Author Topic: A good ride story?  (Read 1103 times)

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Offline Don R

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A good ride story?
« on: January 16, 2026, 07:13:39 PM »
 I'd bet everyone has a good ride story, maybe not great but I bet most can relate to this one.

I was 21 and had my first Honda, a 73 CB500. It was a Saturday in spring and got up to 70*F, my brother called, him and a few friends were riding over to Burlington Iowa for a beer. I agreed but my bike wasn't broken in and I wanted to keep it below whatever rpm the dealer told me. The stock car guys with us called BS but rode slow to humor me. We were about 50/50 Honda 750's and Kawasaki LTD's and me on the 500.
 A guy on a 750 joined us, everybody thought someone else in the group knew him, so he was an instant new friend. We got to the River, looked down through the steel mesh bridge deck at the water of the Mississippi, had our "one" beer and when we came back out it was dark, damp, windy and 45*. Nobody was dressed for that and we started home. It didn't take long for them to speed up and ride off. I decided then and there that my 500 was sufficiently broken in and rode about 80mph the rest of the way home. I didn't warm up but got home sooner.
 Later one someone asked me who was that guy? I said I thought you knew him. It turned out he was the brother-in-law of a guy that I worked with and he just wanted to go for a ride too.
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Online jgger

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #1 on: January 17, 2026, 08:23:04 AM »
Well it was about '68 or '69 when I suggested to a friend, who i had introduced to motorcycles, that we ride up to Mt Wilson. So 2 dumb high school kids armed with my CL72 ( 250 scrambler) and his 175 Honda scrambler took off to discover Angeles Crest Hwy, this was a big adventure. It was January or February,  clear and cold southern California day. We lived in Whittier and it was before either the 605 or 210 freeways were built, so about 35 miles of surface street riding to get to the base of the mountian.

Mt Wilson is almost directly above the Rose Bowl in Pasadena and where all the broadcast towers are for a major part of So Cal.  If you ever watch the Rose Parade it is the mountian skyline they always show in the background. We both grew up ( to our ripe old age of 16) looking up at the mountian and wondering if it could be tamed. So with an abundance of enthusiasm and a lack of good sense off we went. It was a great ride until............altitude and temperature joined forces to humble us. As we got to about maybe about 3/4 of the way to the top the cold finally made us pull over, only because there was no longer any feeling in our hands, toes, and several other body parts. It snows alot on Mt Wilson but this was a dry year and it was freaking cold!  My friend Bruce wanted to quit but because of the cold and that's when I came up with the great idea to warm or hands on the exhaust pipes of 2 bikes that had been run hard and just shut off. Off came the ski gloves and I grabbed ahold of the muffler.........cold as a fish! Carefully touching the pipes all the way to where they exited the head.......nothing!  I wrapped my hands around the cylinders and got the hint of warmth , it was like heaven! As we squatted next to the road fondling our engines we discussed if it was worth the effort to continue. I'm not sure if it was the lack of good sense that kicked in at this point or the dwindling embers of our enthusiasm, whatever it was we decided to soldier on.

Once at the top we were rewarded with a magnificent view of the entire San Gabriel  valley, all the way to Downtown Los Angeles, clear to the Pacific ocean.  Looking straight down the mountian you could see the football field of the Rose Bowl,  Santa Anita race track, and any other landmarks that were part of that era. We looked at each other after about 10 or 15 minutes and agreed..........LET'S GET THE F...OUTA HERE! We mounted out steeds, choked them so they would start, kicked them back to life( did it mention it was cold) and headed back down to civilization.

It may not been much of a ride by today's standards, but it was a magnificent adventure for two16 year old kids.
« Last Edit: January 17, 2026, 08:30:35 AM by jgger »
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Offline Johnie

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2026, 09:09:03 AM »
Back in the early 70's my first bike was a 1965 Honda 65cc Sport. I would run all over the city and county thinking I was Bronson...LOL. A good friend wanted to take a ride about an hour away to a great little lake to go swimming. I was a skinny 16 year old and he was a big kid so to speak. Too much for that little 65cc. We decided it was a good idea any way and got our fins, goggles, towels and lunch together and headed off on the 55MPH state highway. Didn't take long to find if we had 45MPH we were lucky. We got there, but the truckers behind us were not happy. It was a slow ride, but great ride in the sun and warm summer to our favorite beach loaded with girls. We had a blast then we both got bigger Honda's and did it all over again...the beach and the girls. Nothing like growing up in the 60's and 70's. Good times that often flow through my memory. My buddy is still around. We get together and our wives hear the story among other fun times we had back then...only on bigger bikes. One thing about owning a bike back in those days it was easy to get any girl to take a ride. They loved a cycle and to cruise on those warm summer days. I was introduced to my wife by my high school girlfriend...they both loved riding the Honda, but my wife and I have been riding for 47 years now. Life is good!
« Last Edit: January 17, 2026, 09:11:05 AM by Johnie »
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Offline Don R

