had to be the bike's soft suspension that was holding me back. This was confirmed as soon as I transferred my 05 suspension upgrades to the 08.

You *******!!!!

Don't start costing me $$$$ I can't afford! The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09. The stock suspension if perfectly fine on my 09.
I'm sure that it is.....just don't ride George's 09, that could get expensive in a hurry.
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Just got back to Tampa from D&H in Cullman, Alabama. No pictures to speak of my friends, you've seen every angle of the bike and this one looks exactly the same as the others. I tried to stay on back roads but wound up on I-65 and I-10 for a small part of the trip. I predominantly ran US 31, 98, 331, 52, 88, 81 and FL SR 19 for the bulk of the miles. By the time I parked it wet and dirty in the garage my new cruise missile had 640 miles. My observations? Before I write those, allow me to tell you what my past rides were. In order of ownership:I need to get my Passport X50 hooked up quick or I won't have a license for long.

My apologies if this is long and drawn out, but in short, I think I'm in
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!!!
No apologies needed -- If I was on the fence about a 2013 model purchase, this write-up would have me in "buy mode"

 
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