415-970-9670
Transcription
415-970-9670
News, Clues & Rumors Volume XXVIII, Issue 6 Publication Date: June 22, 2010 On The Cover: Sain bainuu! Greetings from Mongolia. On the road waaaaay less traveled with CityBike art director, Alan Lapp. Contents: News, Clues & Rumors. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Events. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Pashnit Tour of the Sierras. . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Two Geezers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Ghengis Gone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Chrome Bag Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Brenda Bates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Dr. Gregory Frazier. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Ed Hertfelder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Maynard Hershon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Marketplace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Classified Ads. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 AFM Report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 CityBike Staff: PO Box 10659 Oakland, CA 94610 phone:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415/282-2790 e-mail: . . . . . . . . . . . . [email protected] Find us online: citybike.com News ‘n Clues: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Staff Editor-in-Chief:. . . . . . . . . . Gabe Ets-Hokin Senior Editor: . . . . . . . . . . Robert Stokstad Chief of the World Adventure Affairs Desk:. . . . . . . . . Dr. Gregory Frazier Staff Photographers: — Robert Stokstad — Gary Rather Art Director: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Alan Lapp Advertising Sales: . . . . . . . . . Kenyon Wills Publisher: . . . . . . . . . . . . .EHW Partnership Contributors: Brenda Bates, Dan Baizer, Craig Bessenger, John Bishop, John Burns, Joanne Donne, John D’India (RIP), David Edwards, Mike Felder, Dr. Gregory Frazier, Will Guyan, Joe Glydon (RIP), Brian Halton, Maynard Hershon, Ed Hertfelder, Harry Hoffman, Otto Hofmann, Jon Jenseon, Patrick Moriarty, Lary Orlick, Bob Pushwa, Gary Rather, Mike Solis, Ivan Thelin, James Thurber, Adam Wade. CityBike is published on or about the 15th of each month. Editorial deadline is the 1st of each month. Advertising information is available on request. Unsolicited articles and photographs are always welcome. Please include a full name, address and phone number with all submissions. We reserve the right to edit all manuscripts. Web hosting and design by mojotown.com ©2010, EHW Partnership. Citybike Magazine is distributed at over 150 places throughout California each month. Taking more than a few copies at any one place without permission from EHW Partnership, especially for purposes of recycling, is theft and will be prosecuted to the full extent of civil and criminal law. MOTO MELEE CityBike Magazine Delivery Truck Rescues 2010 Moto Melee Participants From Certain Doom. The CityBike Armored Magazine Carrier was driven with relish and considerable bouncing over the threeday, 800+ mile Moto Melee course this year as a chase vehicle. Along for the ride was a threerail motorcycle trailer with hydraulic dropdown ramp, put to good use carrying air-cooled vintage machinery distressed by actually being ridden out of their respective zip codes. for a night of feverish wrenching and beersoaked spectating/advice giving under the beam of headband-mounted flashlights until well after midnight. With several unfortunate, but unsurprised entrants taken out in the first day by The event, open to any pre-1971 motorcycle (or scooter) (with favor CityBike Armored Magazine Carrier. Photo by Craig Howell given to “interesting mechanical issues, the CityBike Armored machines”), started in San Francisco near Magazine Carrier was completely full with the Golden Gate Bridge with about 75 four dead bikes for the second day—a bikes. Highlights included Lou Sullivan’s journey across the state from I-5/Red Bluff 1966 Yamaha YM-1, Craig Howell’s to Fort Bragg over the magnificently paved, 1959 BMW R50, David Fuller’s 1966 sensuously winding, and lightly patrolled Benelli Wards Riverside, Les Baker’s (!) Highway 36. 1955 MotoGuzzi Falcone, Mat Pretiss’ 1955 Velocette Venom, Pete Young’s 1916 When they say “interesting” bikes are Excelsior Model 16 and flocks of Triumphs, welcome, interesting bikes do show up. BMWs, Moto Guzzis, Nortons, and Jamie Kerrick of Munroe motors was in the Ducatis. truck on day two after his Triumph Twenty Day one consisted of a “paved” route with a One seized its shift mechanism. The interesting thing about Jamie’s bike? It’s tasty dirt road option. With the exception been meticulously restored to a 100-point of the washboard road out to the Bodie show bike, has participated in “The Art ghost town off highway 395, News, Clues of the Motorcycle” at the Guggenheim, has not seen a road worse off than the surfaces encountered on middle of the first and was now in the process of having the veneer of perfection worn off by actual use day, requiring speeds below 25 miles per hour for safety and filling retention - a true in the real world—a fate that sadly does not await most spit-and-polish restorations. adventure which is probably far easier on Motorcycles being what they inherently two wheels with 4000 lbs less weight. A are, NCR fully endorses real-world use of true challenge to both rider and machine all machines. We were also impressed by through stunningly beautiful & empty the camaraderie, generosity, and patience areas of the state! For more on that, use present in the group when someone’s a map online and check out Berryessa Knoxville Road (Napa) and Leesville Road machine failed to continue working. Rather than going on for a personal best on the (Williams) the Google street view was course, a broken bike generated a swarm of available on each road when News, Clues concerned participants all willing to help, last checked. with explanations about how a potato could Reports from the (optional) dirt section be used as a condenser claimed that the unpaved sections were in a pinch and other good for high speeds - the vintage bikes old mechanics’ tales. which emerged looked simply fabulous in the tan dust from that segment. After the Day Three was a spectacular dirt track or suspension proving ground run roads were down traversed, all participants proceeded north through the scorching heat of the central valley to Red Bluff’s famous Super 8 discount hotel August 2010 | 3 | CityBike.com the California Coast through the redwood empire and back to the more familiar areas around Tomales and Point Reyes. Attrition was comparatively light—if your air-cooled monster can survive the heat and climbing found in the first two days, day three is a comparative cake walk. Congratulations went to Keith Munroe of Hampshire, England, who’d flown in, borrowed a bike, and had ridden the chase truck most of the first two days, with fiddling being done on his borrowed Triumph T140V in between. Third time was the charm and he made the entire day with the only complaint being some monkey-butt symptoms. The entire event was capped by a gettogether at Chenery Park restaurant in the Glen Park area (worth a visit!) for a really enjoyable awards banquet. Event gets five out of five stars for organization, quality of the experience, and choice of obscure and fun-to-ride California back roads. Motomeelee.com for more information and photos. I LOVE MAN Moto Melee participant Andrew Holmes returned from dinner in Red Bluff in the heat with his shirt off and displaying his recently added tattoo of the crest from the Isle of Man (which hosts the famous Motorcycle Time Trials annually). As soon as he entered the compound, someone immediately twisted the pronunciation of “Isle of Man” into “I-LOVE-MAN”, and got most of the group to chant that repeatedly whenever he walked by, proving that even the most dedicated of us are always subject to some good humored hazing if we give our buddies even the slightest opening to do so. ERRATA In our story “Yelp? Help!,” (July, 2010) we erroneously reported Jenn Bromme, owner of Werkstatt Motorcycles (werkstattsf. com)admitted Yelp contained bad reviews of her shop “from former employees and customers with unrealistic demands,” when, in fact, she never said anything of the kind. This statement implies she has disgruntled former employees— extrememly unlikely, as Jenn goes out of her way to provide excellent pay, benefits and working conditions for her employees— and that she feels her customer’s demands are unreasonable in any way, which is simply not the case. CityBike regrets the error and will work harder at checking facts and confirming quotes in the future, except for the stuff we just make up. SUZUKI COME-BACKI Did you miss the opportunity to buy a hot-off-the-assembly-line 2010 GSX-R or V-Strom? If so, take heart: on July 19, the company announced a limited return to the USA market after shipping next to nothing to dealers for the 2010 model year. As of right now, the only models Suzuki announced for 2011 are the 2011 V-Strom 650 ABS, 2011 DR650SE, 2011 DRZ400S, 2011 Hayabusa, 2011 Boulevard S40, 2011 RM-Z250, 2011 RM-Z450, 2011 TU250 and the 2011 Boulevard M109R and Boulevard M109R Limited. The R85 motocrosser will also be available, as well as a number of quad models. These models doubtless give a snapshot of Suzuki’s best-selling models; everything in this list was available in 2009 (and 2008, for that matter), although the RM-Z250 and RM-Z450 motocrossers are updated. But the release states this is the “first big wave” of new models, implying that there is more to come; good news for roadracers and sportbike enthusiasts craving a new GSX-R. spent months in the hospital and lost a leg. Felicia...well, she’s still driving around. She’s hired defense attorney Rob Amparan (who defended accused Jon Benet Ramsay killer and kiddie pornographer John Mark Karr), who managed to delay the preliminary hearing for something like 18 months. Finally, Judge Cynthia Lee started getting annoyed and scheduled the preliminary hearing for July 14th. At the hearing—attended by Astrid and a dozen of her helmet-clutching supporters,—Amaparan managed to secure yet another continuance, this one until August 25th. The word is Amaparan wants his expert to examine the wrecked scooter as well as three years of accident reports from the intersection. Was it a good strategy to wait out what may have been the worst year of the Great Depression by almost completely withdrawing from the market? Since we don’t have access to 2010 motorcycle sales numbers, that’s a tough call to make, but it’s clear Suzuki is still alive and kicking. And that’s good news for the industry as well as motorcycle consumers. www.suzukicycles. com. In the courtroom, News, Clues saw Stenson for the first time—a perfectly normallooking person, which triggered much internal dialogue about the banality of evil—with a friend and an older woman, presumably her mother. We asked a paralegal friend of Astrid’s about the case, as she follows it very closely, and she told us that Stenson has no money of her own, and so will pay nothing aside from basic liability insurance coverage. And yet, she is free on $50,000 bail and has managed to pay tens of thousands of dollars to Amparan, who probably doesn’t work cheap—$400 an hour, is what another attorney present speculated. We feel that justice will be at least partially served, with Stenson getting prison time and her family probably $100,000 poorer thanks to Amparan. We will continue to keep you updated. JOY OF SIX BMW isn’t happy blowing your mind once every 20 years. Now, it’s once a year. Last year, it was the totally un-BMW-like S1000RR superbike, and while we should have seen it coming last year when the company showed its six-cylinder prottype musclebike (“Milan Madness,” 12/2009), we didn’t think an actual streetbike would come of it in less than a year. JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED For those of you just joining us, last January scooter enthusiast and journalist Astrid Gunter-Molzow was struck and badly injured by allegedly intoxicated Felicia Stenson, an Oakland woman with a history of DUI-related injury “accidents.” Astrid Felicia Stenson on trial, artists rendering. Well, here it is: BMW has announced two touring models with the compact 1600cc, 160 hp motor. There will be a GT and a more-luxurious GTL. Unlike the 1000, these bikes are dripping with BMW-iness. Comfortable, wind protection, luggage, and farkles and features galore, including active headlamps that track the road as the bike leans. No word on specs or pricing (now this bike will be expensive!), but you can visit BMW’s K1600 microsite at tourer-2010-en.com. BLOWING THE LID OFF Motorcyclist Fires Dexter Ford Over Helmet Standards Articles Hell For Leather’s Wes Siler did an analysis of the recent firing of long-time Motorcyclist editor Dexter Ford (Editor at Extra Large) recently. Read the full piece here: hellforleathermagazine.com/2010/07/ leaked-docs-show-motorcyclist.html Some may recall Ford’s scintillating expose on helmet safety standards published in Motorcyclist in 2005. Ford’s findings questioned long-revered Snell helmet standards and indicated that a cheapo $79 Chinese-made DOT-standard helmet may actually be safer in a direct-impact crash than an expensive Snell-certified one. This got a lot of people’s attention. It would appear from the piece that Ford’s findings also ruffled a few well-established feathers among Motorcyclist’s helmet advertisers who charge a premium for a helmet with Snell certification. In a second Motorcyclist article in 2007, Ford indicated that the Snell testing standards allow a more-rigid helmet that could transmit too much deadly force to the brain in a crash rather than absorb and deform as intended. You can review Ford’s articles at motorcyclist.com. Two years later, in 2009, Ford did a third related article for the New York Times. By this time Snell had, without ever admitting its standards were outdated or flawed, stated it was revising its testing methods and standards. Did this change the tune coming from Japan’s helmet industry? Ford knew about Snell’s proposed changes before he penned the N.Y. Times piece but pursued Snell nonetheless—and with a vengeance. Apparently this was too much for the honchos at Motorcyclist (or their parent company, Source Interlink) to bear, and Ford’s freelance relationship was ended. All this is detailed in Wes Siler’s Hell For Leather piece, including a series of email exchanges from Brian Catterson, Motorcyclist’s Editor (and former CityBike contributor) to Ford. Here is an excerpt from Siler’s piece: “The emails, which Ford confirmed for us are the real thing, include an apparent assertion by Catterson that major helmet makers threatened to withdraw advertising in his magazine due to Ford’s New York Times piece. That same email then quotes Catterson as saying, “I’m getting serious heat over this, to the tune of threatening my job unless I do something about you.”” they also have a very close (and dependent) relationship to helmet manufacturers. In fact, Snell staff are flown to Japan every year to do research. They also visit manufacturers in Italy and Korea. It’s clear the Snell-labeled helmets’ dominance of the helmet market has been put at risk by Dexter Ford’s articles. But since Snell has now revised its testing standards to allow a less-stiff shell and other alterations indicates Ford may have been on to something; these changes mean helmet manufacturers have had to revise their manufacturing methods and possibly materials to conform to new standards, all because of one nosy journalist and his unrelenting effort to open a can of worms—and prove a point. adventure model since the current 1050cc Tiger. It’ll be based around the 675 Daytona’s Triple, punched out to 770cc. It’ll be pretty dirtoriented, with a 19-inch front wheel and just over 400 pounds of heft to schlep around. There will also be a revision of the 1050 Tiger, which like the current model, will be more pavement-focused. We can also expect a replacement for the 6-year-old 1050 Speed