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #3 on: January 21, 2026, 09:08:54 PM »
 We live in western Illinois, my Dad had family in Pennsylvania, in the mid 70's he wanted me to drive him and Mom back out there for a week vacation. I talked him into letting me tow my Vetter equipped 750 behind his Buick so my wife and I could have some get-away time. We spent a couple days with my aunt and then rode it to New Jersey to the beach, when we got there, we wanted beach matts, towels and a few souvenirs, going back that bike looked like the grapes of wrath truck with stuff tied all over it.
  I had spent the morning riding looking into the sun, then the day at the beach, then riding back looking into the sun. That evening my cousins took us to do some nighttime fishing, I couldn't see my hand in front of my face.
  A week after getting back I crossed railroad tracks and the Vetter windshield fell back and landed in my lap. That's when I learned they had invented the metal clip to hold them on and that you were supposed to remove the windshield when towing on a trailer.
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Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #4 on: January 21, 2026, 10:45:12 PM »
The second year my wife and I had our matching 2008 Kawasaki KLR650s, my son and his wife rented a cottage about 100 miles north of our farm for the first weekend of May. The weather was glorious, so on the Friday we packed up the bikes and headed up there. The previous Fall, we’d spent +30 days riding together all around PEI, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Quebec and Labrador, so this was pretty tame….

All weekend it got cooler and cooler. Cold rain on Sunday and when we woke up Monday morning there was an inch or two of snow everywhere! We waited a few hours, put on all the clothing we had, and headed home. The main highway was sanded and salted and a sloppy mess. By the time we got home we were covered in gritty icicles. Easily the most miserable ride we’ve ever had.

Offline Stev-o

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #5 on: January 22, 2026, 07:36:09 AM »
Must have been summer of '81, a group of 5 of us decide to take a cycle camping trip to Colorado.  We left Houston and avoided all interstates, though West Texas and New Mexico and made it to CO in 2 days.
Spent 8 glorious days camping near Telluride, sunny and highs of 80*.  After that, three of the guys had to head back to the real world.
My friend Mel had both quit our jobs so we had more time to ride, we decided to head north to WY, towards Yellowstone Park, I was on my Kawasaki 1000 and he on his Yamaha 650.  We get as far as Kelly, WY and it has become VERY cold, we would stop periodically and do jumping jacks on the side of the rode to warm up!  Then, the snow started falling, keep in mind this is late June at this point.  That was the final straw, we decided to get a motel room, camping is freezing temps after leaving beautiful weather in CO was not in the cards.   Watched the movie "The Shining" that evening, will never forget that trip!
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Offline Johnie

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #6 on: January 22, 2026, 08:28:18 AM »
Gosh we bikers do seem to start out on a warm day and by nightfall the cold hits...and we weren't prepared for it. Such is the case with my story. Dating my wife at the time 1977 and just got my new CB750K. She had just got her first job as a radiologist in Milwaukee. We were both from Oshkosh about 90 minutes apart. I would ride down to see her on weekends on the bike. This was early summer in June and it was so warm in the morning I decided to ride down in my cut-offs and tank top. Had a great day, but I had to be back for work the next day and left late for home. Well, the temp had dropped drastically and I was freezing my butt on the way home on the expressway. By the time I got home I could hardly move. Went to the drawer in my room and pulled out the electric blanket and needed that heat. I am sure I was hypothermic and needed that blanket to survive. Fun to talk about now with her, but man it was the coldest ride ever. And yes, we were wearing cut-off jeans back then...crazy man!!! We were doing a lot of riding in the 70's and now we are in our 70's and just enjoying riding and retirement. Here's the girl and the bike...
« Last Edit: January 22, 2026, 08:30:13 AM by Johnie »
1970 CB750K0 - Candy Ruby Red
1973 CB750K3 - Candy Bacchus Olive or Sunflake Orange
1970 Chevy Chevelle SS396 - Cortez Silver
1976 GL1000 Sulphur Yellow

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Offline willbird

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #7 on: January 22, 2026, 08:31:19 AM »
In early 1990's I rode my CB750K2 from near Toledo, OH to Ocracroke Island. My motel there was not on the island so I took the ferry there and bummed around for the day, heading back to the ferry I noticed the ODO was about ready to roll over a 10k increment and so I went nearly to the ferry landing, then went back enough to turn around and make sure it rolled that 10K increment over while going 100+ MPH :-). 100 and a little is pretty much wound out on that bike with he Windjammer II :-).

Offline Johnie

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #8 on: January 22, 2026, 08:34:24 AM »
Great stories guys...I like the read! Keep them coming...
1970 CB750K0 - Candy Ruby Red
1973 CB750K3 - Candy Bacchus Olive or Sunflake Orange
1970 Chevy Chevelle SS396 - Cortez Silver
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Offline Don R

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #9 on: January 22, 2026, 10:12:45 AM »
  Chime in if you were there, world tour, I forget which year.
  My brother and I did Topeka to Munster Indiana, we picked Godzilla up at the Motorcycle Classics office. We were a little late but made the meet-up group pic and lunch, later the promised photo came out in the magazine, and it was 6 of us in a 1"x1" postage stamp.
 The Kansas and Missouri guys rode east on cool two-lane roads with us all afternoon and I found an awesome tail of the dragon style roller coaster road in Mo. to follow towards home.
  We took a week off and then headed to Chicago to meet up with the next group. The first rider came along in Dixon, then we met the group late again (due to my poor choice of routes) at Portillos in St. Charles. Next, we rode the surface streets towards Three Floyds Brew Pub, it took hours, but we made it in the rain. Everyone was soaked, two of us had bike trouble and were down to 45 mph, my brother had slipped his foot at a stop light and fell over. No damage but the Indiana crew waited, and there was a waiting line to get in. We were so wet the store manager took our gear to the kitchen to warm it and dry it while they mopped the floor around us. We surrendered Godzilla, the book and banner and had a nice meal. Somewhere I have a photo or two, I'll add them if I find them.
  One of the guys had a room at a nearby motel so we followed him there and got a room for ourselves.
  In the morning, we were barely dry and it was 40*F. I learned about clutch adjustment at the engine side and adjusting a chain on the side of the road and we headed home. Part of the way back we abandoned the 4 lanes and hit the backroads, we seemed to warm up when the road required attention and turning. We also ignored the speed limits.

 I believe RX man Jerry was returning, crossed the mountains in a sleet storm and arrived at a truck stop looking like an ice man. That would be a good story.
 
No matter how many times you paint over a shadow, it's still there.
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 You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.

Offline BenelliSEI

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #10 on: January 22, 2026, 10:55:42 AM »
Great stories guys...I like the read! Keep them coming...

Johnie….. great story. I need to dig out a few pics of my “girl friend” too. She stopped riding (always her own bike, never liked riding on the back) when we had the first of three children. About twenty years ago she got back on and still at it. Best times!

Offline HondaMan

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #11 on: January 22, 2026, 11:52:53 AM »
Back before Al Gore closed the road through Rocky Mountain Park to day-drivers who used it to get back & forth to Grand Lake on the other side of the Continental Divide, this was a popular trip for the full-day rider and one we did every year: from the Denver metro area we'd ride up the Front Range (one of 3 ways) to Rocky Mountain Park, over the Divide to lunch in Grand Lake, then south down the back of the Front Range through Winter Park and over Berthoud Pass to I-70 back into the Denver metro. This is a little over 300 miles, IIRC, and took an 8 AM rally starting point to get home before dark in the summertime.

In the bunch was more than a dozen bikes, ranging from the 1980 CBX Six (the cafe' racer-looking one) down to the [then new] Honda 700cc V Interceptors (4 of them), my sole CB750 at the front, a CX500 at the tail end of the group (we both had CB radios on the bikes to track everyone) - this was the first time our church group rode together (other rides were even bigger). There was a BMW 1000cc and a big Yamaha Four (1100cc?) among them, no H-Ds in the bunch.

After rallying at the start, the entire Front Range suddenly socked in with a thick fog, so we decided to ride up I-25 to Loveland instead of the curvy Front Range roads, which would be cold, wet, and maybe snowing (this was the end of June, not quite summertime above 7000 feet yet), stopping at Loveland to reassess and get some coffee. Then we decided we'd ride thru the wet, if it was, to the Park, then over. When we came out of the restaurant the Front Range was clearing and off we went: it was about 70 degrees then, at 9 AM. When we hit the Continental Divide at 12,000+ feet about noon it was snowing anyway (from a clear blue sky, the clouds were below us) so we decided to skip the Lodge at the Top, but we had lost 3 of the V Interceptors to breakdowns while climbing through the Big Thompson River Canyon to Estes Park. Two of those rode back together, one stuck in 2nd gear only, and the 3rd one parked at a gas station in Thompson Canyon to phone home for someone with a truck. The 4th Interceptor was leaking oil at Grand Lake, so he bought some at a gas station and I carried his half-empty bottle in my Vetter until we got to Berthoud Pass that afternoon, when he used the other half. The west side of the Divide was beautiful weather at 60-something degrees, and the back side of the Divide was blooming in Mountain Spring, gorgeous views all the way. We got strung out over 5 miles of hiway, so I stopped at Winter Park to get the bunch back together because I was 'losing' the CX500's radio at the back of the pack, then we humped over Berthoud Pass, passing every truck and car up the steeper sections and coasting back down after stopping at the top for a stretch and to install gloves against the 30-degree weather again. As we rolled back down the east side of the Pass to I-70 back to town the sun was setting behind us, lighting up the steep canyon walls all the way down the hill again. We got back to the church at 6:30 PM and called the missing Interceptor riders to make sure they were OK, and we all ordered pizzas for supper.

That was our first big ride. I lost track of how many others we did, but we rode as a bunch for more than a decade. I miss those riders, more than 20 overall: only 3 of them (including me) still ride today - and, I'm still on that same CB750!
« Last Edit: January 22, 2026, 11:54:25 AM by HondaMan »
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Offline newday777

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #12 on: January 22, 2026, 07:46:01 PM »
Mark, that was a great story and reminded my of when I had my buddy that I had crossed the country with in his 66 Chevy truck to California and when he told me that he was going to head back to NH to get his stuff to move to Boulder I asked him to bring my 750 there with him and I hitch to Boulder from Northern California. I was living with a girl at the time so when Jim let me know he was headed west with the load she and I started hitching. 24 hrs later we were in Boulder, 3 rides and a total of 30 minutes standing with our thumbs out, the second ride was with a family in a Ford Econoline van, Sparks NV to Idaho Springs CO.
After unloading the trailer I checked over the bike and the next day she and I headed for Rocky Mtn Park via Gold Hill to Peak to Peak Hwy into Estes Park. It was 90 degrees in Boulder when we left so I had my Tshirt and Levi's Jean jacket on. It dropped to 40° at the 12,000 Peak and spitting snow as we headed down towards Grand Lake, I figured it would warm up as we headed down the west slope(rookie!).... It turn to cold rain then to pouring rain. We were drenched and cold. We were looking for a restaurant to get warm in, notta one. We stopped at a Highway DOT barn and got out of the rain in the sand barn and I scrounged up some wood and built a fire in the sand pile to warm up before heading down further and finally stopped at a restaurant and got some coffee and couple of 55 gallon trash bags, cut arm and neck holes to make ponchos to fend off the rain after some coffee. We picked up I70 back to Idaho Springs and took the Canyon road to Golden then back to Boulder past Rocky Flats, getting there after dark and it was still raining. It was supposed to be a 3 hour tour....I was a young 21 year old.... lessons learned the hard way that day.
Stu
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My current rides
1975 K5 Planet Blue my summer ride, it was a friend's bike I worked with at the Honda shop in 76, lots of fun to be on it again
1976 K6 Anteres Red rebuilding project, was originally my brother's that I set up from the crate, it'll breath again soon!
Project 750s, 1 K2, 4 K6, 1 K8, 1 F1, 1 F3
2008 GL1800 my daily ride and cross country runner

Prior bikes....
1972 Suzuki GT380 I had charge of it for a year in 1973 while my friend was deployed and learned to love street riding....
New CB450 K7 after my friend returned...
New CB750 K5 Planet Blue, demise by ex cousin in law at 9,000 miles...
New CB750 K6 Anteres Red, to replace the totaled K5, I sold this K6 at 45k in 1983, I had heavily modified it, many great memories on it and have missed it greatly.....
1983 GL1100A, 1999 GL1500 SE, 1999 GL1500A

Offline Kelly E

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #13 on: January 23, 2026, 08:58:58 AM »
Two years ago we were in Lewiston Idaho on a multi day trip when my 94' Kawasaki Concours 1000 started to overheat. The temperature was in the mid 90°s. We were still 400 miles from home. While sitting in a church parking lot letting it cool down I figured out that the water pump was the culprit. I called up Murph's Kits(a Concours specialist) and ordered a replacement water pump. Then I filled up the overflow tank that would take about 12oz of water and made it back to the hotel.
The next morning we left for home my plan was to fill up the overflow tank every time we stopped so the bike would suck in the water as it cools during the stop. After a long hot day with many stops I made it home at 5pm without doing any damage to the bike. The next day the fresh water pump arrived and I went to work on changing it. The original pump was so bad that I could grab the impeller and just rattle it around. My buddy said I'm a lucky guy using some other choice words but I said that it was thanks to Kawasaki's solid engineering. 8)
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1978 Kawasaki KL 250
1980 Suzuki GS 1100E
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Offline Don R

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #14 on: February 06, 2026, 02:12:29 PM »
 I told this one a long time back, we had a group of 13 bikes going from Western Illinois to Louisville to the flat track races. There were three guys entered from our town. On the way, near Indianapolis a mattress fell out of a truck in front of us and two of our group successfully rode over it. We went to the Speedway and saw the museum.
  We made it to the motel that day and the track the next day. After the race there was a long line of bikes leaving. Someone found or made a hole in the fence and there was a dirt trail going up to the interstate. We got in that line, made it up the hill, entered from the shoulder and merged into a solid line of motorcycles. About halfway to the motel my brothers' lights went out. He had allowed the Honda shop to install his Windjammer and a Scotchlock had come loose in his wiring harness. Anyway, he stayed next to me and got back using my headlight. The ride back was all daylight, and he fixed it after we got home.
 I sold the K3 that I was on but still have his one family owned K4 750.
No matter how many times you paint over a shadow, it's still there.
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Offline HondaMan

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #15 on: February 07, 2026, 09:35:31 AM »
After unloading the trailer I checked over the bike and the next day she and I headed for Rocky Mtn Park via Gold Hill to Peak to Peak Hwy into Estes Park. It was 90 degrees in Boulder when we left so I had my Tshirt and Levi's Jean jacket on. It dropped to 40° at the 12,000 Peak and spitting snow as we headed down towards Grand Lake, I figured it would warm up as we headed down the west slope(rookie!).... It turn to cold rain then to pouring rain. We were drenched and cold. We were looking for a restaurant to get warm in, notta one. We stopped at a Highway DOT barn and got out of the rain in the sand barn and I scrounged up some wood and built a fire in the sand pile to warm up before heading down further and finally stopped at a restaurant and got some coffee and couple of 55 gallon trash bags, cut arm and neck holes to make ponchos to fend off the rain after some coffee. We picked up I70 back to Idaho Springs and took the Canyon road to Golden then back to Boulder past Rocky Flats, getting there after dark and it was still raining.

Yeah, boy, when crossing the Park it's traveling through 3 weather zones in summertime! The Gold Hill Peak to Peak hiway is one of my all-time favorites, too, when the tourists have gone home.
In 1977 a restaurant opened at the corner of Hwy 34 & 40, west of where you hung out in the sand shack (that town is Granby).  One day my wife and I were with a friend and his wife on his 750 and it was raining there (just like for you!) as it often does after 2 PM, and we pulled into that new place to have a long lunch and wait out the wet. That restaurant became a biker's stop for decades, and the owners marked out the parking lot in front of the window for BIKES ONLY so you could keep an eye on your ride during lunch. Fine folks!
See SOHC4shop.com for info about the gadgets I make for these bikes.

The demons are repulsed when a man does good. Use that.
Blood is thicker than water, but motor oil is thicker yet...so, don't mess with my SOHC4, or I might have to hurt you.
Hondaman's creed: "Bikers are family. Treat them accordingly."

Link to Hondaman Ignition: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=67543.0

Link to My CB750 Book: https://www.lulu.com/search?adult_audience_rating=00&page=1&pageSize=10&q=my+cb750+book
Link to My CB500/CB550 Book: https://www.lulu.com/search?sortBy=RELEVANCE&page=1&q=my+cb550+book&pageSize=10&adult_audience_rating=00
Link to website: https://sohc4shop.com/  (Note: no longer at www.SOHC4shop.com, moved off WWW. in 2024).

