frito1
Well-known member
Took the FJR for it's first extended trip last weekend. The weather was hot, but I just caught a couple of showers. I was hoping the FJR would be my new long distance ride, but the jury's still out on that.
The Good: The power and nimble handling of the FJR makes busy interstate type traffic almost tolerable. If you can see an opening you can be in that opening. My bike has MC Cruise installed, I've used it a bit, but this weekend it was priceless. This is my first bike with cruise and I like it better than I ever thought I would. The bar risers and Yamaha touring windshield were well worth the price paid for them. The rework of the seat by Rick Mayer worked out well. I wish I was 50 pounds lighter and 20 years younger so I could enjoy the ergonomics a little more, but the overall package is now tolerable. Coming home Sunday I rode 855 miles straight through.
The Bad: Like I said it was hot. The on board thermometer read 99-101 most of the day. By mid afternoon I was suffering more than I ever have because of heat on a bike. Not all the bikes fault, but it was a factor. Turn signals, WTF, self cancelling signals have been around on bikes for 20 years, come on Yamaha, get with it. Side opening saddle bags? Who thought that was a good idea? I'm sure an engineer somewhere thought they were great, but if you'd ever used top loading hard bags you would throw rocks at the FJR bags. The bag liners are nice, but unless you never open the bags till you reach your destination it's still a compromise.
The Funny: People can't figure out the FJR, they just can't get the brand right unless it's in bold letters on the tank. I've pretty much de-badged my bike so it's designation isn't obvious to the untrained eye. The sport bike guys I saw always gave me a positive reaction. Japanese cruiser guys avoided me like the plague. I got mixed reactions from the HD crowd, many were interested, thinking like me the FJR would be a great second bike. Others didn't acknowledge my existence. At one gas stop a cager hopped out of his car and asked if I had seen the new 1600? He said I would be ready to trade soon as I saw one. I reckon he thought I was riding a bimmer. Real BMW riders glared from a distance.
All in all, a fun and interesting trip. The FJR performed flawlessly (I didn't expect anything less) and I covered a lot of miles in a hurry. Oh yeah, fuel mileage was mediocre. 43 mpg going and 39 coming back by the same route. The only difference was a little bit cooler temps coming home. I'm at a loss as to the drop in mileage. Average speeds for the trip were 75-80 mph.
The Good: The power and nimble handling of the FJR makes busy interstate type traffic almost tolerable. If you can see an opening you can be in that opening. My bike has MC Cruise installed, I've used it a bit, but this weekend it was priceless. This is my first bike with cruise and I like it better than I ever thought I would. The bar risers and Yamaha touring windshield were well worth the price paid for them. The rework of the seat by Rick Mayer worked out well. I wish I was 50 pounds lighter and 20 years younger so I could enjoy the ergonomics a little more, but the overall package is now tolerable. Coming home Sunday I rode 855 miles straight through.
The Bad: Like I said it was hot. The on board thermometer read 99-101 most of the day. By mid afternoon I was suffering more than I ever have because of heat on a bike. Not all the bikes fault, but it was a factor. Turn signals, WTF, self cancelling signals have been around on bikes for 20 years, come on Yamaha, get with it. Side opening saddle bags? Who thought that was a good idea? I'm sure an engineer somewhere thought they were great, but if you'd ever used top loading hard bags you would throw rocks at the FJR bags. The bag liners are nice, but unless you never open the bags till you reach your destination it's still a compromise.
The Funny: People can't figure out the FJR, they just can't get the brand right unless it's in bold letters on the tank. I've pretty much de-badged my bike so it's designation isn't obvious to the untrained eye. The sport bike guys I saw always gave me a positive reaction. Japanese cruiser guys avoided me like the plague. I got mixed reactions from the HD crowd, many were interested, thinking like me the FJR would be a great second bike. Others didn't acknowledge my existence. At one gas stop a cager hopped out of his car and asked if I had seen the new 1600? He said I would be ready to trade soon as I saw one. I reckon he thought I was riding a bimmer. Real BMW riders glared from a distance.
All in all, a fun and interesting trip. The FJR performed flawlessly (I didn't expect anything less) and I covered a lot of miles in a hurry. Oh yeah, fuel mileage was mediocre. 43 mpg going and 39 coming back by the same route. The only difference was a little bit cooler temps coming home. I'm at a loss as to the drop in mileage. Average speeds for the trip were 75-80 mph.