Rider gets stuck on back tire.

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Well, according to the comments in the ebaums post, she was able to complete the ride with the rest of the group, so she was not seriously injured. I often wonder how those pillions sit on the back of bikes with tiny pillion seats and nothing to hold on to. My wife (then girlfriend) almost slid off the back of my Kawasaki H1 back in '75 after we went over a bumpy RR crossing, and that bike had a full size seat. I put on a sissy bar after that.

 
Ya know... I'm surprised here...

All the sheep jokes, and other totally off colored responses to simple things like screwing on an oil filter... or dropping a nut...and NOTHIN? Not one off color response?...

I gotta say. I'm a little dissapointed.

I'll go first...

Caption: Redefining "Tramp Stamp"

Looking for love in all the wrong places!

I bet he wont be hittin' that for a while.

Hehehe...

She was just tryin' to get off!

(I'm done....I almost feel bad about this one... )

 
How about "Thank God he had on a big rubber"

"Surprised it wasn't a Harley, most girls like those big vibrators"

 
I've seen those things and thought they looked dangerous, but I never even considered the possibility of this happening.

Capture-1_zps60591aab.jpg


 
Squids will be squids. She would have missed the rear tire if not for the extended swing arm!
This must be in Florida.
Coming down on Florida are ya. Tags don't look Fl. And not that means much to squids anywhere, but state law says no vertical plate mounting. Besides, they dress like those Southpark cartoon kids. What state are they from again?
rolleyes.gif


Just firing back a little, but your right about those exposed tires from the extensions. Unguarded chains or belts make me think of bad possibilities too.

 
Squids will be squids. She would have missed the rear tire if not for the extended swing arm!

This must be in Florida.
Coming down on Florida are ya. Tags don't look Fl. And not that means much to squids anywhere, but state law says no vertical plate mounting. Besides, they dress like those Southpark cartoon kids. What state are they from again?
rolleyes.gif


Just firing back a little, but your right about those exposed tires from the extensions. Unguarded chains or belts make me think of bad possibilities too.
I think the comment you are responding to was a reference to the several extended swingarms in the clip. (They're really only useful to keep the front end down for straight-line drag racing acceleration but dramatically diminish handling performance on twisty roads, especially with 220 or wider tires like those.) You don't see those things much on sport bikes (except at a drag strip) anywhere that twisty roads predominate as favorite riding venues, and it's no secret that twisty roads are probably rarer in Florida than in any other state.

If you want a heavy dose of having your state regularly dissed for all manner of imagined (or otherwise attributable) deficiencies, try living in California (where it's pretty much undisputed that we have all manner of outstanding twisty motorcycle roads).

 
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Squids will be squids. She would have missed the rear tire if not for the extended swing arm!

This must be in Florida.
Coming down on Florida are ya. Tags don't look Fl. And not that means much to squids anywhere, but state law says no vertical plate mounting. Besides, they dress like those Southpark cartoon kids. What state are they from again?
rolleyes.gif


Just firing back a little, but your right about those exposed tires from the extensions. Unguarded chains or belts make me think of bad possibilities too.
I think the comment you are responding to was a reference to the several extended swingarms in the clip. (They're really only useful to keep the front end down for straight-line drag racing acceleration but dramatically diminish handling performance on twisty roads, especially with 220 or wider tires like those.) You don't see those things much on sport bikes (except at a drag strip) anywhere that twisty roads predominate as favorite riding venues, and it's no secret that twisty roads are probably rarer in Florida than in any other state.

If you want a heavy dose of having your state regularly dissed for all manner of imagined (or otherwise attributable) deficiencies, try living in California (where it's pretty much undisputed that we have all manner of outstanding twisty motorcycle roads).
Or Arkansas. I saw some rather blatant Arkansas stereotypes in one of the threads about Erin moving here. But it's all in good fun.

We've also got some of the finest crooked roads around, but I still see a lot of the extended swingarms here. Bikes like those in the video aren't at all rare around Little Rock. I love catching them on crooked roads with my 14-year-old ZRX .... or my 2-month-old FJR ;)

 
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