RaiderBill
Well-known member
Gnirtsnod, I think the damage is worse because my other motorcycle helped to slow the fjrs' fall.
"In my experience the side stand can tend to drag its rubber tip a bit". There is no rubber tip on my side stand. Do you have one on your FJR?In my experience the side stand can tend to drag its rubber tip a bit while wheeling the bike around so when you lean the bike down the side stand is over center the wrong way and gives way. I always give it a kick fwd nowadays and never trust the bugger. By the way I always park it IN GEAR.
Went and looked for the rubber tip and it has none, must have been one of my other, older, bikes-tactic still stands though. Hope things work out."In my experience the side stand can tend to drag its rubber tip a bit". There is no rubber tip on my side stand. Do you have one on your FJR?In my experience the side stand can tend to drag its rubber tip a bit while wheeling the bike around so when you lean the bike down the side stand is over center the wrong way and gives way. I always give it a kick fwd nowadays and never trust the bugger. By the way I always park it IN GEAR.
+1 on your comments. Knock on wood I have never dropped any of my three FJR's but I did drop a Yamaha Virago twice and a BMW twice. After those mishaps I learned to make damn sure the side stand was fully engaged, bike in 1st gear, and pushed against compression. Also, it is smart to never park in down hill position if possible.
When I dropped mine there were no cute girls just you. I'm glad you were there to help and it's still Mark's fault it went over.Well that sucks but it happens. Just so you don't feel like you're the only one.Dropped mine st a stop sign today. Stuck my foot in a pothole,by the time I regained my balanced she was to far gone to save.
Cute girl helped me pick it up.
I totally disagree. The FJR's kickstand is just fine. If the rider pays attention and ensures it goes down all the way, then everything is just fine.rhun posted: The FJR has a poorly designed kick stand. No detent to help ensure it doesn't move when you put it down. Doesn't go very far forward, so not much room for error. If you look at the mount I think one could grind the stop back a bit to make it go farther forward. If you are on a 2 degree or greater downhill slope leave it in gear.
I agree, it's fine. Also, I always leave it in gear regardless of the surface slope angle. In the past with other bikes (not FJR's), I had two go down after I stepped away. One the sidestand folded up, not in gear, it was my fault! The other, the sidestand sunk into the hot pavement, again my fault!The FJR's kickstand is just fine. If the rider pays attention and ensures it goes down all the way, then everything is just fine.
I agree with rhun the side stand could use a detent. With my bike on the center stand I can pull the side stand up from fully deployed with a slight tug using only my little finger. A detent would help. Not criticizing Yamaha just making a minor product improvement suggestion.I totally disagree. The FJR's kickstand is just fine. If the rider pays attention and ensures it goes down all the way, then everything is just fine.rhun posted: The FJR has a poorly designed kick stand. No detent to help ensure it doesn't move when you put it down. Doesn't go very far forward, so not much room for error. If you look at the mount I think one could grind the stop back a bit to make it go farther forward. If you are on a 2 degree or greater downhill slope leave it in gear.
Your post sounds similar to this: "My car has a poorly designed reverse gear. Occasionally it backs into things."
I've done all of those -- not necessarily on the FJR, but at some point, all of them.I'd like to offer 3 more ways one can drop his FJR.
(DAMHIK)
1. He can put the side stand fully down over dirt gravel that he thinks is stiff enough to support the weight of the bike. Then after he gets off the bike and walks about 10 feet away, the soft dirt/gravel gives way and down she goes.
2. He can put both of his feet down while the bike is in neutral. Then he can remove his hands from the bars to take some photographs. And while he is looking through the view finder of his camera, he can become just a little bit disoriented, which causes his balance to shift and the bike to go oopsie...
3. He can attempt to make a U-turn on a 2 lane highway that is going uphill. Then when he is 1/2 way through the turn, he can forget about the slope, causing the bike to become imbalanced and go oopsie....
(Dumb *** Pants)
At least for #1, I got myself a sidestand pad...
https://www.amazon.com/KiWAV-motorcycle-motorcross-kickstand-universal/dp/B00CPGQ2DG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1493330353&sr=8-1&keywords=side+stand+puck
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