6string
Silver Member
Anyone remember the 2 stroke bikes of the 60s and 70s? Take the baffles out of the pipes and it sounded like a herd of chainsaws on steroids. :thumbsup:
Anyone remember the 2 stroke bikes of the 60s and 70s? Take the baffles out of the pipes and it sounded like a herd of chainsaws on steroids. :thumbsup:
Harley could use information in their advertising. Sounds like a good way to sell motorcycles.
Why yes I do.... my friend had a Kawasaki 500 two stroke triple and that got me into my Yamaha RD400 two stroke twin. I swapped the stock exhaust for SpecialistII expansion chambers, got larger carbs, swapped out the reed valves with lighter ones from a 250 so they'd open faster, had the pistons machined to open the intake and exhaust ports faster and took two teeth off the front sprocket. Made for an extremely fast little street rocket. Surprised I didn't get killed. Never dumped it. Ran like a pooch under 5000rpm, but as soon as you hit 5 it would snap you back and lift the front tire in the first three gears well up to a bazillion rpms. I had a set of wheelie bars that I could easily swap out for a day at the drag strip. Best I pulled was (as I recall, as I gave up riding it when we had kids in the early 90s), 11.92 at 119mph in the quarter. Not bad for a 25 cubic inch motor! :laughing: I still have it, but I took it apart so I couldn't ride it. It was evil. Anyone remember the movie Christine? Well, that bike is my Christine.Anyone remember the 2 stroke bikes of the 60s and 70s? Take the baffles out of the pipes and it sounded like a herd of chainsaws on steroids. :thumbsup:
I still have it, but I took it apart so I couldn't ride it. It was evil. Anyone remember the movie Christine? Well, that bike is my Christine.![]()
I don't care who you are,,,,, that's funny!!!!
My Wife would roll her eyes and say "Typical Male Logic".![]()
Why yes I do.... my friend had a Kawasaki 500 two stroke triple and that got me into my Yamaha RD400 two stroke twin. I swapped the stock exhaust for SpecialistII expansion chambers, got larger carbs, swapped out the reed valves with lighter ones from a 250 so they'd open faster, had the pistons machined to open the intake and exhaust ports faster and took two teeth off the front sprocket. Made for an extremely fast little street rocket. Surprised I didn't get killed. Never dumped it. Ran like a pooch under 5000rpm, but as soon as you hit 5 it would snap you back and lift the front tire in the first three gears well up to a bazillion rpms. I had a set of wheelie bars that I could easily swap out for a day at the drag strip. Best I pulled was (as I recall, as I gave up riding it when we had kids in the early 90s), 11.92 at 119mph in the quarter. Not bad for a 25 cubic inch motor! :laughing: I still have it, but I took it apart so I couldn't ride it. It was evil. Anyone remember the movie Christine? Well, that bike is my Christine.![]()
After reading through many of the threads referring to the loud pipes as if were a safety feature to save life's, I got to thinking if I have ever heard a Harley with a Horn:laughing: ( No I have'nt ) Perhaps the rev of their engines is their Horn, Rumble Rumble Beep-beep!![]()
My cousin had a Kawi 500 triple two stroke. Scariest thing I ever rode! :shocked: Wheelie magnet.
I like my Honda CB900 Custom. Comfy, plenty of power, handles well enough, and best of all, heavy and grounded!
As for my rather scathing post earlier, I was merely giving my riding impressions based on what I like out of a motorcycle and my personal impressions on the Heritage Softtail... just as my friend requested. My family and friends collectively ride just about every make imaginable. We ride together and give each other a little lighthearted grief around the campfire. In the end, all we care about is that you ride... and have a sense of humor.
I still like mufflers.
Joe