Triple. Expect to hear more about these models in the coming months. NEXT NINJA The Japanese Big Four have been quiet lately, especially in the sportbike category. Website MotorcycleUSA. The real focus of Siler’s Hell For Leather com almost skipped its annual piece is on journalistic integrity. It makes supersport shootout because the case that Motorcyclist’s Catterson there were no new 600-class bikes to sold Ford out, an unwise move and one test for 2010—something that hasn’t Motorcyclist might pay for in credibility happened for a long time. But Kawasaki (and eventually advertising revenues) has stepped up to the plate with a new in the industry and among readers. The ZX-10R, rumored to be lighter, faster Ford firing also implies that both Shoei and boasting just as much electronic and Arai may have been complicit in the firing or meddling in editorial content and wizardry as the BMW S1000RR, influence peddling. This is a big No No, and currently king of the sportbike hill. Not a lot of official info about the Motorcyclist knows this. bike—except a teaser site at kawasakiIt’s no surprise to long-time CityBike challenge.com—but NCR chatted readers that magazines like Motorcyclist with a secret source in Kawasaki who do the bidding of corporate interests and confirmed that indeed, it is all that. will never enter into controversy without a trap door way out to cover their corporate BRAMMO BLAMMO! bottom line. Was Dexter Ford sacrificial? Dirck Edge at MotorcycleDaily.com had this to say about the Brammo Empulse, the Dexter, there will always be an open company’s new streetfighter-styled, 100 desk for you at CityBike. (He can’t have mph electric roadster: mine! -ed.) —Pat Moriarty “Tired of reading about electric motorcycles that can barely keep up with Moriarty emailed both Bret Milan and boulevard traffic? Bikes that might travel It would appear Catterson hung Ford out Rick Menapace, Shoei and Arai’s respective 40 miles, or less, before dropping dead at to dry after previously encouraging him P.R. reps, for responses. They both the side of the road? We all knew electric to go ahead with the articles. Lots of back vigorously denied that their companies motorcycle technology would march peddling and revision going on here, as you had anything to do with the firing, and forward quickly, sort of like having to can imagine. that they would never attempt to exert that replace your computer due to obsolescence kind of pressure—or even threaten to pull every year or so (at least in the old days). In 2006, after the first of Ford’s three advertising. After all, writes Menapace, Now it’s your cell phone that’s obsolete articles, CityBike interviewed the Snell Arai ran ads in Motorcyclist—both in print every six months. folks, spending the the day in Sacramento and online—when Ford’s story was on at their testing and research facility. Ford’s Let’s hope the Brammo Empluse has the website. “Why would we advertise first piece was brought up and we were a longer shelf life than modern cell in the place where the story appears, but given detailed explanations as to why it phones. This is starting to look like a real then “threaten” to pull our ads unless the was, in their opinion, not strictly correct. editor is fired for publishing a rehash of it in motorcycle, with decent range and plenty Not being experts, we couldn’t comment another publication completely out of their of speed—even for enthusiasts. Brammo on the veracity of Snell’s assertions, but announced the Empluse earlier today in control?” Rick has a point. keep in mind Snell’s testing is partly funded three variations, including the 6.0 (capable by the helmet industry and the foundation TRIUMPH ADVENTURERS of a 60-mile range), the 8.0 (80 miles), gets a small fee for every “Snell”-labeled and the 10.0 (100 miles). These ranges If you want to travel more minimally, helmet sold. Snell’s standards and testing come from a single charge from a normal, Triumph is announcing its first new methods may have been understandably standard U.S. influenced by Shoei and Arai, among the electrical first helmet OEMs to really use serious outlet. science, super high quality materials and sophisticated testing methods in the More construction of their helmets. Snell simply important, and follows their lead in an effort to establish impressive, is standards to make the safest helmets the Brammo possible. claim that each Empluse But Ford’s points and subsequent tests model “will have validity too. One major criticism be capable of was that Snell helmets did not allow for sustaining 100 differences in human head size and weight, mph.” This which can affect children and other small may not be riders. And while the Snell foundation is Hayabusa/ZXhonest and serious about testing helmets, 14 territory, August 2010 | 4 | CityBike.com August 2010 | 5 | CityBike.com but it is plenty for most riders in the real world . . . something you could not say about most of the electric motorcycles available up to this point. Brammo says Empluse deliveries will start next year at prices of $9,995 (for the 6.0), $11,995 (for the 8.0), and $13,995 (for the 10.0). According to Brammo, “the Empluse 10.0 may cost as little as $7,000 in certain states after Federal and State incentives.” Your CPA has all the details.” Moto-Blog Hell for Leather (hellforleather. com) ran a very in-depth story about the Empulse, pointing out that the bike has a power-to-weight ratio similar to a Suzuki SV650. There is no mention as to charging time, but one of Brammo’s engineers From 3:14 Daily Valencia @ 25th 415-970-9670 pointed out that even a short-duration charge session will be enough to get you home. Still, it’s not a long-distance bike, but we’ll bet it could work for a 150-mile Sunday ride, and you rode really slowly. News, Clues predicts that by 2020, e-bikes will have 300-mile ranges, 150-mph top speeds, 10-minute recharge times (at repurposed gas stations) and cost less than gas-powered models. Will anybody buy internal combustion vehicles if that comes true? Not many, we’d wager. SB 435 More from the It Could Happen Here department: California Senate Bill 435, authored by Senator Fran Pavley (D), has dropped the requirement that motorcycles get smog checks. Instead—and this may be worse—motorcycles 2011 and newer must retain stock mufflers and emissions systems. Find out how to fight it by calling ABATE at 760/956-1669 or go to abate. org. MIGUEL RETURNS TO LAGUNA designed Highland V-Twin motorcycle in the USA. On July 10th, three members of its executive management team perished in a fatal plane crash. According to the company, the three men wereì41year-old President Mats Malmberg, 51-year old Chief Operating Officer Chase Bales and 37year old Chief Financial Officer Damian Riddoch. The three were returning from a business trip to Detroit, when they had asked to make an emergency landing at Tulsa International Airport, but went down instead in a wooded area of a city park northwest of the airport, killing all three aboard.” CityBike sends its deepest sympathies to the families of the fallen men and wishes all the best to the company. You can find out more about Highland online: ushighland.com. The Thunder ($80) is made of polyurethane and mesh to keep you extra-cool, but it also armor and padding for protection. Find out more at alpinestars.com. AEROSTICH POWER MODULE AND WHEELCRATE WORKSTAND A couple of new ideas from Aerostich: the first is one that would make our own Gutter Mechanic weep with joy. It’s the WheelCrate Workstand, and he’s probably kicking himself for not thinking of it first. It’s basically a ramp that fits securely onto two heavy-duty milkcrates, raising your bike 11 inches off More evidence that AMA Pro Racing may not be as lame as we all initially thought. AMA mega-champ Miguel Duhamel will be making his return to the sport at the July 23 - 25 Red Bull U.S. Grand Prix at Mazda NEW STUFF Raceway Laguna Seca, his first AMA Pro ALPINESTARS GLOVES start since the 2009 Daytona 200. He’ll It’s starting to get hot out there, eh? be riding with the Moto Forza NovaTac Alpinestars agrees and releases two Racing Ducati. new sport-oriented shorty gloves, the Thunder and the SPS. The SPS HIGHLAND DEATHS ($90) uses perforated goatskin for Sad news from US Highland, a start-up comfort and armor for protection. company that’s building the Swedish- the floor so you can work without cramping your back too badly. When you’re done, just lean the contraption against your wall, or toss it into your truck—it would be great for club racers to take to the track. It’s available in steel ($237) or aluminum ($267). Milk crates not included. Also in the Aerostich catalog is the new PDM60 Power Distribution Module ($109). It lets you wire up six separate circuits for electrical accessories cleanly and safely, even with complex CANBUS wiring systems. You can program the different circuits for different functions (like leaving some powered when the key is off) and it’s waterproof. No more blown fuses! Both are available through Aerostich RiderWear House: 800/222-1994 or aerostich.com. SCHWANTZ APPAREL One of our greatest American racers, Kevin Schwantz—a CityBike subscriber, if you don’t mind a little namedropping—has just announced a line of clothing branded with his racing number, 34. Brand 34 shirts, sweats and ballcaps are available at the Kevin Schwantz School website: schwantzschool.com. WILEY-X GLOVES Not to be outdone in the summerglove department, sunglasses maker WileyX (a veteran-owned, Bay Area business) introduces the Hybrid glove. Designed for tactical work for soldiers and police, it should work well for riding: it’s made of goatskin in high-wear areas, with a Nomex/Kevlar blend elsewhere. The cool part: an injection-molded removable plastic knuckle guard can be slipped on our off in seconds. wileyx.com. IRON MAN Angry you only get to dress up like a superhero once a year? Apparently, so is UD Replicas, makers of the Batman motorcycling suit. The company now offers the Iron Man suit, styled to look like the suit worn in the movie Iron Man II. But it’s fully functional, with heavyweight cowhide, Cordura and Spandex inserts for comfort, and CE armor at the impact points. An entire suit—jacket, pants, gloves and boots—is available at udreplicas.com for $1099. Please stop rolling your eyes. August 2010 | 6 | CityBike.com August Events Every Wednesday Night 6:15 Top Shelf Motorcycles shop ride. Highway 1, over Mt. Tam, then down to Bolinas for dinner. “A night ride that many of used to do 20 years ago.” All are welcome. Top Shelf is at 757 Lincoln Ave, Door 19 in San Rafael.Call 415/453MOTO or go to the Top Shelf website: topshelfmotorcycles.com. Every Friday night ‘till Thanksgiving: TT and Short Track at Sand Hill Ranch 5:00 pm to 10:00 pm: Get out to Sand Hill Ranch (50 Camino Diablo, Brentwood, CA 94513) with your dirt-tracker and ride under the lights. Cushion track, knobbies work best.$25 for motorcycles, $25 for PeeWees and $5 for spectators. sandhillracing.com or call 925/240-6247. First Saturdays (August 7, September 4, October 2) Mission Motorcycles (6292 Mission St. Daly City, missionmotorcycles. com 650/992-1234) has Brown Bag Saturdays: 15% off all parts and accessories you can stuff into a brown paper sack. Third Sunday of each month (August 15, September 19, October 17) Moto-Sketch at Tosca Cafe: come and sketch a live model draped over a custom bike. $7 to sketch, free to just watch. Tosca Cafe, 242 Columbus Ave. in S.F. Thursday, July 23rd to Sunday, July 25th 2010 Red Bull USGP and AMA Pro Racing Road Racing Gigantic schedule combining MotoGP, Moto2, AMA SuperSport, Daytona Sportbike, and American Superbike action at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. Monterey’s Cannery Row turns into a huge sportbike-themed party with thousands of fans. Friday and Saturday nights will be the Leo Vince USA and Mazda Raceway Movie Night; watch short films from the Bostrom Bros, Michael Jordan as well as the documentaries Faster and The Doctor will be shown on the giant 30-by-10-foot scoring tower, visible from Corkscrew Hill. It starts at 8:00 pm, and it’s free! You can also pick up discounted tickets to the event at Mission Motorcycles: missionmotorcycles.com or call 650/9921234. The full event schedule can be found at mazdaraceway.com or call 831/242-8201 for updates. Saturday, July 31st, 2010 Calistoga Half-Mile National Flat-Track Napa County Fairgrounds, 1435 North Oak Street, Calistoga. AMA Pro Flat Track, the big boys come to battle it out in Sonoma! calistogaflattrack.com Monday, August 2nd, 2010 NORCAL Guzzi Bike Night Point Arena Here there be soul-sucking, spirit-crushing Interstate 5 Mountains Cool 6:00-8:00 pm, Applebee’s in Milpitas (84 Ranch Drive, off N. McCarthy Blvd.). All motorcycles welcome! Call John 510/3775575 for more details. Saturday, August 7 The Land of Good Riding Land Governator Here there be wineauxs th Valley Hot First Annual CityBike Mojo to Zen Ride 9:00 am-5:00 pm: Leave from Mojo Town (1345 East Francisco Blvd. in San Rafael) at 9:00 a.m. and ride up to Zen House in Point Arena. After a lunch of legendary Chile Verde tacos—provided by the good folks at Zen House to the first 50 riders— we’ll tackle the fabled twisty deliciousness of Skaggs Springs Road. Some of your favorite CityBike staffers and contributors will be along for the ride, we’ll have T-shirts and other goodies to give away, and we’ll even have a bike show/judging. For more info, email [email protected], or check our website and Facebook page for updates. Thursday, August 11th to Sunday, August 15th Oysters Famous Lighthouse Salt Water Buncha Bridges and Prisons Oakland San Francisco Here there be riots Here there be traffic Flux Capacitor Search Engines nual CityBike First An Mojo to Zen Ride Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance The classiest vintage car show in the world, the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance, has fallen in love with motorcycles. For the second year in a row, there will be a motorcycle class out on the 18th fairway this August 15. You can expect to see a stunning collection of vintage American bikes through 1959 spread across a variety marques. Admission is on the pricey side—$150 in advance, but you’ll see some incredible cars at this 60th anniversary show, too. 831/622-1700 or pebblebeachconcours. net San Rafael Join us for our first-ever Mojo-to-Zen CityBike ride! 8:30 am, Sat. August 7th, 2010 Meet us at MojoTown, 1345 E. Francisco Blvd. in San Rafael. At 1:00 pm at the Zen House, we'll provide a taco lunch for the first 50 riders, as well as prizes, a bike show and more! Visit CityBike on Facebook to confirm or email us: [email protected]. Monday, September 6 Open House at Dudley-Perkins H-D, 333 Corey Way, So. San Francisco. dpchd.com or call 650/737-5467. NORCAL Guzzi Bike Night 6:00-8:00 pm, Applebee’s in Milpitas (84 Ranch Drive, off N. McCarthy Blvd.). All motorcycles welcome! Call John 510/3775575 for more details. October 9th – 11th Always wanted to know more about motorcycle maintenance, but didn’t want to sign up for a three-year course? DUBBELJU Motorcycle Rentals in San Francisco and Master Mechanic David Harris of the Motorcycle Zen House in Point Arena have teamed up for the first PCTT—the Pacific Coast Toolbox Tour. Join us for three days of riding on N-CA back roads, two nights lodging in Elk and a crash course of wrenching on motorcycles. Riders of all experience levels are welcome. The tour is limited to five to nine riders. $390/Person dubbelju.com or call 415-495-2774 August 2010 | 7 | CityBike.com You Meet the Nicest People on a Pashnit Tour, While Discovering Your own Backyard silver Hayabusa. Four of the magnificent seven are women. Finally, all have professions that make you want to ask, “Now just what the hell is it you really do?” Economist, Consultant, Psychology Technician, Professor, Fire Department Captain, Physicist, and Motorcycle Tour Leader—these are the job titles that follow the names on the rider manifest. Story by Bob Stokstad, photos by Tim Mayhew and Bob Stokstad A lot of snow fell in the Sierras this winter, so much that Tioga Pass didn’t open until June 6th. The snowmelt makes the falls in Yosemite full and furious, and is reason enough for a motorcycle tour of the Sierra passes. Pashnit’s was scheduled for June 11-13. I signed up, remembering that I’d had a good time five years ago on the Central California tour. The social fabric of this trip starts forming as bikes collect at 7:00 am on a bright morning in Livermore. The hardware in the Starbuck’s parking lot is diverse: four sport tourers, two cruisers (including a genuine Harley-Davidson), and a scarred Triumph Tiger. Ogling the other riders’ bikes and asking penetrating questions like, “pretty good on gas, huh?” is a timeworn but proven icebreaker. This turns out to be a special tour for more reasons than just that white stuff piled by the side of the road and the melt running across the asphalt. We are a small group—only seven riders including leader Tim Mayhew, the ‘Pashnit guy’ on his signature blue and Pretty soon the riders’ briefing (rules, safety, and the importance of a late apex) is over and the grind across the central valley begins. All this routine flies out of mind once the interesting roads in the foothills and, especially, the approach to Yosemite begin. The Merced River rages in the canyon, purple wild flowers grow on the steep embankments, and the lack of traffic makes the double yellow tolerable. Best of all is the cool, pure mountain air we inhale. The route through Yosemite Valley never gets old—it’s one of the most beautiful places in the world, and it’s in our backyard. Not everyone in our group has been here before, at least not on a motorcycle. Watching someone experience Yosemite this way for the first time and seeing his or her reaction only heightens one’s own pleasure. It’s not quite group sex, but sensing the pleasure of companions definitely enhances the overall experience. At 9945 feet of elevation, Tioga Pass is the highest point we’ll reach on this ride, and we get to do it on the first day. It’s cold, very cold by now, the sky has darkened and snow flurries appear. Then the flurries turn to hail, BB-sized kernels of ice that first blow across the road and then carpet it. Riding on ice can be exciting, but this is not the time to test the limits of traction. By the time we arrive at Olmsted Point, the sky is once again blue against puffy white clouds and the sun is getting low, providing perfect light for a hike in the snow to get a better view of Half-Dome and the Valley in the distance. Lee Vining on SR 395 has two things going for it—proximity to August 2010 | 8 | CityBike.com Yosemite and a stunning view of Mono Lake. And these two things alone are enough to command a king’s ransom for a peasant’s accommodation. This irritates, but is forgotten quickly after a carafe of house red appears on the dinner table. It’s time to resume the conversation from lunchtime and find out more about each other. Ages span thirty years, with the low end not quite forty. Riding experience? Five months to fifty years. Personal histories? All over the map, judging by the little information shared the first evening. Most of all, the seven of us around the table develop a mutual respect, rooted in a common joy of riding. Crossing the Sierra twice in a day, to end up only 60 miles from where you started that morning, might seem like an odd thing to do, but it’s not that far to ride, and the passes—Sonora going west in the morning, and Ebbetts and Monitor going east in the afternoon—are a riding experience to match anything offered in an Edelweiss catalog. The day’s program includes a visit to Columbia, a gold-rush town that becomes an open-air museum on a Saturday afternoon. Not on the schedule, however, was the dead battery in one of the bikes when we returned from lunch. Tim made a few phone calls and located a used but serviceable battery in Sonora, we borrowed jumper cables from a friendly young fellow driving a car that looked like it could use them regularly, and soon we were all heading down the road. We decided to stay together to solve this problem rather than splitting up. The social fabric was nearly complete. If you’re ever looking for a place to stay on 395, head for August 2010 | 9 | CityBike.com Getting Enough These Days? Tim Mayhew is—Leading Tours and Moving Product The adorable, biker-friendly West Walker Motel. the West Walker Motel in Walker (pop. 665). The place is lovingly decorated and maintained by two ladies who have a “Bikers Welcome” sign on the office door and charge half the price you pay in Lee Vining. There’s good barbecue and beer across the street, too. On our last day, we ride over Monitor pass again, this time heading west. It’s not like we’re repeating something we already did. Traversing the pass in the opposite direction and at a different time of day is different experience. And this time we stop at the overlook and climb a pile of rocks to get a panoramic view of the Owens Valley, White Mountains, and the snow-capped peaks of the eastern Sierra. Carson Pass on the Kit Carson trail is the last bit of crisp, cold riding we have before beginning the descent into the heat of the Sierra foothills. It’s the first time I’ve been this way in over 25 years of riding in the Sierra and explains why taking a guided tour is something even the more experienced (mature, if you will) rider should do. Another reason, regardless of how long you’ve been on two wheels, is that meeting interesting people from different walks of life who share a common passion is stimulating, fun, and educational. We all realized this as we sat around the table at noon and performed the final ritual of the ride—exchanging photos. A gigabyte here, a few gigabytes there—everything fits on a thumb drive. The best part of the ride can’t be captured on silicon, of course, and those are the memories of these three days and the nice people who helped make them. What would you do if your wife (or girlfriend, partner, boyfriend, significant The tours, which Tim leads with this tour-company partner, Tim Regehr, are other, mother-in-law) told you to start a financially sound and, after expenses are motorcycle tour company? Would you paid, even leave a little cash on the table. say “No, not that, anything but that,” But that’s not enough to pay a mortgage or would you think you’d just been and support a family of five, which is told to embark on the career of your where a day job comes in handy. Tim was dreams? Tim a mortgage Mayhew’s loan officer. wife, Sarah, Well, we all told him, as know what he recalls, happened “to do there. motorcycle Fortunately, tours and just when start making that job some money.” tanked, Seems that another Tim had been branch of spending the Pashnit so much empire time riding took off. California’s Subscribers magnificent to California motorcycle Motorcycle roads and Roads and describing participants them on in the Pashnit the web sport-touring that Sarah forum would thought it occasionally was time not Tim Mayhew - The Pashnit Guy ask to Tim only to share to set up a “group buy” for hotly soughtthe joy but also bring home some cash. after items. And so Tim became a reseller Pashnit Motorcycle Tours was born. of motorcycle accessories. He began, Real life begins when you get out of in his words,”to move product,” and high school. Mayhew’s first 10 years rather successfully. Pashnit Moto has as measured on this clock were spent since sold over a million bucks of stuff, riding and wandering—discovering (or varying from accessory power sockets to developing an addiction to) motorcycle Zero Gravity windscreens. Tim works touring. A 6000 mile across-the-U.S. 12-hour days to keep up with e-mail ride started in mid-winter, followed by a orders, shipping and invoicing. But that 10,000 mile trip to Alaska in the spring pays the mortgage and will put at least were Mayhew’s introduction to serious three kids through college. There’s also a riding—single-malt scotch whisky for an Pashnit website devoted to aftermarket emerging ride-aholic. From Mississippi goodies just for the Hayabusa, Tim’s to the middle of Texas in 36 hours, touring and commute bike, which now catnaps sitting on the bike at 2:00 am: has 90,000 miles on the odo. Such was this intense focus on riding defined his Mayhew’s second decade, which began first decade. Mayhew joined the Marines in 1998 with the founding of pashnit. and landed a day job that required him com and then morphed into a successful to travel (ride, that is) all over California. tour company and on-line motorcycle He’d lay out his business and recreational accessory sales business. rides with a Thomas Bros. Road Atlas and a highlighter, systematically crossing What’s next for Tim Mayhew? Looks like he’ll need to hire some help with off roads already traveled. product packaging and invoicing as The Internet arrived during this period Pashnit Moto’s sales continue to increase and Tim started posting his photos and (he already gets plenty of resumes from route descriptions. At 30,000 visitors a folks who’d like to help lead tours, thank month, the website was flourishing. Then you). California Motorcycle Roads has it became 75,000 a month. At 100,000 matured, and the tour business is stable, per month Tim stopped counting. having bounded back this year after Last time he checked, the annual total 2009, an annus horribilis. The future is topped six million visitors. With all hard to predict, of course, but it’s for sure this road knowledge and net notoriety, that this friendly, gregarious ex-Marine offering guided tours was a natural. It will continue to charm tour participants has become, indeed, a dream career. with his enthusiasm for California’s Pashnit (as in “Passionate) tours is now motorcycling paradise and also help a in its seventh year, and Tim’s approach wider clientele spend money on their to each ride, even though he’s done the favorite pastime, motorcycling. A winroute maybe 15 times before, is still win situation if ever there was one. fresh and inspiring. It doesn’t get old for Want more info? The gateway to everything him because the roads are the best in Pashnit is at pashnit.com. the world, there are always new people August 2010 | 10 | CityBike.com Two Geezers to meet, and the route changes—just a little—each time. In fact, it’s perfect, except for that part about “making some money.” Honda introduced them. He knows them inside and out. But Bob is no one-trick pony. In his living room there was a small but stunning formula-style racecar clad in handhammered aluminum. Above that was an impossibly detailed model sailing ship three feet in length. He showed me pictures of miniature submarine models he made for the WWII movie Das Boot Boot. There was a miniature cannon, complete with muzzle rifling, a tiny axe and Lilliputian engravings. He was commissioned to make three others just like it. By Ferdinand Marcos. After the tour Bob trued my tired wheels as best he could and declared them to be “totally fucked,” but useable for my first build. Next time, he told me, I could check a wheel’s condition by holding if flat against a plate glass window. Bob seems to have taken me on as a project, a fixer-upper, and has since spent countless hours passing this kind of knowledge on to me and dragging me around the Bay Area to introduce me to his friends; decorated bike builders, wheel wizards, pillars of the racing community. One guy was a mechanic for Rothman’s Honda during Wayne Gardner’s championship Grand Prix year. Bob is immensely talented himself but would mock anyone who would call him a “craftsman.” He is fond of saying that “it isn’t rocket science, I just beat it with a GEEZER #1: BOB GUYNES The World According to Bob By David Lander, Photos by Chad Katoff, Historic photos courtesy of Bob Guynes Y ou know Bob Guynes likes you if he calls you “no-talent,” “Quasimodo” or simply “Claude.” He’s a burly, blustery man old enough to be my grandfather. On the night I met him he was dressed like a lumberjack; jeans and a red flannel jacket. Within just a few minutes he gleefully diagnosed my problem. “You’re a goddamned pencil-neck engineer.” He added the he would help me overcome that handicap. Lucky me. I was rebuilding a rusted, forgotten Honda CB160 and preparing it for vintage racing. I had just re-laced the rims, a first for me, and an acquaintance recommended I take them to Bob to get them trued. Never one to turn down experienced help, and largely because it was free, I duct taped the wheels to my bag and rode down to Bob’s house in Foster City. Three projects occupied the center of Bob’s small garage shop: two ‘60s-era Honda CR-style racers and a conjoined pair of CB175 engines he was building for Bonneville. He has lived and breathed, built and raced these early twins since August 2010 | 11 | CityBike.com Bob’s unique abilities qualify his as probably the only one who could. And in a world of “assholes,” “users,” “morons,” and “pencil-neck geeks,” Bob Guynes truly stands out. GEEZER #2: JIM REGER A Man with a (Honda) Dream Honda scooters from Santa Cruz to San Francisco and back just for half-day visits. They raced each other hard down Highway 9, then switched to coastracing the same road after one too many crashes. His stories are populated by motorcycles and by people, recalled with near equal fondness. Road racing, Jim’s long-time aspiration, was out of reach. It was prohibitively expensive and he had a family to consider. His unrequited love finally found an outlet in the machines themselves. He began to build road racers, many of them ‘60s Honda factory style motorcycles. He builds these bikes for one reason: he loves to. And while he brings some of them to bike shows for fun once in a while, and regularly takes top prize, Jawa Cezeta scooter (now illegal to remove from that country) and a gray-market Honda CBR250RR. One unremarkable cardboard box, half hidden in an unlit crawlspace beneath the house and huddled among many others, contains a very rare, early Honda Twin prototype engine. Just there. In a box. Jim led me through his open, sunny living room, past a pair of reissue Honda Dream Photo: Chad Katoff During a Sunday afternoon desert race nearly 50 years ago, rock,” and “how bright do you have to be? Jim Reger cornered too close to a Any moron could do this shit.” He made large rock, which violently ripped the smoke stack of his model ship from tin his foot off the peg. In searing cans and scotch tape. On his aluminum car, pain, blood filling his boot and the velocity stack filters are tea strainers spilling over the top, he loaded and the steering wheel is made of Harley his bike and drove his van eight spokes. He overbores crankcases with a hole saw (gasp!). Brutal and inelegant, but miles to the doctor. He had broken one of faster than a drill press and you don’t have his toes and ripped his big toe clean out of its socket. And on Monday morning he to dismantle as much of the engine. showed up to work. He is dedicated to making his bikes “Those were really the best times to be look period correct, to which end he a rider,” he said with sincerity. Jim is a employs the cheap and mundane instead gentleman: soft-spoken, the product of an of overpriced OEM parts from Ebay. America where even motorcycle hooligans This is in some small part because he’s kept their hair neat, as his is to this day. a staunch Luddite and doesn’t own a His irrepressible enthusiasm is still shot computer. He has turned bicycle pedals, ATV rims and GM oil filter housings into through with simple wonder and delight. gleaming gems, often searching for just Jim’s stories describe an era filled the right item for months. I once noticed with a close-knit riding community. the trick shift mechanism on one of his “Everybody knew everybody else. Superhawk builds was made from a 10 That’s just how it was.” Instead of mm combination wrench. message boards, local riders hung out at dealerships like Santa Clara Honda, Wrench aside, you would never guess where Jim would eventually work as at the origin of his parts. The truth is parts manager. They rode packs of 50cc that not just any moron can pull this off; Photo: Chad Katoff wage of 25 cents for high school kids, power was built, not bought. By 1964 he was racing a 305 Superhawk at TT and short track venues in Salinas, Lodi, Fremont, Alviso. 50s, a hand-made vintage racer, black-andwhite racing photos and trophies into a small, crowded side room. There sat a pair of bikes—unceremoniously shoehorned in among six or seven others—that have landed him in motorcycle magazines a dozen times over. One is a grotesque black Moto Guzzi Falcone, pinstriped by Von Dutch. This one Jim bought as-is. There is nothing like riding a professionally set up track bike, it will definitely make you... PRO Photo: Chad Katoff FEEL LIKE A RACE-PREPPED 250 NINJA RENTALS!! For trackdays with ZoomZoom, Pacific Tracktime and Kegwins. Reserve your bike for any of their trackdays! Championship Racer, Brian Bartlow 559-273-4429 For the entire 2010 schedule and all the info go to www.feellikeapro.com Comes complete w/ Jim got his first bike in 1957, a secondhand Cushman “bathtub” scooter, and quickly began searching for more power. In Boulder Creek, California, with a population of 310 and an average hourly this is not the point. To give you an idea of the depth of Jim’s commitment to building his bikes just right, I spent a weekend with him, traveling by van from the Bay Area to Redding, California and back. We picked our way through a motorcycle salvage yard, raided the OEM stock of two dying Honda shops and dug through dozens of crates of parts at a friend’s house. He was after a hardto-find brake lever for a current build, but came home empty-handed. I guarantee he will find it. Recently, I visited Jim on a clear Sunday afternoon. He lives atop an isolated peak in the Santa Cruz mountains in a 1960s wooden geodesic dome in 10 acres of dense green forest. He guesses he has over 150 motorcycles surrounding and occupying his home and each of the handful of smaller structures on his property. He regards them not as items in a collection, but as family who came to visit and never left. Most of his bikes are ailing vintage Hondas that he uses as donor bikes, but he also has such curiosities as a rare Czechoslovakian August 2010 | 12 | CityBike.com Beside the Falcone is the real heavyweight: a near-perfect replica of Mike Hailwood’s famous Honda RC-166 6 cylinder GP racer—built around a Honda CBX engine. Jim constructed it over three years, attending to each detail with a dedication bordering on obsession. To produce the stunning full fairing, he taught himself how to form aluminum and hand hammered it over the course of a year while watching TV at night. He worked for half a year on the impressive six-megaphone exhaust system, a glacial black slab of three cones jutting from the trailing edge of each side of the fairing. Every detail is purposeful, organic, and elegant in its conception and execution. He understandably considers it one of his best. and profane graphic on the back. * if you are hirsute and have a pathological inability to look people in the eye, avoid airports while wearing this shirt City Bike Magazine PO Box 10659 Oakland, CA 94610 [email protected] Send us $14.99 + $5 for shipping and we’ll send you a shirt... really! Email us: [email protected] or mail a check. Let us know your shirt size (S-XXL) and shipping address* What’s next for Jim Reger? In one motorcycle-crowded in-law unit he slowly rubbed his palms together, giddy, and nodded toward a beautiful teal frame on the floor. “I’m getting ready to start building that bike. It’s a Ron Grant Suzuki.” After a thoughtful pause, he added, “Well, if I live long enough, anyway.” “And if I keep myself busy building enough bikes, I just might make it.” David Lander is mechanical engineer who builds robots and motorcycles in his spare time. He fills the other 3 hours of each day sleeping. You may contact Mr. Lander at [email protected] August 2010 | 13 | CityBike.com We promised the road crew that there would be a bottle of vodka and a carton of cigarettes in it for them if our bike was mostly still there when we returned in a week. We brought the spare tire into the round felt tent (called a Ger), and locked the bike with a skimpy little chain. We piled into the Forgon to continue our journey. The sights were wonderful, but I had a nagging feeling that I’d have enjoyed it more on the Ural. Ghengis Gone: Seeing Mongolia from a Sidecar July, August and winter), we rode it frequently in the city, and out into the nearby countryside for picnics. Toward the end of our stay, we made plans to take a roughly 500 mile trip for a week, making a loop around the Buddhist monastery at Kharahorin, the Orkhan Khurkruu waterfall, and Ogii Nuur lake. In preparation for the trip, Zina and I went to the gravel pits just outside town to get her acquainted with driving the hack. Words and Photos: Alan Lapp M y wife, Zina, won a 1-year fellowship to Mongolia, and we lived in the capitol, Ulaan Baatar (U.B. for short) in 2002-3. While we were there, we bought a used “domestic production” Ural sidecar, a very basic model. Kick start only, single-wheel drive, drum brakes, leading-link forks, and a funny little stamped sheet brass carb slide. Our example delivered surprisingly poor fuel economy, unresolved by repeated tune ups. Despite its shortcomings, it’s howling good fun to ride—all hacks require certain mental adjustments be made: when the chair is on Our friend, Batlai, my wife, Zina, and myself. the ground, it “tricycle steers” —point the wheel anywhere without tools. Over the course where you want to go. However, when of the year, we had a variety of maladies the chair wheel comes off the ground, it stop the bike: contaminated gas, the “motorcycle steers”— counter-steer to go kill switch shorted internally, a broken where you want. Part of the fun of a sidecar battery box shorting the battery to the is flying the chair around turns: it’s the frame, the condenser wire broke off, the hack equivalent of wheelies. But, and this is alternator bolts fell out, the carb tops would a big one: you must mentally switch gears mysteriously back off, causing the motor about how to steer it the instant the wheel to idle too fast, the sheet-metal hack fender leaves contact with Terra Firma. kept breaking from the vibrations and the plugs would foul with regularity Another thing to understand about that would please Urals is that they’re 100 percent a Swiss reliable: you can absolutely count on the fact that at some point, it will stop running. I never went Mongolia is twice the size of Texas, has the population of Philadelphia, and half of that population lives in U.B. Ironically, if you’re on a road, you’re not far from help, despite the thinly-spread population. In part, this is due to the weather: nobody drives past a stranded vehicle, as it’s a matter of life and death in the winter. The second thing to know is that at the time we were there, Mongolia had over a million miles of roads, with fewer than 500 of them paved. Riding a motorcycle beyond the city limits is by default an adventure ride. With that in mind, I stocked up on spare tubes, patch kits and spare spark plugs and points. watchmaker. I learned to ask for “Orsiin “Orsiin hamgeen sain” sain” spark plugs—“From Russia, most good quality.” There is no force in this universe that will resurrect a fouled 30-cent made-in-China spark plug. Plugs are like White Castle burgers; one won’t get you far, better get six. When the weather was above freezing (as an aside, the four seasons of Mongolia are June, Forgon—a We left U.B. following behind a Forgon—a Russian mix between a four-wheel-drive military jeep and a V.W. van, which seem invariably painted olive drab to be or slate gray. Inside this Forgon were our friends from the When we got back to U.B., I headed over to the Technikiin Zak, or technical market. The Ural “dealer” had new replacement parts for everything from the head gasket up in stock. The total cost was $80, and that was probably the higher, ‘foreigner’ price. I imagine doing the same repair on a BMW GS would cost many thousands of dollars here in the states, and you’d probably wait three weeks on back-ordered parts. Busted flat in Ulaan Baatar. Notice that the crash bar is bent nearly to the footpeg, and the Toyota paint on the shin guard. States, Cory and Dan and their girls, Claudia and Carleen, and a fellow scholar, Ben. We carried fuel, spares and tools—our ordinary luggage was stashed in the van. The first part of the ride was on the highway, and I use that term loosely. It’s a paved road that leads north, and is in miserable condition: narrow, highly crowned, littered with potholes. It’s impossible to go faster than about 40 mph on this road. Both comfort and ease of driving actually improve when the pavement ends just beyond a town called Luun. After a short break to switch pilots, Zina took the helm, and quickly caught up to the Forgon just as the pavement ended. As we crossed onto a narrow gravel bridge over a large culvert, an oncoming Toyota Landcruiser startled Zina by moving toward the center of the road. Zina’s well-developed motorcycle brain overwhelmed her fledgling sidecar brain, and counter-steered us directly into the side of the Landcruiser, shearing off most of the left-side cylinder head, littering the road with smashed aluminum bits and hot oil. It happened in an instant, and was over quickly, but I tasted the tinny flavor of a massive surge of adrenaline. If you absolutely must hit a brand new Landcruiser, Mongolia is the place to do it. The driver was more concerned about our well-being than the nearly full-length scrape in his truck. We agreed that it was our fault, and the driver suggested $50 to replace the gouged rear tire, which we were happy to pay. We towed the hurt and bleeding Ural to a road construction crew about two miles further down the road. They were working on the Millennium Road, a joint Mongol/Chinese boondoggle to allegedly improve trade between the countries. Inexplicably, the road is 75 miles away from any population center. Repair & Service We Ship Worldwide CALL US FIRST! Salvaged & New Parts! Tue–Fri 10–6 Sat 9–5 Roadside alternator repair. August 2010 | 14 | CityBike.com Once home again, we endured another long slog in the Forgon over the horrid paved road to Luun, where we delivered the vodka and smokes as promised, as the bike was unmolested. In keeping with the tradition of helpfulness, the bike was quickly surrounded by a Mongolian Horde of mechanics, and I was relegated to handing wrenches into the huddle. The bike was quickly repaired, a great cheer August 2010 | 15 | CityBike.com Tankslapper NO FAT BIKES! Maynard, I’m 100 percent in agreement with you regarding the global motorcycle obesity problem you so eloquently pointed out (“An Eleven and a Three,” July 2010). I believe choice is good and everyone should be able to buy a steed that speaks to them but lately it feels like the industry might be The Mongolian Horde of Mechanics. went up when the bike fired, and we got on the road back home. has value to me. On the other hand, the fates had dealt us a pretty sour hand, and we deftly recovered with no real loss other The motor was running like crap, and we than wounded pride and a serving of regret. made frequent stops: I adjusted the valve It occurs to me that there are a variety of clearance, still crap. I adjusted the point vectors that go into producing the outcome gap, still badly missing on the damaged of an adventure ride. side. I pulled the plug, Personal disposition, and discovered that a riding skill, wrenching recently-new plug was skill, preparation oil fouled, and I’d left of spares and tools, all my spares at home adequate money and with our luggage. I time, the number cleaned it to the best of and character of my ability, closed the riding partners, and gap significantly, and support vehicles. the motor propelled us, And luck—one must shuddering, homeward. never underestimate Ever fickle, the Ural the value of luck. blew its main fuse If one vector is just as we reached the lacking, another can city limits. Mongols compensate. We have many wonderful, were fortunate that friendly, generous our inexperience was attributes. A sense of balanced by having civic pride isn’t among a support vehicle. If Traditional Mongolian jacket called a Del. those attributes: the you’re a chronically place is evenly strewn bitter disappointment with a thick mantle of litter. This worked magnet, the quality of your experience will out pretty well for me in this case, a strip of be improved by increasing the values of all cigarette wrapper bridged the fuse, and the the other vectors. aluminum coating restored conductivity. Alan Lapp is a soul-singing, hash-slinging, Back home, I had time to consider the trip. trash-talking director of art and crusher of On one hand, it had been a bust—we only bones. Send feedback about your Asian riding got half-a-day’s drive away from home, adventures to him: [email protected]. barely even got off pavement, and didn’t get to see the sights from a motorcycle, which your horrific use of that slogan “Ride Fast Take Chances.” I have never ridden over 85 in a Catholic school zone in my life, nor do I do pop-a- wheelies, or burnt-outs on my Zundap ACLU 1235cc unsportsman-like bike! I do however leave it at full gas-on mode in the garage at all times, so when I am ready, she’s ready! And I ride with all my gear: Birkenstocks, condom on my gimmick and my hockey helmet from my I have never ridden over 85 in a Catholic school zone in my life, nor do I do pop-a- wheelies, or burnt-outs on my Zundap ACLU 1235cc unsportsman-like bike! heading towards adding a roof as an option. Numero uno on my list of criteria for determining which motorcycle to purchase the last two times has been a road-ready weight of under 500 lbs. I’m always willing to compromise assorted creature comforts in lieu of tossability, my ability to pick her up and technical simplicity. I always find that I’m nodding my head in agreement with your view of things motorcycle-related or not, keep up the great work. shortbus days, oh yes and dishwashing gloves so to you I say, “ride like a maple bar is on fire in your colon, take Prozac.” Alan Anttila ‘09 Wee 480lbs. fully fueled Dear CityBike: RIDE FAST TAKE CHANCES HORSE GETS MORE BEATINGS CityBike: Right On! How did Gwynne ever learn those skills (“Tankslapper,” July 2010) boasted? Most times when another motorcyclist’s foolhardy riding behavior pisses me off—when I sit back and think about it—it reminds me of me 20 years ago. Godspeed brothers , sisters and wolf in Andrew Jackson’s clothing! James Willard McD Oakland CA James, you confuse and frighten us. And we like it. What is this world coming to? Who is this person? Their political correctness chips at American freedom. Ride Fast Take Chances, offensive? What part is offensive? The “ride fast” part or the “take chances” part? I remember when I was 10 years old, taking my buddy’s Honda 50 and going for a ride without my mom’s permission. Then in college I would go to the beach on my girlfriend’s Vespa with nothing on but trunks and flip flops. Stupid, I admit; but youth is wasted on the young. Keep the motto please, for all reason stated. Now in my forties, I look back at those days of riding, at what seemed to be insane BT speeds with reckless abandonment to my Marin own safety, with apprehensive nostalgia. I wouldn’t want my two boys to live like I Editors, did. No son, do as I say, not as I did. But for I am extremely and prematurely offended us, wanting to ride fast and take chances is and defended, upended and suspended by as a visceral yearning as wearing pink is to a little girl. (I use “little girl” metaphorically, I don’t mean females.) I am saddened by those who can’t admit to themselves they really want to live the life we chose. I think your rag advocates safety effectively, even though your motto is Ride fast Take chances. Life comes down to basically a handful of decision; so take off your dress and ride like I know you really want to. Bob Beck The Bay Area Bob, we think Gwynne does indeed remove her dress when she rides, although she replaces it with leather. Please send your thoughts to CityBike, PO Box 10659, Oakland, CA 94610 or do that email thing: [email protected]. August 2010 | 16 | CityBike.com