All i read is blah blah blah 6th gear!
Getting close to NEPRT material!
So, if I asked, say: 'Would a sixth gear require a different vicosity oil?' we might go over the edge? :lol: :dribble:
All i read is blah blah blah 6th gear!
Getting close to NEPRT material!
It's always straw-man arguments with you anti-6th-gear morons.I could be wrong but my impression is that the bulk of riders pleading for a 6th gear come from a background of "high strung" bikes that have all their power in a narrow band (usually way up high). The 6 gears they got used to are needed to keep the bike "on power" in a wide bunch of situations.
The FJR's power band is so wide that it does fine without a 6th gear. With care, it can go from zero to 110+ mph in 3rd. Most have noted that an additional 6th would either be so high as to only be used above 80 or that the existing high/low boundaries would be kept and the different gears simply set more closely together (resulting in more stirring over any given section of road).
IOW: A 6th gear to assuage the conditioning of former sporters would bring little to the table.
And, yes, Fred, I wear my Curmudgeon badge proudly!
Companies like Quaife have, for decades, sold custom transmission gearsets for stock, racing, and popular motorcycles. If there were sufficient demand, one could (probably?) be sourced for the FJR. It would replace, directly, the stock gear-set -- no wider. In fact, Quaife replacement gear-sets can be had in many differing iterations: 4-speed, 5-speed, 6-speed, etc; close ratio, wide ratio... IOW, 'made to order'.Objections to the change are immediately obvious: It would make heavier an already heavy bike, and it would make it wider, affecting cornering clearance; it would require more parts and compexity and would increase the bike's cost; it would require a virtual re-engineering of the tranny and drive train necessitating expensive R&D and testing in a down market; and it's doubtful it would affect sales once revised in that direction. Would anyone buy an FJR that was essentially the same bike/engine that it is now except it would be heavier, slower, wider, and more expensive?
With enough money, I can customize anything into anything else. I could turn an FJR into a Harley Ultraglide. I could even turn what you've just written into something that makes sense. But alas I don't have that kind of money. We're talking about a mass-produced bike for a mass audience, not a one-off. I said YAMAHA wouldn't spend the money to put out a 6-speed FJR 1300 because it wouldn't result in enough increased sales to offset the substantial costs. I did not say that it couldn't be done at all by anyone stupid enough to spend the very large amount of money it would cost in return for the very small benefit.While your rambling soliloquy makes some salient points, some just 'don't hold water' -- to wit:
Companies like Quaife have, for decades, sold custom transmission gearsets for stock, racing, and popular motorcycles. If there were sufficient demand, one could (probably?) be sourced for the FJR. It would replace, directly, the stock gear-set -- no wider. In fact, Quaife replacement gear-sets can be had in many differing iterations: 4-speed, 5-speed, 6-speed, etc; close ratio, wide ratio... IOW, 'made to order'.Objections to the change are immediately obvious: It would make heavier an already heavy bike, and it would make it wider, affecting cornering clearance; it would require more parts and compexity and would increase the bike's cost; it would require a virtual re-engineering of the tranny and drive train necessitating expensive R&D and testing in a down market; and it's doubtful it would affect sales once revised in that direction. Would anyone buy an FJR that was essentially the same bike/engine that it is now except it would be heavier, slower, wider, and more expensive?
Then there are the many motorcycles with 'casette' style transmissions -- different gear-sets for different purposes -- 'at the ready'.
I maintain your 'dire predictions' about the inability/un-likelyhood of more/different gearboxes is largely histrionics.
The sidebar wasn't completely right on . . . as when he described his black 2009 FJR, subject of a dozen or so photos spread throughout the article, as ". . . my big blue Yam . . . ."The sidebar about the FJR was right on
Because, as we all well know the '06 Blue was the best there ever was. It was a Freudian slip.The sidebar wasn't completely right on . . . as when he described his black 2009 FJR, subject of a dozen or so photos spread throughout the article, as ". . . my big blue Yam . . . ."The sidebar about the FJR was right on
Some have tried to make the FJR into a slightly smaller/much cheaper Gold Wing -- but an H-D Ultraglide -- now, there's a stretch....With enough money, I can customize anything into anything else. I could turn an FJR into a Harley Ultraglide.While your rambling soliloquy makes some salient points, some just 'don't hold water' -- to wit:
Companies like Quaife have, for decades, sold custom transmission gearsets for stock, racing, and popular motorcycles. If there were sufficient demand, one could (probably?) be sourced for the FJR. It would replace, directly, the stock gear-set -- no wider. In fact, Quaife replacement gear-sets can be had in many differing iterations: 4-speed, 5-speed, 6-speed, etc; close ratio, wide ratio... IOW, 'made to order'.Objections to the change are immediately obvious: It would make heavier an already heavy bike, and it would make it wider, affecting cornering clearance; it would require more parts and compexity and would increase the bike's cost; it would require a virtual re-engineering of the tranny and drive train necessitating expensive R&D and testing in a down market; and it's doubtful it would affect sales once revised in that direction. Would anyone buy an FJR that was essentially the same bike/engine that it is now except it would be heavier, slower, wider, and more expensive?
Then there are the many motorcycles with 'cassette' style transmissions -- different gear-sets for different purposes -- 'at the ready'.
I maintain your 'dire predictions' about the inability/un-likelyhood of more/different gearboxes is largely histrionics.
There may not be that much money...? I'm merely an amateur (un-like some...)I could even turn what you've just written into something that makes sense. But alas I don't have that kind of money.
Your "cost" argument may 'hold water' (partly?) -- I'll allow you some traction there. But, your "heavier, wider, more complex' comments just don't fly.We're talking about a mass-produced bike for a mass audience, not a one-off. I said YAMAHA wouldn't spend the money to put out a 6-speed FJR 1300 because it wouldn't result in enough increased sales to offset the substantial costs. I did not say that it couldn't be done at all by anyone stupid enough to spend the very large amount of money it would cost in return for the very small benefit.
Yes, I see your point about heavier/wider. I wrote a long rebuttal defending my position, and when I got to the end of that I found my own argument to be illogical and stupid. Assuming Yamaha was willing to redo the tranny of the FJR1300, they could redesign it to fit within the existing case and weight. I take back heavier/wider, but not more complex: 6 gears is by definition more complex than 5. I don't need an engineering degree to figure that out. Know how I know? Because 6 is more than 5. More gears, more dogs, more parts, more complexity.Your "cost" argument may 'hold water' (partly?) -- I'll allow you some traction there. But, your "heavier, wider, more complex' comments just don't fly.
Boy do I hate when that happens.I wrote a long rebuttal defending my position, and when I got to the end of that I found my own argument to be illogical and stupid.
It's a big club.Boy do I hate when that happens.I wrote a long rebuttal defending my position, and when I got to the end of that I found my own argument to be illogical and stupid.
I've deleted some perfectly crafted, well worded posts just before clicking the "add reply",
'cause when I proof read it I realized I was full of it! :lol:
Wow, you use all five!I'd say more if I could type faster. I'm limited here, having only five fingers on each hand. Now if I just had six . . .
Enter your email address to join: