Love those bikes, and that one has a few tasteful mods. Spang is right, they have gone up in the last few years. Four or five years ago you could get a really clean CR for less than $3K. The only issue I know of is the rocker arms on the early motors. Not sure where 92 was on that spectrum. It almost needs white wheels to go with the frame though.
I had a buddy that had a lightweight version of the 900ss. It was museum quality and he got a fortune for it when he sold it. Really cool bikes. Go get that thing RD.
How many miles in the Road king? We still had some older Road Kings in the department when I retired...like 05s I think. We still had a carbed ‘99, too, I believe.
Well, I transferred the Road King to the new owner this morning and bought the Ducati this afternoon...pick it up Saturday morning. Yeehaw!
I think I did OK. I had a nice long talk with the owner; I feel pretty good about his stewardship while the bike has been in his care. Here is his ad description.. 30,700 miles, excellent condition, new Barnett clutch with Oberon slave cylinder, runs great, full service with new belts at 27000 miles, newer battery with wiring update, Ferracci high exhaust, CycleCat rearsets, have some stock parts. This model features Ohlins rear shock, adjustable front suspension, aluminum swingarm and 5.5 inch rear wheel.
I dont miss my harley at all, sold it and bought a ducati 950 SuperSport S, actually feel one with the bike. The electric livewire is bs, who will buy these bikes for the amount they go for and worry about charging them. I was at the PRI show this past weekend, they had a kart that ran on batteries, the longevity of the motor was interesting because usually you have to rebuld the engine every 10 to 15 hours but when asked how to charge the battery, use a generator at the track LMAO.
Using a generator isn't the only way to charge at the track. One solution is to charge from a larger battery pack that itself is connected to solar cells. This could simply be a trailer that carries the charging pack and has solar panels on the roof. The solar panels would charge the large battery literally any time the sun is shining (i.e between race weekends) Regardless of that scenario, if an electric motor provides a competitive advantage as a powerplant, I wouldn't necessarily care if I needed a gas-powered generator for charging. You can ridicule me for using a generator if you like, but if I win I won't care one bit. Not sure if they have a class for it but I've been thinking that an electric-motored kart or prototype could be seriously competitive In SCCA autocross. Besides that, every race engine depends on electricity to run so what's the big deal if the powerplant itself is electric?
I have no issue with an electric engine in racing. i do have some safety concerns having a decent size batter that could fly off the kart, car, or bike. What if you need to be extracted from an electric car, is it safe for everyone. The up front cost for the kart i saw was double what it would cost to buy a two stroke running kart. The world does not have the resources necessary to mine for batteries if everything goes electric. Electric vehicles are cool but they are not saving the earth. I also enjoy hearing a motor and listening to the different manufactures engine tones.
It's typical that something new to the market is going to cost more. But once you have your self-contained charging system in place, the cost of fuel pretty much goes away so the savings in race fuel and oil is there. I agree that electric vehicles aren't going to save the earth. Even while I worked at Tesla I wasn't drinking that Koolaid. However, EVs do have their place. Just think about the reduction in smog for an area like LA if the vehicles there were predominantly electric. I also think that having an electric-vehicles-only racetrack in the middle of a city would bypass the sound issue and make racing much more accessible. I like the sound of an engine as much as the next guy, but I'd also love having someone not know I'm about to pass them because they can't hear me