Chrome: All Business, No Bling. When Chrome launched their now-iconic messenger bags in 1994, they squarely hit the mark. In 2009, with the introduction of their Berlin bag, they pulverized it. massive loads with ease. To that end the Berlin’s total volume is a staggering 52 liters, over 25 percent more than the In The Beginning Metropolis. The side pockets have been relocated to the front and now feature a hrome, started by two guys sewing Velcro closure flap of their own as well junkyard fabric in a Colorado as one small zippered pocket. Gone are garage, made its name building impossibly the Velcro laptop attachments and secret tough bicycle messengers bags, and its pocket; the Berlin is all business. focus hasn’t shifted in 16 years. Chrome One of the bag’s most noteworthy features bags are ridiculously sturdy, 100 percent is its harness system. The main shoulder waterproof, offer generous carrying strap is an EVA padded design similar capacity, ample comfort, and are backed to that of the Metropolis, with a by a lifetime guarantee. Also, they’re cross-chest stabilizer. The Berlin undeniably cool. steps up the shoulder-strap The Metropolis ($160), Chrome’s large concept from there by offering a sized messenger bag, has been my beast second padded stabilizer, which of burden for the past six years. Here are can be untucked from a pocket some of the things I have carried in or within the main flap and otherwise secured to my Metropolis: an pulled over your other armored Vanson roadrace suit, a CBR shoulder. The net result wheel, bags of dog food, bags of groceries, a is an X-type harness rearstand…you get the idea. Chrome’s bags with an incredible are obviously designed by the architect of amount of stability Dr. Who’s Tardis—time travel and scarf and four points of not included. adjustment to Chrome’s products are constructed with an keep the load where you want 18-ounce independently suspended truck it (which may not tarp liner; basically a fully waterproof bag suit the physique within a sturdy Cordura shell. The inner of some women). bag is sealed with mil-spec seam binding that renders it truly waterproof. I remember This model also riding throughout the rainy season of 2005- includes a feature curiously absent from 2006, and despite a staggering 35 inches the messenger bags: a of rainfall over 104 days, not one drop penetrated my bag. I wish I could have said foam back panel. Words and photos, David Lander C the same of my other “waterproof” gear. Initial Impressions Okay, it’s got all the features I want in a bag, but could it possibly be as rugged as claimed? The 1000-denier Cordura outer shell has survived six years of daily abuse with not a single rip, tear, or abrasion of any sort, despite having been down in two crashes. Not bad. The buckles and hardware are all in great shape (save a few small spots of rust on the seatbelt buckle), and the inner liner is also still intact and tear-free. If that’s not impressive enough, consider that I’ve worn this bag nearly every day since I got it—roughly 1500 days. While the liner hasn’t torn, it did begin to admit moisture this year, so I dropped it off at Chrome’s 4th Street flagship store in San Francisco, a bit skeptical of their warranty. Two days later, and without fuss, they presented me with a brand new Metropolis. Pinch me. In order to get a sense of how well the Berlin would work as a messenger bag for the non-messenger set, I temporarily substituted it for my Metropolis for day-to-day duty, and the experience is undeniably different. The first thing that crosses my mind each time I reach for the Berlin is, “Jesus, that thing is a monster.” It feels big when I put it on but it doesn’t look clownish on my 5-foot-8 frame; the fact that I chose it in black probably helps. The bag is also a bit more cumbersome to operate than the Metropolis, but necessarily so. The Berlin offers substantially more in the way of straps and adjustability, and the straps themselves are more complex. For example, the two straps that secure the front flap are extra long so that they can secure large loads. As a result the extra length has to be reined in, which the Berlin accomplishes with a combination of hard plastic loops and elastic. Sack Up Recently a new bag caught my wandering eye. The “Pro Series” Berlin ($220) takes the basic messenger bag platform and turns it up to 11. While the standard messenger bags are perfectly suited to urban life, the Berlin’s no-holds-barred design suggests a more focused raison d’etre: carrying August 2010 | 17 | CityBike.com never felt hollow. Heavy loads are still heavy, but feel much lighter than they would in the Metropolis or any other bag. Another surprise was how well it handles irregularly shaped loads; I bought a small café-racer style half fairing at a swap meet, The Berlin performs packed it into the Berlin, and on the ride as advertised, and briefly panicked because I was sure I had I wouldn’t expect forgotten it. anything less If you need a cavernous, top-of-the-line from Chrome. messenger bag, the Berlin is a no-brainer. What came It will handle both light day-to-day duties as a and huge loads with ease. You may want surprise, to consider the Metropolis (or one of the however, smaller messenger bags) if you are looking was the for something easier to handle, if you carry way the a laptop frequently, or if you prefer a sleeker bag feels look. Then there’s the price, to which, like a frankly, I wouldn’t give a second thought: cloud you buy a Chrome bag for life. How much on my back even is $160 or $220 divided by your life? I’m when carrying currently at about $1.50 a month for my moderately heavy Metropolis: peanuts. loads. Loathe I’d like to say that I would buy either of to peddle these bags again, but the point is moot: hyperbole, I kept this word with a lifetime guarantee that Chrome stands behind, I’ll never need to. in mind each time I took Chrome bags are available online the Berlin on (chromebagsstore.com), but if you live in the Bay an outing, Area you can visit their new and expanded store at and it 580 4th street in San Francisco. brenda BATES Clinicians are using such techniques as rhythmic sounds that produce pulse-like beats while the listener uses headphones. Clinicians have long known that there is Other instruments used to induce the a link between stress and illness. Dr. Carl relaxation response include biofeedback Simonton, author of the book Getting Well machines and even rhythmic flashing Again and founder of the Simonton Cancer lights. However, when it comes to Center in Santa Barbera, California, encouraging the relaxation response, posited that illness can be predicted by the motorcycles fit the bill. They produce a amount of stress in a person’s life. The good rhythmic engine sound and beat that can news is that stress-releasing activities help be both heard and felt by the rider. Also, to return the body to normal functioning, as motorcyclists know, a concentrated, thereby minimizing the chances of stressfocused frame of mind is necessary to ride induced illnesses. Motorcyclists are aware safely. All of this combined replicates the that after a good ride, a sense of well being primitive form of a Zen-like state, maybe sets in that can indeed last for days. So, even allowing the rider to motorcycling can be get rid of built-up stress considered to be a stresschemicals in the body. releasing, potentially Apparently, we have a healthful activity that deep-seated need for may actually help to such sounds, rhythms prolong one’s life due to and even motion (such as the relaxation response. dance or motorcycling) The connection between because they do indeed beats, trance, Zen-like naturally induce the relaxation, elation and relaxation response. motorcycling is obvious. Jungian psychologists How many times have we (those who follow the all heard the phrase, “the Zen of the ride” ideas of the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung) or something similar? Zen is a concept theorize that pulse sounds are primordial related to trance in a hypnotic sense, that and are simultaneously comforting and is, a concentrated, focused mental state ecstasy producing. The theory is that accompanied by relaxation. It is interesting this is because these sounds and beats that we are now using primitive methods, are encoded in our brains due to our modified by modern technology, to induce environmental heritage. the relaxation response. Technology of this Today we can actually measure brain sort returns us to a calmer state of being, wave patterns that produce the relaxation similar to the relaxation response felt by response. Clinicians know that the brain people involved in primitive rituals. released from stress, filled with a sense of well being that may last for days. R hythmic sounds such as the beat of a drum, clapping of hands and foot stomping are primordial in nature. Primitive societies (which includes our ancestral heritage) tend to have rituals that involve the use of a beat and are often accompanied by dance or physical movement. Beats are not only heard but also felt, thereby creating the emotional experience of both comfort and elation in humans. This produces a sort of ecstasy within the participants which is usually considered necessary in primitive ceremonial practices. The people engaged in such rituals tend to feel viscerally elated while being simultaneously relaxed. This enables them to go into a keen, mentally concentrated and focused frame of mind. In such a state, the body is able to release built-up stress hormones. This is at least one reason why after such a ritual, the participants feel healthier, happier and Beats and Bikes $400 off MSRP! (not valid with any other offers) has four specific waves: Beta, Alpha, Theta and Delta. Beta is our normal waking state. Alpha is a more relaxed brain wave which is necessary for the immune and the mental health system to repair itself. Theta is a deeper, more relaxed state that hypnotists induce for a hypnotic trance state of mind. This is a very peaceful state and not at all like Hollywood movies, where a person is unaware of what they are doing. Theta waves often come just before sleep. Delta waves are very slow and occur during sleep or unconsciousness. Alpha and Theta are the brain waves primarily responsible for the relaxation response while a person is still in a waking state. Or, possibly, it’s the relaxation response that causes Alpha and Theta brain waves. Which came first…the chicken or the egg? It’s an age old question that we probably will not be able to answer any time soon. If all evidence is tallied up, it’s reasonable to assume that after a good motorcycle ride, Alpha and Theta waves are more frequent, thereby helping to induce the relaxation response. So keep on searching for those twisty mountain roads and ride as often as possible. It may very well keep your immune system and mental health in top condition. In short, motorcycling may prolong your lifespan or at least encourage a healthful, happier one. dr. gregory w. FRAZIER U glier than a mud fence. That was what I thought the first time I saw a 1980 R80 G/S. “Better throw a tarp or blanket over that one,” I said to the shop owner, “It’s so ugly it’ll be breaking mirrors here in the showroom.” comprehend its use, let alone see any artistic qualities in its design. The dealer told me that it was ideal for my riding style. He pointed out that I liked to get off the main highways onto gravel roads (I had broken several of the clear windshields on my R100RT from washboard vibration on gravel roads) and the R80 G/S was designed with an off-road purpose in mind. He also pointed out the G/S would take on sand, mud and water, unlike my touring R100RT. All this made little sense as I was used to dirt bikes being light and small I had been a BMW rider for nearly 15 years at that time. My motorcycling experience to that point had been mostly road riding, some long distance touring and road racing. The motorcycles displacement, not over 400 pounds and 800cc as was the R80 G/S. When I asked about a factory windshield I was told “Nope, not available.” The deal killer was the one saddlebag option—for the right side only. I was told that because the muffler angled up the left side, a left saddlebag would stick out too far and therefore none were available. Imagining a R80 G/S with one saddlebag on the right stopped at a stoplight killed any thoughts I had at the time of ever owning a G/S Tales from Over the Edge A Madcap Collection of Memoirs from Marin County California’s Sunday Morning Ride pacificcoastpowersports.com 1433 El Camino Real • Santa Clara, CA 95050 • 408-280-7277 to get CityBike delivered to your door by the meanest, most psychotic, well-armed branch the Government has to beat you with. That’s right! we’ll send the man to your mail hole once a month for an entire year delivering the latest issue of CityBike. Rereleased for the Amazon Kindle Reader, & Free Kindle Reader for PC, Mac, & iPad bulletpress.com August 2010 | 18 | CityBike.com Just send a check for $30 to: 10650 PO Box 10659 Oakland, CA 94610 be sure to include your name, address, & phone number! or use Paypal! [email protected] [email protected] Another contributor to the death of the deal that day was the new Monolever rear suspension. I felt it was not only unbalanced Ugly Duckling: the BMW GS Brenda Bates is an enthusiastic motorcyclist, therepaist and author. Her latest book, Back in the Saddle Again: How to Overcome Fear Riding After a Motorcycle Accident, can be purchased online at bikepsych.com. Sales, Service & Performance Upgrades model. Not only did I see the R80 G/S as being buttugly, from the rear with one saddlebag I imagined it looked like a one-legged ostrich trying to hop down the road. I had owned other than BMWs were Japanese, a couple of Indians and one Harley-Davidson. The touring I had done led me to the BMWs because they were comfortable and needed little or no daily maintenance, quite the opposite of the Indians or the Harley. The Japanese motorcycles were small and since our dollar was favorable to the German Deustchmark, a BMW was, in my opinion at the time, a better deal than something Japanese (rumored in my Indian and Harley circle of friends to have been pressed together from used American beer cans). My latest purchase was a 1000cc BMW outfitted with a full fairing and Krauser saddlebags. It was ideal for my long rides around the United States and into Canada and Mexico as long as I stayed on macadam roads. Once I took it off the pavement it would wallow and flop like the Indians or Harley, testing my strength or mettle as well as my wallet when replacing broken parts. Looking at the R80 G/S the dealer was encouraging me to purchase, I could not ER H T A E L E FRE ASE C P O T P LA e 50) Over $1 s Purcha y n A With er $500! Ov alue (Retail V but also looked too weak to hold the rear wheel. Another reason I passed on the purchase was the orange seat, a color not matching anything on the rest of the motorcycle. Nothing on the R80 G/S appealed to me except for the air-cooled flat-Twin engine. I had learned from my previous BMW touring and racing that this design was reliable. As I walked out of the BMW dealership, shaking my head at the ugliness of the R80 G/S and how some fool would part with $4800 to own one, something the dealer had said was zoning in and out of focus in my cranial cavity: “Adventure Touring.” That term piqued my interest. Now, 30 years later, I am a confirmed “Adventure Tourer,” having circled the globe five (and one-half) times, doing many of the miles on a 1981 R80 G/S. I have sat on GS models for over 300,000 miles, sunk one in a 12-foot-deep river, jumped one over a barbed-wire fence, and slept next to them on six of the seven continents. I feel those GS years and miles have given me a clear definition of “Adventure Touring.” The evolution from tourer to Adventure Tourer pushed me into the universe of dual-purpose motorcycling, another catch word for the GS functionality which later entered the promotional material for the GS models (coupled with “enduro riding”). I have often stripped my GSs of their touring gear and ventured significantly off roads, sometimes onto goat trails or no trails. Several times I have stripped them even further to be first to checkered flags on race tracks. Looking back at my initial acquaintance with the G/S model and the suggestion to cover it with a tarp or blanket I have to laugh at myself. The R80 G/S, in the newbie eye of the beholder, was ugly at the time, but eventually blossomed into two wheels of beauty, and as I look at them today, the appeal to me is just like an ugly duckling that grows into the bird of beauty, but that’s just my opinion after growing to appreciate them after 30 years. Dr. Gregory W. Frazier is a professional motorcycle adventurer and has circumnavigated the globe five times by motorcycle. His latest book, Motorcycle Adventurer, is about the first motorcyclist to circle the world in 1912-1913, and can be found at motorcycleadventurer.com. His home is in the Big Horn Mountains of Montana, but he travels extensively by motorcycle around the globe during the year. He says of his wilder motorcycle adventures on the planet, “I hate adventure that has anything to do with snakes or sharks.” Tell us your BMW G/S story: [email protected]. We stock a large selection of heavy duty jackets , pants, chaps, & bags. Custom garments and accessories. We repair, alter and clean leather products. Our leathers are guaranteed against defect for life. We make custom 1 & 2 piece 1833 Polk St. (@ Jackson) San Francisco - johnsonleather.com leathers! (800) 730-7722 • (415) 775-7393 Forcefield Body Armour, The worlds leading “Soft armour technology” Body protection system specialists. August 2010 | 19 | CityBike.com HERTFELDER S A rider in this shape can’t possibly have enough energy left over to get his brain in gear. the cable is wound nice and tight around his countershaft sprocket. Just start your engine in neutral, get the motorcycle rolling forward and toe the transmission into low gear. The engine will stall any time you come to a complete stop, so the trick is to keep rolling. Once I came across a rider pushing a motorcycle that had the entire left side of the handlebar broken off. He was tired, maybe still shaken up from the crash, and his brain was not operating on all channels. Now let me tell you about a trooper who got himself so worn out he wasn’t sure I’m not even sure if it was operating on which way was up but sure knew which way any channel. was down: down was where you came to those sudden stops and didn’t have a cool This rider had convinced himself that the breeze blowing into your jacket anymore. motorcycle could not be ridden. It took some doing, but I finally convinced him to Chained Brain o there I was, pushing a broken motorcycle uphill and slamming a shin into a footpeg every 58th step or so. My heart rate had already gone off the scale and it had settled into the pump cadence of a really big steam engine pulling a string of fully loaded coal cars up a steep grade somewhere in Colorado, where there is so little level ground the city of Denver had to move the airport out to Kansas when they try riding with the broken handlebar under needed longer runways. his butt. It is not good to have your heart beating so Last I saw of him he was motoring down strong that it stretches your Adam’s apple the trail, steering with one hand and and makes it hard to think. working a clutch that was back near his left A really trashed rider can get so worn down that he can’t twist his head fast enough to fling sweat out of his eyebrows, so he merely closes his eyes and keeps pushing as the drops roll down his face and he hopes there are no six-feet deep washouts to drop into. I had to con Glamorous Shirley (GS) into letting me use her motorcycle because her 1974 Honda XL175 would qualify for the Vintage class. Her rental fee (really a ransom) was a new set of pots and pans. When I saw the bill for these things I realized, too late, that it would have cost me less to buy two XL175s and a microwave oven. When GS says there is a lot of give and take in a marriage she means it. The Honda might not be competitive against all those Pentons and Bultacos coming out of the woodwork, but, then again, neither am I. I only had two concerns: the first was getting stuck behind Bevo Forti on a narrow trail. The second was being overcome with Blendzall fumes, then being eaten by alligators and getting a posthumous summons for poisoning wildlife with Blendzall. The XL175 had to be swamp-proofed a little, so I covered the plug with a The trooper was me. At the Daytona Beach rubber bootie and ordered a set of Jeff Fredette hand guards. Then I went to the Alligator Enduro I fried my brain and forgot everything I’d learned since I was 11 hardware store and purchased three feet of what they call sash chain, chain with years old. wide links used in double-hung windows. The first stupid move was to even think of I bolted the center of the chain to the hip pocket. It didn’t look real graceful but it riding the Alligator; in three previous tries motorcycle’s down tube and fastened the the best I did was houring out at the first sure got him back to his van faster. two ends to the brake and shift levers, check after the gas stop. However, when allowing just enough slack for them to Put this in your memory banks—up front radio announcers in New Jersey are making operate properly. The primary purpose of where you get to it easily after an endo, a the wind-chill factor sound worse than the chain is to keep brush from jamming side-o or a rap on the helmet from someone thermonuclear war and the cat wants to go behind the foot pedals, but it also helps else’s fork leg—your motorcycle will get outside to chew on frozen starlings, Florida to prevent a pedal from being folded back you home even if the clutch lever gets looks real nice. if it kisses a tree stump. smeared into your buddy’s skid plate and Here’s what happened to the world’s worst dirt rider at the Alligator Enduro—a real credit to his terrible reputation. By the first checkpoint, where I was only down 13 minutes, the Honda sometimes needed a few extra lifts on the shifter to catch the next higher gear. After the checkpoint it got progressively worse, and I was left with only low and neutral. This plus the heat, humidity, whooped–out trail and having to dodge faster riders must have put my brain on hold. After the little Honda got stuck in low gear I limped slowly into the gas stop because I didn’t want to do one of those Waring blender jobs on GS’s transmission. What had happened was that the Florida mud, which has so many tiny roots mixed in that it looks like you could make bricks with the stuff, had packed into those wide links on the chain I had attached to the shifter. Later upon layer of it jammed in every time I up shifted, finally reaching the point where the shift lever just didn’t have enough movement to shift the gears anymore! Trail Tip: never use sash chain on your shift lever, and never put your brain on hold. For a copy of Ed’s latest book, 80.4 Finish Check, send $29.95 plus suggested inscription to: Ed Hertfelder P. O. Box 17564 Tucson, AZ 85731 [email protected] August 2010 | 20 | CityBike.com spraying the inner bottom run of the chain lightly, just like always. maynard I’ve been using Chain Wax, a Maxima Racing Oils product, for years, maybe for a decade. Chain Wax goes on clean and mysteriously dry, and then disappears. It doesn’t spatter the garage floor with overspray. After it sets up, it stays on the chain and off my rear wheel. It seems to protect the chain as well as anything I’ve used. HERSHON F irst, I admit that I can’t live with a dirty bike. If I let my bike stay dirty more than 24 hours, if I’m that careless about its maintenance and appearance, I must not be proud of it. Unless I’m far from my bucket, sponges and brushes, I’ve neglected my one and only bike. I must be ungrateful for the joy motorcycling has given me. I must not love motorcycling. I thought I loved it but apparently I don’t. Perhaps I never did. A wrong-headed guy My regularly Chain Waxed chains generally last about 18,000 miles. My Kawasaki single’s original chain, no doubt the cheapest O-ring chain the company could specify, lasted just that long. Maybe some people’s automatically oiled or enclosed chains last longer. I figure 18,000 miles is the natural life of a frequently spray-lubed drive chain. Correct me by mail if I’m way wrong. When spring seemed days away, I put the bike on the center stand outside in sunlight—and realized to my shock that my bright-plated rear spokes were as black as if they’d been painted. Black full-length. Embarrassed, (though no one could see) I polished the spokes with WD-40 and a rag and got them sorta clean. As I did so, it dawned on me that my spokes had been dirty with Silkolene residue since October, the last time I’d been able to brush dilute Simple Green on my spokes and rinse it off with a hose. Dirty all winter... As of this writing, I’ve done two washes outside with a hose and a tapered spokewashing brush. The chain lube residue and Chain Wax will wash off after hours of riding in hard rain, but that’s its sole downside. In 2005, I rode my fine Kawasaki ZRX1100 from Tucson all the way across Texas to western Louisiana in hard rain, two full days of rain riding. Chain Lube, a Sad Tale in Three Parts My ZRX had no centerstand - meaning like me probably never admired Mike Hailwood or Joey Dunlop. Probably speaks no effective way to spray the chain. The bike clanked and jerked so badly I thought disrespectfully about Valentino Rossi. surely the gearbox was broken. Those precise words may not go through my mind, but that’s the gist of it. Sad, huh? Soaking the chain with lube on a dealer’s lift loosened up the kinks. Then, on a Second, I’d like to talk about Denver mechanic’s recommendation, I bought a winters. You can ride your motorcycle once can of Bel-Ray SuperClean Chain Lube, or twice during most weeks of winter here. the most tenacious, messiest chain lube Alas, if you live in a high-rise downtown imaginable. It did stay on but my chain and wash your bike with a bucket and hose looked like it had been smeared with white in the parking lot on the shaded, north side grease. Cleaning it off once I got home was of the building where the hose hookup hard work. I still have the can of Bel-Ray lives, you cannot wash it in the old, familiar but I wouldn’t use it—even gun-to-myway until spring. Until spring the washhead. You’d have to shoot me. water you splash on the pavement will freeze at night and cause you or one of your This last winter, I replaced my KLR’s chain and sprockets and noticed that the can of neighbors to fall down in the morning. Chain Wax was nearly empty. When I went You can wash your bike with two buckets to the good motorcycle accessory store, over a drain in the underground parking from whose employees I have never had garage where your bike waits out the bad tips, the young man recommended winter. Sadly, you may find two-bucket Silkolene chain lube. He said he too had washing less than satisfying. Without used Chain Wax until he tried Silkolene a hose to direct rinse water at hidden and found it to be better, more lubricious or areas of your bike, you feel as if your bike better penetrating or more preservative of remains (despite your efforts) unclean O-ring health. in those hard-to-reach places. And you Instead of buying Chain Wax, I bought a feel imperfectly clean yourself, as if you can of Silkolene Pro Chain 100% Synthetic showered in a full-leg cast. Racing Chain and Sprocket Lubricant. I You miss the glow you feel when you noted that the Silkolene product tended achieve sparkling motorcycle cleanliness. to coat my garage floor with spray that Well, I miss it. missed or passed through my chain. I Now we can talk about what’s really going learned to cover the floor with a large rag to collect that over-spray. I must’ve used the on here: Chain lube. I want to talk about Silkolene half a dozen times this winter, chain lube. I hope you do too. August 2010 | 21 | CityBike.com stuck-on brake dust are gone. I finally have a glistening, clean rear wheel. Maybe I love motorcycling after all. Mike Hailwood’s memory is safe with me. I’m sure that lots of you reading this can tolerate a dirty back wheel. I don’t have that freedom, I’m sorry to say. Even if I thought that some messy or runny chain lube would prolong the life of my chain by, oh, 25 percent, I could not use that miracle lubricant - if it dirtied up my rear wheel. How would that look after all? Like neglect, right? Like disrespect. What would it say about me? Next thing you know, I’d be badmouthing Valentino Rossi. Maynard lives in exile in Denver, CO. You can reach him care of CityBike: [email protected]. Intensely Good Marketplace Graphic Design & Illustration I’m Alan Lapp, a 25-year veteran designer & illustrator. Companies you know and trust, such as CityBike, Lee Parks Design and RaceTech choose Level Five Graphics because I offer a great price & performance value. Your business can benefit from my experience and commitment to customer satisfaction. View my portfolio on-line, and contact me to start solving your design needs. Great work to follow. 510-295-7707 • www.levelfive.com ✯ ✯ ✯ ✯ ✯ ✯ (408) 354-4999 ! E B I R C SU BS C’MON, YOU KNOW YOU WANT IT. Just send a check for $30 to: PO Box 10650 Oakland, CA 94610 be sure to include your name, address, & phone number! or use Paypal! [email protected] August 2010 | 22 | CityBike.com August 2010 | 23 | CityBike.com CLASSIFIEDS AUGUST 2010 CLUB LISTINGS Hyosung owners unite! I’m trying to organize a ride. Email me if interested: [email protected]. HATTAR MOTORSPORTS in dazzling San Rafael is the area’s largest volume purveyor of new Ducati and Triumph motorcycles. We sell more bikes because we’re nicer than those other guys, because our manifest enthusiasm for motorcycles is infectious, because we have cubic tons of inventory from which to pick from, because we have cubic tons of lending sources from which to find you a great financing deal, because we have cubic pounds of money (OK, ounces...) to throw at you for your trade-in, and because we have lots of cute, friendly dogs sprinkled about the place. Oh; and one more thing... WE GOT DEALS! And, evidently, poor grammar. But still, WE GOT DEALS! So here are some snippets of information concerning said DEALS we happen to got at the moment: DUCATI SPECIALS: Please note that Ducati dealers are not permitted to sell any of their wares at any price other than M.S.R.P. except at their dealerships! It’s a thoughtful policy, really, since it helps preserve the value of these machines when it’s time to sell or trade them in. But we do have some awfully sweet deals (remember the “WE GOT DEALS!” thing we chatted about earlier?) on new Ducatis we really wish we could blabber about here. Suffice to say that a trip to sleepy San Rafael will reveal a treasure chest’s worth of savings on some bikes that aren’t normally savings-able, while they last! TRIUMPH SPECIALS: Triumph does allow sale prices in ads, so I’m going to town! For a limited time (like you thought we’d do this for all eternity...) with every new 2010 BONNEVILLE’s and BONNEVILLE SE’s purchased from our stock we will give you a gorgeous looking and sounding Arrow complete 2 into 2 exhaust system valued at $1199 fo’ free! We just received one new ’09 DAYTONA 675 and two new ’09 STREET TRIPLE 675’s from the factory at a nice discount and can now pass these savings on to you (and then some!). The first person with $8499* gets our lovely all-black Daytona 675, and two lucky riders will be giggling in their helmets since they just scooped up new Street Triple’s for $7499* apiece! Dawdle at your own peril, you dawdling taker-of-unnecessary-risks fiend! Another Special Factory Purchase to let you in on is a resplendent all-black new ’09 SPEED TRIPLE 1050 for a lousy $8999! I told you we got deals, Mr/Ms Grammar Police! A few other Triumph Specials to tempt you with include 1 new ’09 SPRINT ST 1050 at $2200 off MSRP, 1 new ’10 SPEED TRIPLE 1050 15th ANNIVERSARY EDITION that can be had at $(CENSORED BY EVIL CITYBIKE THOUGHT POLICE! CALL!) off MSRP, a couple of NEW ’09 ROCKET III mega-cruisers at between $4000 and $5000 off MSRP (depending on model), and a bunch of other similar deals. If you don’t see your most-wanted Triumph listed here, just give us a shout. USED BIKE SPECIALS: People love buying their used bikes from us since we inspect them thoroughly, take care of any necessary repairs, and stand behind them for 30 days after the purchase. Takes a lot of the risk out of buying used, does it not? Among our used bike gems is a pristine ’02 HONDA XR650L Dual-Sport bike with a mere 3.5k miles on the clock at an equally mere $3499, an ’06 HONDA CBR600F4i with fewer than 5k miles for a crummy $5999, an ’07 DUCATI MONSTER S4RS with a full Termignoni exhaust kit (big bucks!) among other cool bolt-on’s at just $9499, an ’02 SUZUKI SV650S with kinda’ high miles (43k) but super well-maintained by its one-and-only owner who also lavished it with some tasty extras like a Penske rear shock, P.S. fork springs, a full Yoshimura exhaust system, and a bunch of other fun stuff. It runs like a well-oiled top and is only $3499. WE BUY USED BIKES! Not only do we simply adore taking trade-in’s, but we will also make you a cash offer on the spot for your bike even if you just want to pay off your bookie or (this hurts to write) want to use the money towards a bike we don’t sell. Almost every dealer nowadays is shying away from acquiring used bikes unless they can practically steal them. We are not like almost every dealer, though; we will pay good money for good bikes. Give us a try! HATTAR MOTORSPORTS resides at 601 Francisco Blvd East in scenic San Rafael (a little north of S.F. and a little northwest of Oakland, to give you a little directional perspective). The doors swing open sharply at 10 AM and slam shut like a bank vault at 6:30 PM (unless someone’s spending money here in which case we’ll stay open all night if need be) Tuesday through Friday, and 10 to 5:30 on Saturday. Our website can be found anytime at www.hattarmoto.com. You may email us at sales@ hattarmoto.com if you wish and we still use telephones for old time’s sake with a number sequence of 415-4563345. The * you may have seen by the prices are there to signify that other charges will be added to the sale price in order to determine an out-the-door (or as the Brits more appropriately say, “on-the-road”) price. For detailed info, please give us a shout. MISSION MOTORCYCLES 6232 Mission Street Daly City, CA 94014. 