Wow, seems that I'm not the only one who has gone through this....
I'm not thinking about buying a Hornet or any new bike for that matter. With five bikes, I can't justify the purchase of another one. Maybe if I would sell a few of them I could have one or two classics, and one new. That would be perfect.
I love my bikes, I feel very attached to them because I have put so much money and time on them. They are good bikes overall, but a new bike -be it Hornet, Kawa 750, Yamy FZ1 etc- do everything better than the five of them together. Only in the "looks" and "character" do my old bikes win hands down.
When I ride my old bikes I enjoy them all the way along. The smell of old oil -you never get rid of it even when the oil is new-, the sound of the engine and exhaust, the gleam of chrome. And you learn to live with their "character": brake well in advance, false neutrals, "clonks" in first gear, slight wobbles, stability around curves etc. Yesterday, I got on the Hornet and I had a blast during the whole 20 minutes of the test ride. I have tested and/or ride quite a few other bikes in the past: Sportster, Electra Glide, V-Rod, Fat Bob, CBR600F, VT600 Shadow, Deauville, Bonneville, Thunderbird. In many of them, it was a good experience, but I always felt that either the bike lacked something or that it was too much bike for me -CBR600F-. And you always had that feeling of "careful with this bike that is not yours". Yesterday it was like if the Hornet had been mine for years, from the very first minute of the ride. It was so easy to shift, so easy to brake, so easy to handle. For 20 minutes I just forgot about the bike, I just had to ride and concentrate on the road and surrounding cars. Taking turns like if it was on rails. Stopping in a couple feet. Accelerating and sending your butt against the seat hump. Shifting so smoothly that you didn't even feel the pressure on the feet.
The whole experience left a doubt lingering in my mind: whether I'm doing the right thing putting all my eggs in the same basket. I have always committed to classic bikes and maybe I should have split my money and time between classic and new to have best of both worlds.