phlaug
Member
Hi,
So I wasn't in the market for an FJR. I demoed one forever ago at Americade in Lake George when they were brand new and thought they were fine, but not enough to motivate me to sell my Concours at the time. I've had a lot of bikes in the ensuing two decades, but the FJR never worked into the mix.
Over the past year I've been trying to sell my 1990 Honda GoldWing with Cal. Sidecar Company Friendship III sidecar. In the last two weeks I finally started heavily pushing "open to trades". You can see where this is going. This afternoon, a 2013 FJR plus some cash was exchanged for my rig.
So now here's the question: am I going to keep it?
Here's my current fleet:
2012 Aprilia RSV4, for track only
2007 Suzuki GSXR for street and occasional track use
2007 Honda Fury, which gets far and away the most use.
My wife really likes the Fury. I have a Corbin King & Queen saddle which is super comfortable and she feels great with the high back rest. But it is sorely lacking in storage and so we've done no longer trips with it. (We have trailered it on a couple trips, but I prefer to ride.)
The FJR I got does not have a top box. The two saddle bags offer more space than the Fury, but not a boat load. So that's decision point one: do I invest in expanding its storage, or move on.
(You might ask why would I do the swap if I wasn't going to keep the FJR? 1) Any motorcycle would take up tons less space in the garage than the sidecar, so it's a step in the right direction. 2) The pool of buyers for any bike is going to be larger than the pool of buyers for a sidecar -- I was fatigued of the effort trying to sell the hack.)
I took it on about a 50 mile run this afternoon and enjoy the grunt of it. Rear suspension seems garbage, but I'm sure that's not indicative of a properly-operating FJR, so I'll be scouring the forum on that topic soon enough. Rear brake is super weak. Again, I'm sure that's not how Yamaha made it.
I love the adjustable windscreen.
I love that the dash says "See you next time" when you shut it off.
If anyone wants to convince me why I should keep it, or just tell me other cool things that might not be immediately obvious, that would be great. Owner manual did not come with it. Hopefully there's a link to those in there?
Anyway, looking forward to learning from this forum and trying to figure out how long the FJR will be in my life.
Thanks,
Phlaug
So I wasn't in the market for an FJR. I demoed one forever ago at Americade in Lake George when they were brand new and thought they were fine, but not enough to motivate me to sell my Concours at the time. I've had a lot of bikes in the ensuing two decades, but the FJR never worked into the mix.
Over the past year I've been trying to sell my 1990 Honda GoldWing with Cal. Sidecar Company Friendship III sidecar. In the last two weeks I finally started heavily pushing "open to trades". You can see where this is going. This afternoon, a 2013 FJR plus some cash was exchanged for my rig.
So now here's the question: am I going to keep it?
Here's my current fleet:
2012 Aprilia RSV4, for track only
2007 Suzuki GSXR for street and occasional track use
2007 Honda Fury, which gets far and away the most use.
My wife really likes the Fury. I have a Corbin King & Queen saddle which is super comfortable and she feels great with the high back rest. But it is sorely lacking in storage and so we've done no longer trips with it. (We have trailered it on a couple trips, but I prefer to ride.)
The FJR I got does not have a top box. The two saddle bags offer more space than the Fury, but not a boat load. So that's decision point one: do I invest in expanding its storage, or move on.
(You might ask why would I do the swap if I wasn't going to keep the FJR? 1) Any motorcycle would take up tons less space in the garage than the sidecar, so it's a step in the right direction. 2) The pool of buyers for any bike is going to be larger than the pool of buyers for a sidecar -- I was fatigued of the effort trying to sell the hack.)
I took it on about a 50 mile run this afternoon and enjoy the grunt of it. Rear suspension seems garbage, but I'm sure that's not indicative of a properly-operating FJR, so I'll be scouring the forum on that topic soon enough. Rear brake is super weak. Again, I'm sure that's not how Yamaha made it.
I love the adjustable windscreen.
I love that the dash says "See you next time" when you shut it off.
If anyone wants to convince me why I should keep it, or just tell me other cool things that might not be immediately obvious, that would be great. Owner manual did not come with it. Hopefully there's a link to those in there?
Anyway, looking forward to learning from this forum and trying to figure out how long the FJR will be in my life.
Thanks,
Phlaug