650/992-1234 or 415/333-1234 missionmotorcycles.com 1st Saturday of the month is BROWN BAG Saturday! Get it in the bag and Get 15% OFF! Any Parts or Accessories in stock are 15% off the marked price! One bag per customer, so get in as much stuff as you can and have fun while saving money! Our Service Department will check your tire pressures for free whenever you bring in your motorcycle, scooter, or ATV for servicing or repairs. Used Bikes: 2006 Honda Shadow Aero 750—U1088, Looks and performance of Classic Cruiser Styling From Days of Old, $5499 2004 CRF250R—U970, Newly rebuilt motor! Only $2999 2004 CRF250X—U1101, Green Sticker, Only $3749 2002 Kawasaki ZX-12R—C432, Lots of extras! Just $4999 2008 Kawasaki ZX10R—U1049, «Willie D. Custom» With Lots of Goodies, only $8999 with this CityBike Ad! 2007 Kawasaki ZZR600—U1059, Great Commuter With GIVI Top Case, $5999 2003 Kawasaki Ninja 500R—U1096, dependable, fun to ride commuter with cushy Corbin seat! $3299 2007 Kawasaki Ninja 500R — C431, Fun, easy, manageable first sportbike, 6 miles! $4499 NEW: Zero Electric Motorcycles Available Here At Mission Motorcycles. Call To Schedule A Demo Ride (650) 992-1234 See all of our bikes online at www.missionmotorcycles.com. Prices do not include government fees, taxes, dealer freight/preparation(new vehicles only), dealer document preparation charges or any finance charges (if applicable). Final actual sales price will vary depending on options or accessories selected. TIRE SPECIAL!!!! Now thru Aug 31st come by the shop and get your ride equipped with a brand new set of Dunlop Q2 tires and pay just $299 for the whole deal including installation! Of course, there's always a catch (no?) which means you have to pay a few bucks for tire disposal ($4 to be exact) and we need to give the state its precious tax money so you've got to pay that too. Otherwise two freakin' ninety nine! Please call service at 415-626-3496 extension 3 to make an appointment. If you skip this part you must bring us something good to eat. USED BIKES 2003 DUCATI MULTISTRADA 1000: Hey! Who needs to spend $23K on a new Multistrada with all it's Gameboy buttons and gizmos when you can get a great low mileage pre-owned one for less than six grand? Okay, so it's a different bike but still..... This one has had just one owner who kept up on all services and warranty items -- it's in great shape with just 8000 miles on the clock. Fully equipped with a Givi topcase, a centerstand, an extended windscreen and a painted underbelly fairing. And it's Red! Very nice for just $5995! 2009 DUCATI 1198S: Practically brand new Superbike waiting for a rider! This bone stock bike has lots of factory-installed race bits -- traction control, full Ohlins suspension, forged aluminum wheels etc. One owner who bought it here, only 2000 miles, absolutely perfect and needs nada. Metallic black over bronze frame and wheels. Full factory warranty good until April 2011 or extend it five more years out to 2016 (wha?) for only $799. All this and badass street cred for just $17,495. 2000 DUCATI MONSTER 900IE: Low mileage icon for less than $4K! Red over bronze with a few minor scrapes but only 4800 miles. Runs great and all set for a summer in the city! Just $3995 2003 DUCATI 749 BIPOSTO: Another low mileage Ducati. Just under 3500 miles since new. Fly yellow. (Bug splats blend right in!) Termi slip on pipe for some more boom. Great for the street or bust it out on the track and show the 848 folks a thing or three! Only $6495 2009 HUSQVARNA SM510: Just about as new as you can get without being new. Only gone 400 miles and ridden to church seven days a week by a little old lady in Ross. Never seen snow or sleet and never had a parking ticket either. Did I mention it's almost new? (Ok there are a few boot scuffs on the back fender -- little old lady quit her yoga class....) Was $8699 but, for you, special CityBike reader, it's only $5995! 2006 DUCATI SPORT 1000: Super clean Mono posto Sport Classic. The original design from Mr. Terblanche with a dry clutch, shock on the left and pipe on the right. 7.8k easy miles put on by a careful owner and recent 6K service. A few mods round out the package—Ducati bar risers, open clutch cover and Shark 2-into-1 pipe for some extra sound. Can't believe no one has yet stepped up and taken control of this beast! Only $6795 NEW BIKES MUNROE MOTORS DUCATI SAN FRANCISCO'S OLDEST AND BEST MOTORCYCLE SHOP—SINCE 1958 Ducati and Munroe still have some great specials going! Logomania didn't exactly set the world on fire (don't ask...) and so the folks in Cupertino have switched gears and come up with something everyone understands.... CASH! Or if you don't like CASH and would rather fritter away your pennies each month, there's cheap financing too. Any way you crumble the cookie, the deals are good and summer is not yet half over so get on down here! 412 Valencia St. S.F. 415/626-3496 www.munroemotors.com FOR RACE FANS Along with those somewhat quick guys from Italy, Spain, Texas and Kentucky our very own Nicholas Hayman has been invited to race at Laguna Seca! That's right! Sir Nick has just a few races left including a biggie at Laguna on the Saturday of Moto GP weekend (rapidly approaching on Friday July 23rd, Saturday July 24th and Sunday July 25th for those of you napping in yer cubes....) Since this is an AMA event he'll be riding a tried and true 848 instead of his war-torn 999. Look for number 30 making his way to the front! GO NICK!!!! As always you can read his shameless, self-promoting, snickering stories on the amazing website we set up in 1992: www.munroemotors.com As usual we've got a great selection of demo bikes. Take your pick of the new Multistrada 1200 Sport, the new Monster 796, the Hyper 796, the Streetfighter, little Monsters, big Monsters or Superbikes. Bring your helmet, jacket gloves and M1 or you'll be forced to wear one of our stinky loaner helmets! Best test ride time is during the week before 2pm or Saturdays before noon but we're pretty accomodating if that doesn't fit your schedule. 4:56 pm on Saturday tho, Fuggghetaboutit Jerky! MV AGUSTA Before we're all sold out come see and ride the amazing new F4! We've got a Titanium colored demo and the August 2010 | 24 | CityBike.com other two colors as well (Black, or everyone's fav Red over Silver). Unbelieveably, these incredibly sexy bella machinas are just $18,500! Brutales are cool too -- come ride one! And then, of course, buy one! 2007 Kawasaki Ninja 500R, silver, just 646 miles, $3895 HUSQVARNA 2007 Suzuki GS500F Silver, full fairing, liked by CityBike! 4473 miles, $3695 Just arrived, the new, totally redesigned, more powerful 2011 SM 630 and TE 630s! Awesome new twin cam headed engines and cool new color schemes! Sorry but we're all sold out of the 2009s that y'all been calling about.....You missed 'em, okay! We'll get you any 2010 or 2011 that's available to us. Just bring your checkbook. TRIUMPH The Bonnie Black is back! Come get the original classic, a Bonneville dressed for the streets of San Francisco. Basic, elegant and super retro with a black engine and all black paint. How about a cruiser? The Triumph Thunderbird just won another award—Named Best Cruiser for the second year in a row by Cycle World Magazine. We've got a Silver and black one on the showroom floorand it looks pretty darn good, even to the sportbike eyeball (gotta squint and cough a little maybe) Americas, Speedmasters and Rockets -- don't look anywhere else. We'll make you an offer you can't refuse! SCOOTERS! 2006 Hyosung Rally 3518 miles, 50cc fun, $1299 2002 MZ Moskito, 6172 miles, 50cc, just $750 2008 SYM HD200 777 miles, fast, fun, freeway-legal, $3195 2010 SYM HD200 Cross-country rally scoot! Call for pricing. 2008 SYM RV250 Big, fast, superscoot! 671 miles, $3395 1969 Vespa ET3 Primavera Classic! Runs! Cute! $2899 1983 Vespa PX200 1289 miles. Rare electronic ignition model, CA plated two-stroke! $3995 2006 Vespa GT200 6157 miles, gray, $4295 2006 Vespa LX150, 4037 miles, red, $2895 2007 Vespa LX150, 71 (really!) miles, blue, $3695 And for the umpteenth time will someone please buy our Matte Khaki Green 2010 Scrambler! Can't list the deal here but go to our website and see the savings. It's good! And, of course there are Tigers, Street Triple Rs, Daytona 675s.......all amazing triples! 2008 Vespa LX150, 1496 miles, red, $3595 MOTO GUZZI 2007 Yamaha Vino 125 2913 miles, gray, cute! $2195 Excellent selection of the venerable V-Twins from the shores of Lago di Como. Come see the retro styled V7 Classic and Cafe, the brawny Griso and Guzzi's entry into the dual sport world, the Stelvio. 2008 Yamaha Majesty 400, Liquid-cooled maxi-scoot! 593 miles, $4395 SF MOTO 2004 Yamaha Zuma 50, two-stroke fun! 5118 miles! $1295 255 8th Street at Folsom in San Francisco: 415/2553132, www.sfmoto.com. Located in the SOMA (South of Market) neighborhood in San Francisco, California we provide the bay area with new and used motorcycles, scooters, service,and gear. We have an overflowing inventory of used sportbikes, cruisers, supermoto, and scooters. Lots of options for financing as well. Our Service department has INCREASED operating hours. Every weekday morning service now opens at 8:00 a.m. What’s New: In the parts department: Sartso kevlar riding pants (jeans) are comfortable, and a very good value. In stock for both women and men. Look for pix on the website. The SHARK Helmets RSI Carbon Collection has just arrived and is most likely the lightest helmet you have ever picked up. Check them out right here at SF Moto. ALL in stock SPARX full face helmets are on sale for just $100.00 while they last. All outerwear from Armadillo currently on SALE at CLOSEOUT / BLOWOUT prices !!!!!! In the Service department: Service hours have INCREASED! Every weekday morning service now opens at 8:00am. We are getting fantastic response from all of you on this one THANK YOU!! Now we have a direct phone line into the service dept: Call SF Moto service direct at 415-861-7186 A new tool just arrived from Europe that allows us to make a working copy of your Vespa or Ducati key EVEN if you LOST your MASTER KEY! In the Sales department: Photos of the 2010 Hyosung GT250R are now up. Find the link to pix on the motorcycles page. Find our page on Facebook to find out which bikes we just bought, and will soon be coming to market. Just click on “Facebook” at the top of the page and we will see you there! Check www.sfmoto.com for photos and video of used and new inventory! MOTORCYCLES! 2007 Honda Shadow 600, 1010 miles, blue, V-Twin! $4095 2008 Honda Shadow 600 Blue, liquid-cooled V-Twin! 4360 miles, $4095 2006 Honda CBR600F4i, fast, comfy, 344 miles, $5695 2009 Kawasaki Versys 650, green do-it-all funster! 9969 miles, $5395 2009 Kawasaki Ninja 500R, blue 8114 miles, $3849 CityBike Classifieds 2003 Suzuki GSX-R600, Alstare edition, 8761 miles, $4200 2008 Vespa LX150, 343 miles, silver, $3695 2006 Vespa GT200 6157 miles, gray, price reduced! $3899 2007 Yamaha Majesty 400, Liquid-cooled maxi-scoot in blue! 2816 miles, $3795 THE ZEN HOUSE 170 Main Street, Point Arena, CA 95468 707/882-2281 www.TheZenHouse.net 2001 Ducati Monster M900Sie: Arrow Aftermarket Exhaust System, Bar Risers, 25,000 Miles, Fast & Fun PRICED TO SELL!! $3,400.00. 2000 Bimota SB6R: Recent Major Service; Low Miles; Clean, Good Tires & Chain; GXSR Power Plant; Exotic Italian Trim; Best of Both Worlds; Ready to Ride! Own the only one on the block for only $11,000 1996 Triumph Sprint: Very Clean, Factory Bags, StainTune Mufflers, Good Tires, 8600 Miles. GREATLY REDUCED! PRICED TO SELL!! $2,600.00 1990 Harley XL883 Sportster: S & S Carburetor and Air Cleaner, Near New Avon Venom-X Tires, New Battery, Recent Service Just Completed, Easy Starting and Great Running, 24,000 Miles. Great Harley for only $2395 1985 Yamaha RZ350: Milled Head; Fresh Top End; Mukuni Carbs; V-Force 3 Reeds; Ported & Polished; Aftermarket Pipes; Spec II Full Faring; The Last of the 2-Stroke Road Bikes! $3,900 For additional info please visit www.TheZenHouse.net Hyosung! GV650 Avitar, ridden and liked by CityBike, fast, sweet-handling limited-edition V-Twin, FI, 2-year warranty, $7499. 2009 GT250R, better than the 250 Ninja! $3799. 2009 SYM HD200, pick your color, freeway legal, SALE! $3499! 1999 Yamaha R1, blue, 4.6K miles, Ohlins, Race Tech, Graves rearsets, V&H slip-on: $3950. Also, '97 Aprilia RS250 & '99 R6 track bikes: prices negotiable. 408/3430381/921-9689. FREMONT HONDA KAWASAKI 1997 Honda ST1100. Fast & fun sport tourer with moto bars, risers, Corbin & stock seats, Haynes manual, and trunk. 76k and in excellent mechanical, good cosmetic shape. All black. $3800 o.b.o. (707) 223-2064. This month’s pre-owned inventory: 1999 Kawasaki Concours: 40k miles, plus upgrades, never crashed. $2345 or ? Auburn 530/823-8480 2005 HONDA VTX 1300R $5,999 21,800 Miles, Black Beautiful bike, hard bags,Vance and Hines exh. crash bars, windscreen, dual back rest. Ask for Bill Keys 1955 Zundapp 600cc: Restored to perfection. National award winner. Black. $25,000. Serious inquiries only. 415/781-3432 2009 HONDA SHADOW VLX DELUXE 600 $4499 bone stock, with windshield, like new. 2007 KTM 990 Superduke: Orange and black, 7500 miles. Great condition. $8900 707/971-0306 2006 VICTORY KINGPIN $8,999.00 21,000 Miles, Black. Clean, well maintained. Corbin seat with dual backrest. K & N oil cooler. Arlen Ness custom bag guards. 