fossilrider
Well-known member
Just ride it!
I like keeping my bike clean, but it sure doesn't help the condition of my paint.I bought my FJR to ride, not to polish it. I love reminding my HD neighbors of that.
I wash my bike almost every time I ride it, or at least once per week. I have a very convenient and quick setup to do so.
It was the same with my MX racing bikes. Washed every single practice or race. I don't work on a dirty bike and I prefer not to own one.
Just for the record, I put 24,000 on the 05 in the nine months I owned her. So I can honestly claim to both ride and wash the bike. Scratches are inevitable. IMO, undone repairs are not. I prefer scratches on the bolt heads over scratches on the paint, and will pay more for a used bike that has been serviced and ridden, than one that has been polished.
Thanks! At this point, the damage requires a paint job to repair. It is too late for prevention. I might as well just ride it until I decide to either paint it, or sell it. Either way, I sure of one guy that won't want it :lol:OrangevaleFJR,For the lower cowling, tank sides and even the saddle bags, here is my suggestion for protection: Clear packing tape from Office Depot. Stuff is as clear as glass and if you put it on without any air bubbles under it, you wouldn't know it was on the bike! If you want extra protection, put a second layer on top of the first! When removing the tape, peel it off very slowly and it will not leave any residue. If it does, Goo-Gone takes care of that in no time. On the lower colling; the ultimate cheap protection, even if you have the packing tape already on, is to use about a 6 to 8 inches of silver duct tape down the center line of the cowling front and under the cowling. It adds an even thicker layer of protection AND on a Silver FJR, people don't notice it. On a Black Cherry FJR the duct tape complements the bike's color and on a Galaxy Blue FJR, it looks like, well silver duct tape. But you won't get any rock chips or sand blasting there and it pulls right off. BUT, don't leave it there more that 6 month or else you'll have a sticky mess.
The other really good and cheap tank protection is to get the rubberized tool box tray liner. You can get it Sears, Wal-Mart, auto par stores. You can cut it to shape or I just double over a 3' by 2' rectangle and attach it to the tank using the magnets that your kids get a the souvenir stores. Works like a charm. AND when and if you wash the bike, take off the magnets and shelf liner and wash both bike and liner, then go ride! Works great under your tank bag to keep it from scratching the top of the tank as well!
Enjoy,
Violione
Wouldn't this qualify in the Harley Davidson book as "perpetual motion".To each his own, I guess, but I'd work hours to get rid of an oil leak before I'd spend two minutes polishing chrome.
I'm not interested in [SIZE=14pt]marrying[/SIZE] the virgin.Everyone wants to date a whore, and marry a virgin.
Priceless!Ride it like you stole it, take care of it like you will never own another..
Enter your email address to join: