Thursday, October 4, 2012

Sweeet-ah!

     10/03/2012
On the way home this evening, I stopped by Stahlman Powersports ( http://www.stahlmanpowersports.com/ ) to take a 2013 Victory motorcycle for a Demo Ride. There were 17 different models to choose from. Cruisers, baggers, tourers and a Ness Custom or two.

I had checked the Victory website earlier and decided I would test the Cross Roads Classic out if it were available ( http://www.victorymotorcycles.com/en-us/bagger/cross-roads/photos ).

It was, and I did!

It was beautiful, two-tone Burgundy & Khaki w/ Graphics, windshield, footboards, leather covered hard saddlebags, fuel-injected 106 Cubic Inch V-twin engine, Six-speed transmission, Electronic cruise control, ABS disc brakes front and rear.

After registering, and getting a quick run-down of bike specific controls, I took off through the South side of Rolla, through residential areas, to Highway 72. This is the first big twin I have ridden that actually required first gear on a few of the turns from one street on to another. Too slow, and second protested slightly, but had no trouble pulling out of it. I stopped briefly to let my wife and daughter have a look and try the passenger seat out, then continued on.

Cruising the neighborhood streets in third gear at 35mph is about right, and easy to reduce or increase the pace when when needed.

As I pulled on to the highway, I short shifted from first to second, then rolled on, not wanting to push it hard, but was impressed to see 50mph as I shifted to third, and no sign of a rev limiter. From third to fifth was uneventful, with solid, smooth acceleration.

The transmission shift is different than any other I have experienced. Your shifts, both up an down, are confirmed by an audible, forceful clunk. It's not hard to shift, but seems to shift hard. I only had one missed shift. I'm used to a sport touring posture, and after I realized no one had stolen the hardware (the shift lever and rear brake lever are much farther forward, at the end of the long, comfortable foot boards), I adapted quickly to the relaxed cruiser position.

Activation of the cruise control was immediate and smooth, no fluctuation in speed, a welcome surprise to what I had encountered on some of my similarly equipped touring bikes.

I'm pretty confident the Cross Roads Classic could maintain 75-80mph in fifth gear for sustained distances, but when I prompted the transmission into sixth and released the clutch, I started scanning the information center to see if the low oil pressure light was illuminated, or some indication that the engine had disengaged itself from the transmission. I'm sure sixth is "electric" mode, because it was golf cart smooth. The bike has little pulse from the engine to begin with, but this was an obvious reduction in vibration. A small increase in RPM seemingly translates into several MPH.

I only had it out for about 20 miles total, but the factory seat was as comfortable as any I can remember. The windshield was very effective, with little buffeting, not much notice of wind coming up from below and behind the windshield, though I was wearing a full face helmet.

The big bike turns in a little slower than my Honda Pacific Coast 800, but was very manageable, even at slower speeds. The brakes were spot on and well proportioned to the size and weight of the machine. Two and three-fingered operation of the front was not an issue, and the rear was firm, never felt grabby or unsettling.

I could easily get used to this within the first hundred miles. As a matter of fact, the ride home on the Honda was cautious for the first twenty miles, while I readjusted to the change in geometry and character.

I will probably have to wait and find one of these second or third-hand before I can wear out a set of tires on one, but if money were not an object, there would only have been 16 bikes at the next Demo Ride on the schedule!

I would like to say "Thanks!" to Greg Stahlman and his staff, Victory Motorcycles and the Reps that were here today, for making this possible. I have long admired Victory's, this was the first one I've ever ridden, an I was NOT disappointed.
Anybody interested in a Honda PC800?
 I'd gladly trade art work for payments. Yeah, it's Mason jar, cane-sugar-sweet, Southern iced-tea good!
Maybe a one year, 25k mile test ride, rolling billboard? Greg? Victory?

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oh'