Offline dhall57

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #16 on: February 08, 2026, 10:27:18 AM »
I know the title says A good ride story, but this surely wasn't. I'll call this a memorable ride story ;D The year was the late 90's or maybe early 2000s. I hadn't got back into the Honda's yet, that didn't happen until 2009. But I had recently bought a 1997 Harley Davidson Wide Glide. A friend and I who had a HD Heritage and we had promised to go on a charity ride for a good cause so we felt like we couldn't back out even thought it was 28 degrees outside. So on the bikes I' m sure it was at least 10 degrees colder or more. Me and my buddy had all the cold weather gear we had on but still nearly froze to death. My hands got so cold I could hardly pull in the clutch. After the event on our ride back we almost parked our $$ high dollar Haley's on the side of the road and was going to call and have someone pick us up, but we didn't. We made it home and I swore I would never ride in those conditions again and I never have.
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1974 CB750K4
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Offline Johnie

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #17 on: February 08, 2026, 10:30:23 AM »
Good story Hall! Been there as you saw above. Nothing worse that freezing on a bike!
1970 CB750K0 - Candy Ruby Red
1973 CB750K3 - Candy Bacchus Olive or Sunflake Orange
1970 Chevy Chevelle SS396 - Cortez Silver
1976 GL1000 Sulphur Yellow

Oshkosh, WI  USA

Offline ofreen

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #18 on: February 08, 2026, 11:56:23 AM »
I know the title says A good ride story, but this surely wasn't. ...We made it home and I swore I would never ride in those conditions again and I never have.

A good story doesn't just have to be about sunny days.  Like hunting trips, some of my most memorable m/c tours were when I encountered miserable conditions.  A two week ride in 2012 comes to mind when we encountered severe thunderstorms every day except two, one of which was when we stayed a day at a buddy's house in Tulsa.  A lot happened on that ride, and if I get time I will sit down and write out the epic.    It was one thing after another, including me developing a sinus and ear infection after a week out.  My friend Steve and I still talk about that one.  This video was taken on that ride -

Greg
'75 CB750F

"I would rather have questions I cannot answer than answers I cannot question." - Dr. Wei-Hock Soon

Offline newday777

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #19 on: February 08, 2026, 02:32:33 PM »
I was there in San Angelo in November
Stu
Honda Parts manager in the mid 1970s Nashua Honda
My current rides
1975 K5 Planet Blue my summer ride, it was a friend's bike I worked with at the Honda shop in 76, lots of fun to be on it again
1976 K6 Anteres Red rebuilding project, was originally my brother's that I set up from the crate, it'll breath again soon!
Project 750s, 1 K2, 4 K6, 1 K8, 1 F1, 1 F3
2008 GL1800 my daily ride and cross country runner

Prior bikes....
1972 Suzuki GT380 I had charge of it for a year in 1973 while my friend was deployed and learned to love street riding....
New CB450 K7 after my friend returned...
New CB750 K5 Planet Blue, demise by ex cousin in law at 9,000 miles...
New CB750 K6 Anteres Red, to replace the totaled K5, I sold this K6 at 45k in 1983, I had heavily modified it, many great memories on it and have missed it greatly.....
1983 GL1100A, 1999 GL1500 SE, 1999 GL1500A

Offline HondaMan

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Re: A good ride story?
« Reply #20 on: February 09, 2026, 04:59:35 PM »
I know the title says A good ride story, but this surely wasn't. ...We made it home and I swore I would never ride in those conditions again and I never have.

A good story doesn't just have to be about sunny days.  Like hunting trips, some of my most memorable m/c tours were when I encountered miserable conditions.  A two week ride in 2012 comes to mind when we encountered severe thunderstorms every day except two, one of which was when we stayed a day at a buddy's house in Tulsa.  A lot happened on that ride, and if I get time I will sit down and write out the epic.    It was one thing after another, including me developing a sinus and ear infection after a week out.  My friend Steve and I still talk about that one.  This video was taken on that ride -


Is that the San Angelo Hydroplane Hiway? :D
See SOHC4shop.com for info about the gadgets I make for these bikes.

The demons are repulsed when a man does good. Use that.
Blood is thicker than water, but motor oil is thicker yet...so, don't mess with my SOHC4, or I might have to hurt you.
Hondaman's creed: "Bikers are family. Treat them accordingly."

Link to Hondaman Ignition: http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php?topic=67543.0

Link to My CB750 Book: https://www.lulu.com/search?adult_audience_rating=00&page=1&pageSize=10&q=my+cb750+book
Link to My CB500/CB550 Book: https://www.lulu.com/search?sortBy=RELEVANCE&page=1&q=my+cb550+book&pageSize=10&adult_audience_rating=00
Link to website: https://sohc4shop.com/  (Note: no longer at www.SOHC4shop.com, moved off WWW. in 2024).