2002 Moto Guzzi LeMans: 7000 miles, Champagne gold, factory titanium cannisters, factory ECU chip, Corbin Gel Seat. $6000 Clay 510/758-7564, bmwclay@ prodigy.net 2009 APRILIA SR50 R FACTORY scooter only 18 miles!!! $2599 2003 HONDA RC51 $5999 ONLY 18000 miles, Sato high mounts, superbike bar conversion, more 2008 HONDA CBR1000RR $8,999, 1500 Miles Graphite Black/Pearl, Only 1500 miles. Never down. Just like brand new out of the box fresh. You won’t find a nicer used bike. 2006 HONDA GOLD WING PREMIUM AUDIO $15,799 5,700 Miles. Black Extra low miles, like new condition. Call Bill Keys Tues. Wed., Fri. Sat. 510/661-0100 ext 115 or email: [email protected] SCOOTERLAND! ScooterLand US is leading the transition to newer, greener forms of transportation for everyone; 100% Green Technology Electric Bicycles, Eco Friendly Gas & Electric Scooters and Electric Mobility Scooters. Visit us online at www.scooterlandus.com or in our San Jose & Los Gatos Locations 408/ 354-2999. State: check out our web site: www.dubbelju.com and see all the things we have going on. 415/495-2774. Zip: SAN FRANCISCO AND BEYOND: DAVE’S CYCLE TRANSPORT ADVANCED CYCLE SERVICE Ready-to-ride for summer? Stop by for a FREE inspection, tires, chain, brakes! For all your motorcycle needs. Next door to HELIMOT: 1135 Old Bayshore Hwy San Jose, CA 95112. 408/299-0508, 408/299-0509 fax Jim Davis (owner/mechanic) 2003 Suzuki SV1000S, silver. One original owner, still on first set of tires! Just 3000 miles, like new. Other items available. $4500. Ask for Otto: [email protected] 2001 Honda Reflex Scooter: 250cc, 8100 miles, new tags in May, $1999. Call Jess in Belmont: 650/593-6763 2006 KAWASAKI KX450F $3,999.00, 50 Hours, Kawasaki Lime Green / Black, Adult owned, well cared for and clean. Nice bike. Name: Address: City: e-mail: USED MOTORCYCLES: NEW: 41545 Albrae Street in Fremont: 510/661-0100 fremonthondakawasaki.com. Reach thousands of Northern California motorcyclists. Just $15 for 25 words, 25¢ each additional word. Photos add $25. Industry classifieds are a higher price. Free 25-word listing for stolen bikes. Deadline is the 3rd of each month. Just fill out the form, or copy and send it with your check, payable to CityBike 69A Duboce, San Francisco, CA 94103 Three Trials Motorcycles for Sale! 70cc, 250cc and 350cc. Call 415/781-3432 2006 Yamaha FZ1: Under 13,000 miles, excellent mechanical condition though will need tires soon. Everything else is excellent: just some cosmetic wear saddle bags / seat bag included $5000 or offer 831/9172227. PARTS AND ACCESSORIES THE UNDERTAKER: Motorcycle towing system. No trailer, no tires, no tags. No parking or storing. Check it out at www.TowYourBike.com. 925/413-4103. Dirt Bike or Cruiser. The Old Man The Old Truck Dave is working Dave’s Cycle Transport San Francisco-Bay Area and Beyond... 24 Hour Service (415)824-3020/www.davescycle.com WHEELS AND DEALS MOTO TIRE GUY www.MotoTireGuy.com Motorcycle Tire Services San Francisco - Bay Area (415) 601-2853 Order your tires online, Zero CA sales tax plus Free UPS Ground, then have a Preferred Installer in your local area do the installation and save! Please visit website for details. MOTORCYCLE RIDING LESSONS One-on-one training! Motorcycles provided, advanced rider training. Passengers/hills/freeway/refresher course/ dirt! MOTOMIKE 13 years of one-on-one training: get out of the parking lot and ride! 415/225-MOTO (6686), [email protected]. TOWING ACCIDENT OR INJURY? Call 415/999-4790 for a 24-hr. recorded message and a copy of the FREE REPORT EBAY SALES eBay sales. Specialist with vehicles, 12 years experience, and 4000+ positive feedback rating. Flat listing rate. I can produce auctions with 20+ large format, gorgeous, high quality pictures with my dealer account and pro-grade camera. Dr. Hannibal Lechter reminds us that «we covet what we see.” Let me show people what you have and why they should pay top dollar for it! Interested in larger lots of identifiable, good-quality motorcycle and car parts to buy as well. [email protected] or 415/699-8760. STOLEN! Help! My Suzuki DRZ 400SM was stolen in Pacific Heights July 14th. Yosh exhaust, left rear blinker was kinda hanging off, Acerbis front light, new back tire, no graphics just totally black (except two EXCEL stickers on front fork covers. License plate : 17X2436 Vin: JS1SK44A662100477. Please no street justice, just call me and the SFPD if you see the bike. (415) 982-9033 NORTHBAY: REDWOODS MOTORCYCLE TOW & TRANSPORT Stolen motorcycles are listed free in CityBike (if you didn’t steal them)! Send info to [email protected] Providing safe and reliable transport of your motorcycle! REACH OUT TO THE MASSES! SERVICES Licensed and Insured MOTORCYCLE STORAGE AND RENTALS IN SAN FRANCISCO Hold a California Motor Carrier Permit Run your classified in CityBike and communicate with thousands and thousands of Bay Area motorcyclists, most of whom fear and loathe the Internet for the soulkilling time-sink that it is. For $15, we’ll run your ad ‘till sold, and probably even months after that. You can ask for free stuff, tell us why the world will end next week, or publish your personal manifesto 25 words at a time...the sky's the limit! Subscribers get a free ad every month! We're practically paying you to run an ad! It’s like we’re the government. Never worry about theft, vandalism, weather damage or parking tickets. DUBBELJU MC RENTALS, San Francisco’s oldest motorcycle rental shop, offers safe storage for your bike in our shop at 689A Bryant St. Not only is it a great shop to store your motorcycle but we have cool rental bikes as well; BMW, Triumph, Harley, Honda, Suzuki, and even Yamaha scooters. Keep us in mind when your bike is in the shop or you have a friend come in to town. Be sure to Santa Rosa, CA Serving Marin, Sonoma, Napa & Mendocino Counties 707-537-5212 August 2010 | 25 | CityBike.com AFM Report: Round 4 at Thunderhill Raceway with wins in Formula 40 Heavyweight, Open Superbike and CityBike Open Grand Prix on his Mach 1 Motorsports Yamaha. Once again, Lenny Hale racked up the victories in the middleweight classes, with winning finishes in 750 Production, 750 Superbike, and 600 Superbike on his Garage Endeavors tuned Yamaha. Taking things one step further with four victories was Dan Sewell, walking away from the weekend with wins in Formula 40 Lightweight, 650 Twins, Formula 4, and 650 Production Twins on his Twin Works Factory Suzuki. By Mike Solis, Photos by Gary Rather Pacific Track Time’s Michael Earnest added to his winning record for the season, taking the Formula Pacific victory at Thunderhill Raceway. American Honda’s Jeff Tigert led early on his CM Motorsports tuned Honda, with Earnest and BARF Racing’s Chris Siglin both in pursuit. As the race went on, both Earnest and Siglin made their way past Tigert, exchanging positions a number of times as Tigert waited to capitalize on any mistakes. On the final lap, Earnest slipped just out of Siglin’s reach as Tigert set himself up for one last run to the Ed Hazaar (45) out front on his famous Kawasaki in Formula Dinosaur. checkered flag. In the end, it was Earnest who took “I just got lucky that Mike and Chris the race win on his EDR Performanceheld each other up, and then Chris made tuned Suzuki, his second of the season. that mistake,” explained Tigert. “I don’t Siglin appeared to have second in hand, feel like I deserved it. It kinda baffles but mistakenly rolled off the throttle at me—Mike’s been racing all these years the flag. With the actual finish line located and getting faster, and here I am after only another hundred or so feet down the track, 10 years, not riding like I used to just four Tigert was able to motor past for second, or five years ago. I don’t feel like I’m going relegating Siglin to third. slower, but I don’t feel like I have that edge that I used to have. Used to be if there “The last two rounds were rough, having was someone in front of me, I didn’t give a to borrow a bike for Round 2 and then fock—I was gonna come through and get breaking a handlebar clamp in Round 3,” ‘em! I’d like to have the old Jeff back so I said Earnest. “That’s racing though, ya know? It’s the bad days that make the good could challenge him for more race wins.” ones feel so good. It’s a privilege to ride with those guys—hopefully we can do it again in the next one. I think it was a really good race for people to watch—I’m just doing my best trying to represent the old guys out there!” After spending most of the race in third, the former AFM Number One and current Willow Springs Number One Tigert explained how fortunate he felt for his runner-up finish. service Thunderhill also saw some new faces finishing at the front. Open Formula Pacific - 1. Michael Earnest 2. Jeffrey Tigert 3. Chris Siglin 4. David Stanton 5. Martin Szwarc 6. Cory Call CT Racing Open Superbike - 1. David Stanton 2. Martin Szwarc 3. Corey Sarros 4. Scott Wilson 5. Wesley Kane 6. Harley Barnes 750 Superbike - 1. Lenny Hale 2. Kevin Nekimken 3. Jason Lauritzen 4. Greg McCullough 5. Timothy Kamholz 6. Brian Stone Pacific Track Time 600 Superbike - 1. Lenny Hale 2. Tyler O’Hara 3. Travis Oghe 4. Jason Lauritzen 5. Greg McCullough 6. Berto Wooldridge 450 Superbike - 1. Joe Sickle 2. Vlastimil Kotyza 3. Aleksandr Anatichuk 4. Vik Anderson 5. Jake Kimball 6. Chris Barbour 250 Superbike - 1. Kirk Korenko 2. Charles Weaver 3. Brian Bartlow 4. Alex Florea 5. Mark McKinney 6. Wesley Rundall The Track Club Open Production - 1. Ken Casey 2. Jesse Carter 3. Blaine Bessler 4. Patrick Corcoran 5. Tim Scarrott 6. Michael Aaron Cohen 750 Production - 1. Lenny Hale 2. Kevin Nekimken 3. Berto Wooldridge 4. Jason Lauritzen 5. Brian Stone 6. Neil Atterbury Keigwins@theTrack 600 Production - 1. Tyler O’Hara 2. Lenny Hale 3. Berto Wooldridge4. Jason Lauritzen 5. Greg McCullough 6. Jeff Greenberg improvement in his results, “EDR Performance built me a supersport motor, and Terry Russell of KFG Racing has been driving down here every weekend with his trailer and rig to help us out. And of course there’s Michael Earnest, who has been helping me a bunch lately. I’m looking forward to the next race.” Frustrated with what may end up being a costly mistake to his championship hopes, Siglin described his thoughts on the weekend. Another first timer to the top step of the podium was BARF Racing’s Berto Wooldridge. After over eight years of racing, the charismatic Wooldridge finally took his first AFM race win, taking the Formula 1 victory on his Fastline Cyclestuned BARF Racing Yamaha R6 after a hard-fought battle with second-place finisher Greg McCullough. “I was so freaking pissed at myself,” said Siglin, “I’ve raced at this track tons of times, and know better than that. I brain farted for whatever reason and it cost me a secondplace finish, and points that would have tied me with Tigert for the championship lead. Now, I’m nine points back. Trust me, parts AFM Round 4 June 11-12, 2010 Thunderhill Raceway Results 650 Production Twins - 1. Dan Sewell 2. David Raff 3. Robin Geenen 4. Thomas Dorsey 5. Alan Cunningham 6. Timothy Ames Formula 40 Mediumweight - 1. Timothy Kamholz 2. Zdenek Mika 3. James Hendricks 4. Kelly Barnett 5. Garry Bannister 6. David Ben-Jamin 250 Production - 1. Kirk Korenko 2. Charles Weaver 3. Brian Bartlow 4. Mark McKinney 5. Wesley Rundall 6. Robert Wetterau Formula 40 Lightweight - 1. Dan Sewell 2. Jay Avansino 3. Robert Campbell 4. Guy Hyder 5. Jay Kinberger 6. Debra Barton CityBike Open Grand Prix - 1. David Stanton 2. Martin Swarc 3. Wesley Kane 4. Scott Wilson 5. Peter O’Sullivan 6. Jesse Carter Super Dinosaur - 1. Paul Rico 2. Guy Hyder 3. Ed Haazer 4. Andrew Clay 5. Kevin Clark 6. Spencer Smith Scuderia West Formula 1 - 1. Berto Wooldridge 2. Greg McCullough 3. Jesse Carter 4. Eric Gulbransen 5. Lenny Hale 6. Jason Butler Formula 2 - 1. Brian Hoffman 2. Michael Altamirano 3. Erik Kolstoe 4. Richard Denman 5. Andre Benguerel 6. Gwyn Lewis Adjustable Triple Clamp for Ducati 916 to 1198 Race proven and endorsed by World Champion Doug Polen (gopolen.com) Ken Casey (196) takes his first AFM win in Open Production. that will never happen again—I’ll ride my bike into the grass before it does!” Once again, a handful of racers came away from the event with multiple race wins. Former number-one David Stanton continued his mid-season surge in form, August 2010 | 26 | CityBike.com Production saw Ken Casey of Race Ready Motorsports take his first AFM race win, scoring a decisive victory over second place finisher Jesse Carter. “The bike is working great,” Casey explained when asked about the consistent Clubman Heavyweight - 1. Michael Aaron Cohen 2. Steve Erickson 3. Blaine Bessler 4. Brian Woodiwiss 5. Micah Larson 6. Aleksandr Anatichuk Formula 3 - 1. Debra Barton 2. Phillip Krenn 3. Jayson Uribe 4. John Kreidle 5. Gwyn Lewis Clubman Middleweight - 1. Adam La Vigna 2. Mike Nigliazzo 3. Aleksandr Anatichuk 4. David Carpenter 5. Micah Larson 6. Chris McCoy Formula 4 - 1. Dan Sewell 2. Jay Avansino 3. David Raff 4. Andrew Patterson 5. Robert Campbell 6. Jay Kinberger Clubman Lightweight - 1. Rory Kamper 2. Mitch Joseph 3. Aleksandr Anatichuk 4. Kevin Clark 5. Timothy Ames 6. Frank Shermoen Desmoto Sport Open Twins - 1. Chris Siglin 2. Steve Metz 3. Nick Hayman 4. Eric Gulbransen 5. Brendan Walsh 6. Scott Miles Tag Team Heavyweight - 1. Neil Atterbury, Harley Barnes 2. Ron Bunten, Richard Stanco 3. Martin Ayala, David Hutton 4. Tim Scarrott, Eric Morris 5. John Gerard Henry 650 Twins - 1. Dan Sewell 2. Jay Avansino 3. David Raff 4. Andrew Patterson 5. Robert Campbell 6. Jay Kinberger 500 Twins - 1. Vik Anderson 2. Leonard Barker Jr 3. Brian Bartlow 4. Patrick Aldinger 5. Dan Azar Formula Singles - 1. Alex Florea 2. Adam Schindler Formula 40 Heavyweight - 1. David Stanton 2. Peter O’Sullivan 3. Ron Bunten 4. Anthony Manciu 5. Patrick Corcoran 6. Patrick Blackburn has it pretty dialed. I know he likes to ride hard—I always just hope I can pressure him into a mistake or something. We’ve got a good program going with Mach 1 Motorsports, Pirelli, and GP Bike Parts— the team owner and I are good buddies, and it’s his bike I’m riding.” Thunderhill also saw the premiere of a new class of racing, referred to as “Tag Team.” This new class—which utilizes a Le Mans-style running start— incorporates teams of two riders that take Tag Team Middleweight - 1. Greg McCullough, Jason Lauritzen 2. Jesse Carter, Wyatt King 3. Ricardo Vizcaino, Oscar Fernandez 4. David Ben-Jamin, Justus Hoffman 5. Lisa Wallace, Jennifer Lauritzen 6. Kyle Schirrmacher, Sam Richards Tag Team Lightweight - 1. Jay Avansino, Tom Dorsey 2. Mickey Fimbres, Robin Geenen 3. Jonathan Forman, Joe Sickle 4. Alan Cunningham, Brad Gyger 5. Gwyn Lewis, John Kreidle 6. Jake Kimball, Richard Appel turns over the course of 60 minutes, with pit stops allowed only between 20 minutes and 40 minutes. The class appeared to be a hit with the riders, with Keigwins@ theTrack instructors Harley Barnes and Neil Atterbury taking the overall win, after Ken Casey and Gabe Santa Coloma were disqualified for a pitting outside of the allotted time window. “We barely made it out there—it was interesting for everyone,” explained Barnes. “My bike was overheating, I had “This weekend was a dream weekend from the start,” explained Wooldridge. “We had a strategy, a plan of a risky nature, and we executed on it perfectly. I love it when a plan comes together! I’ve won a plethora of races on jet skis, championships, state titles, but nothing felt better than this win—the monkey is finally off my back.” performance Formula AFemme - 1. Joy Higa 2. Christie Cooley 3. Zoe Rem 4. Jennifer Lauritzen 5. Bess Keigwin 6. Lisa Wallace Young racer Tyler O’Hara was another rider who managed to pierce Lenny Hale’s domination of the middleweight classes, taking the 600 Production win. After exchanging the lead with O’Hara a number of times over the course of the race, Hale was forced to settle for second, with Berto Wooldridge third. “I think every time I go out, I’m learning something from Lenny,” explained the 23-year-old O’Hara. “He’s been riding these same tracks for the last five years, and August 2010 | 27 | CityBike.com to back off and let them pass me two laps from the end. I wasn’t really sure, but in the pits they knew because of the illegal pit stop. My bike was overheating, I had to back off and they passed me two laps from the end. It lasted only one race on Sunday until it let go!” The next round of AFM action takes place in July 10-11, again at Thunderhill Raceway. Find out more about club racing in Northern California at afmracing.org.