Do you just despise anyone who's opinion differs from yours?
1- It's not bad advice. It's my opinion. Which I made clear.
2- After 10k miles with my setup I am indeed savvy enough to know what I'm talking about.
3- If you don't like the look,don't do it. But be a courteous enough individual to accept the fact that not everyone shares your exact same tastes in style.
4- And this is slightly off topic. But could you please just avoid me in the future? I really am doing my best to contain myself at this point. I don't know if you think I've wronged you in a past life or whatever,but I'm really sick of your attitude. Your attitude of: "YOU don't agree with ME which makes YOU WRONG and STUPID!!"
If you could do this I would greatly appreciate it. Of course,if I could be of assistance to you in anyway I'd be glad to help. Otherwise I have enough drama in my real life without adding interweb drama from you. Thank you and have a nice day.
I don't despise anyone. If you feel that way that's your interpretation and your problem.
1. It is your opinion that you are offering as advice, and it IS bad advice to give some one. Just because it is opinion doesn't mean it doesn't have merit independent its dubious origin, it is the substance of what it is saying or the actions it leads to that give it merit. Telling someone it is ok to do something incorrectly that will eventually "to each their own" isn't something that should be encouraged, and is bad advice. In motorcycles there are sometimes a clear right way and a wrong way. What you are saying is it is ok to do it the wrong way because you personally haven't felt any ill effects yet, but sometimes there are things you can learn pretty quickly and sometimes there are things that take years and even decades to hurt you and you just have to take someone else's word for it. If you don't believe me, go ask all those old timers who rode hardtails back in the day and ask them about their backs and why they limp.
2. Gee, I guess your 10K miles is totally equal to my hundreds of thousands, or the time I spent working for a race team, or all the old timers who have given me advice over the years. I can tell you there is plenty of stuff in motor cycles I am not saavy about at all, I get schooled all the time by those who have spent more time problem solving than I have. You know what, it is the nature of the beast - a friend of mine's father once said to me "by the time you get to know enough about motorcycling, your life is almost over and you will need another lifetime to use all of it building and riding. My point is this, saavy isn't how many miles you ride, it is how much time you spend problem solving and how well you take advice given to you by others and how you apply all of that. As to the subject of bike ergonomics your comments clearly give you away as not being saavy to this issue since you don't even have your own bike setup properly. It is ok to be wrong and make mistakes so long as they are new mistakes. If someone is telling you something is a mistake, maybe you should listen instead of taking things so personally, esp when that person has no vested interest in you, or your motorcycle.
3. I threw the look thing in at the end as a joke since all the cafe kids these days seem to care about is the look. If you couldn't see that as the humorous part of it then you really aren't saavy.
4. If you think I am targeting you personally, then maybe you should seek professional help. I have no idea who you are and honestly I rarely read who is commenting, just what they say. avoid you? I wasn't making any kind of effort toward you in the first place and I sure as hell am not going to start acknowledging you now. Maybe some of the things you say are just dubious? maybe you are actually giving bad advice to people and you just don't realize it. If one of the goals of this forum is to learn, sometimes part of that learning process is someone who has spent more time on this issue than you telling you you are wrong. Courtesy has nothing to do with it. In fact, I don't see how I am being discourteous by taking an interest in applying my knowledge and experience so you end up with a better bike and a better way of thinking with nothing coming back to me. you don't like what I say, nobody is forcing you to read it. If you think I am wrong and you have something more than just "personal" experience to back it up with I am all ears and willing to at the very least listen. Sometimes there is just a right and a wrong way to do things, we are all constrained by the laws of nature and physics afterall.