Redfish Hunter
Gone Fishing
I had left the FJR with the dealer overnight to get a set of tires installed and on my way home with it today I passed the Indian/Polaris/Victory dealership. They had Indian Demo Rides going on and since I had a couple of hours before I had to be at work, I swooped in and signed up.
Why? Well, I think the new Indians are beautiful. They look fantastic and they sound fantastic. No, I don't want one but I really, really wanted to ride one.
The parking lot looked like this:
The bike I have been wanting to ride looked exactly like this:
So, my curiosity is satisfied. It is large and feels large. It is heavy. It feels like the grips are 4 feet apart which is good because that gives plenty of leverage to turn the beast. Their website says 855 pounds full of fuel and it is at least that. It was a beautiful and beautifully engineered bike. It felt exactly like I expected an Indian to feel. It sounds great, it has less vibration than a Harley but still has enough to let you know there is a large displacement (111 cubic inch) V-Twin down there. Lots of torque, silky smooth power delivery, and a surprising amount of lean angle added up to a very pleasant machine.
Two major faults that I could not get past:
Slow. Really Slow. I was shocked. I do not know what I expected but it was not this. It is about even with the older 96 cubic inch HD Street Glide although it is more refined and smoother.
Hot. Really, HOT! Those of you whining about engine heat on your Gen2 should ride one of these things. The head on the rear cylinder is just below your right leg and in Baton Rouge traffic today at 86 degrees it was extremely uncomfortable. I have ridden my FJR and my Honda ST1300 at low speeds when the temp was above 100 and it was nothing like this.
I thanked the ride leaders, and I got my scorched butt back onto my FJR and headed home. The FJR felt like a 250CC dirt bike after riding the Chieftain. Except it was much, much faster.
Why? Well, I think the new Indians are beautiful. They look fantastic and they sound fantastic. No, I don't want one but I really, really wanted to ride one.
The parking lot looked like this:
The bike I have been wanting to ride looked exactly like this:
So, my curiosity is satisfied. It is large and feels large. It is heavy. It feels like the grips are 4 feet apart which is good because that gives plenty of leverage to turn the beast. Their website says 855 pounds full of fuel and it is at least that. It was a beautiful and beautifully engineered bike. It felt exactly like I expected an Indian to feel. It sounds great, it has less vibration than a Harley but still has enough to let you know there is a large displacement (111 cubic inch) V-Twin down there. Lots of torque, silky smooth power delivery, and a surprising amount of lean angle added up to a very pleasant machine.
Two major faults that I could not get past:
Slow. Really Slow. I was shocked. I do not know what I expected but it was not this. It is about even with the older 96 cubic inch HD Street Glide although it is more refined and smoother.
Hot. Really, HOT! Those of you whining about engine heat on your Gen2 should ride one of these things. The head on the rear cylinder is just below your right leg and in Baton Rouge traffic today at 86 degrees it was extremely uncomfortable. I have ridden my FJR and my Honda ST1300 at low speeds when the temp was above 100 and it was nothing like this.
I thanked the ride leaders, and I got my scorched butt back onto my FJR and headed home. The FJR felt like a 250CC dirt bike after riding the Chieftain. Except it was much, much faster.