This thread makes me think of the old Harley line...
"If I have to explain, you just won't understand."
h34r:
I've had my Harley for 9 years and I love it. It's cold-blooded, cantankerous, loud, slow (for a bike), it doesn't really handle very well, the brakes suck... But I love it. Some days I think it has bi-polar disorder. It'll be running great, just purring right on down the road... Then, all of a sudden, it'll start kicking and backfiring and sputtering and basically fighting me down the road. But, I love it. It has more personality than any bike I have ever owned.
The FJR is one helluva bike, but the 2 are completely different. With the FJR, you tell it to go, and it goes. Tell it to stop, it stops. Tell it to turn, it turns. No muss, no fuss.
Harleys also have a completely different 'feel' compared to other bikes I've ridden. I'm not talking about the vibration here - even though it shakes pretty good at idle, at speed it's actually quite smooth. Harleys
feel big... The Jap bikes I've owned seemed to always try to feel small. The controls of my Harley have a certain
heft to them, while the controls on the FJR try to be light.
So, Harley's 'lifestyle marketing' aside, just speaking about the motorcycles, to me, a Harley is a completely different riding experience compared to the FJR.
As for the Harley riders... Well, it's just like any other cross-section of society. I've ridden with riders who are bad-asses, and I've ridden with some who are as white-collar as can be. The love of the Harley is the common denominator, though. I've ridden with some amazinlgly talented riders, and I've ridden with complete posers - in a previous life, the ex-SO and I would ride with some friends of hers - he had a Heritage Softail that rarely came out of the garage. When it did, they rode 2-up, no helmets. He was a terrible driver. He scared the crap out of me. He couldn't hardly take the bike through a sweeper and hold a line. Scary, 'cause he usually would gravitate toward the center line. I decided that I'll never ride with him again.