Pierre
Well-known member
This is my limit
Yeah, it gets me when it drops to the frigid temps of 65F here (Orlando) and people start going "isn't it too cold to ride a bike?"I've ridden as low as 50 degrees with no problem! Ha!
-sunny Savannah GA.............................................(although not today so much)
Sometimes referred to (in 'weather parlance') as a: "Brass-Monkey Alert"My limit is I ride a few miles and then when I stop at a red light, I get off the seat and bounce up and down a few times. If I hear my balls clanking together, it's to cold.
My limit is I ride a few miles and then when I stop at a red light, I get off the seat and bounce up and down a few times. If I hear my balls clanking together, it's to cold.
My question is how cold can the bike handle before it has problems?
My question is how cold can the bike handle before it has problems?
Down to , but not actualy at, 0 degrees Kelvin.
The Yankee Freezer Burn ride went awesome! Thank you FredW for the tour-mister duties. Someone needs to make a Freezer Burn license plate bracket to go with the Butt Burner bracket.
We left home at 7:30 am when it was 31° (Kelvin I believe) and rode ~65 miles to the meeting point at Fiddleheads. Surprisingly, FJR after FJR rolled in. Everyone ordered two cups of coffee -- one hot cup per hand While us FJRheads were kibitzing and waiting for the sun to warm things up the Seacoast Sport Club rolled in on their concurrent Bridges of NH ride. If you ever want to know the difference between a Sport/Touring bike and a pure sport bike you only needed to look at the SSC riders. What a bunch of blue, shivering and shaking riders they were. I absolutely salute their love of riding to have braved and endured the ride they had to start the day :good: While cold, the FJR group was quite ok. My hat is off to the other FJR riders that made a 2+ hr ride just to ride. Dave, Ann you deserve something special for making your long and cold ride today!!!
My limit is I ride a few miles and then when I stop at a red light, I get off the seat and bounce up and down a few times. If I hear my balls clanking together, it's to cold.
If they clank, they're frozen solid and ya can't feel nothin' anyway. Might as well keep riding. I'm jus' sayin'.My limit is I ride a few miles and then when I stop at a red light, I get off the seat and bounce up and down a few times. If I hear my balls clanking together, it's to cold.
I can't gauge temperature using that method. Mine always "clank".
If they clank, they're frozen solid and ya can't feel nothin' anyway. Might as well keep riding. I'm jus' sayin'.My limit is I ride a few miles and then when I stop at a red light, I get off the seat and bounce up and down a few times. If I hear my balls clanking together, it's to cold.
I can't gauge temperature using that method. Mine always "clank".
The Gen 1 FZ1 I ride has carb heaters... cycles warm coolant through the bodies of the four 37mm Mikunis. It's a little problematic during long hard freeway runs on 95° F summer days. They get so warm that if you stop at a rest area or for fuel they boil the gas out of the bowls. You almost need to choke them to get going again.The coldest temp I've ridden in was -4F. No carb icing...in fact the Z900 Kaw ran like a scalded dog!
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