Author Topic: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.  (Read 4166 times)

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Offline MCRider

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Hello All:
Besides the occasional track day and the hope of getting back on the drag strip someday, Sport Touring is really what i like. That is, riding with appreciation for the sport, while stopping to smell the roses. The FJR1300 was the Worlds Most Powerful Sport Touring Motorcycle for at least a few moments around the time I bot mine. And of course some will argue, but it was in the top 3 anyway. GPS confirms top speed with bags and fairing at over 140mph. RWHP of 125, torque near 100ft lbs. I love this bike. It was the 14th in the USA, the 2nd in Indiana.

With the bags off, there is barely a hint of bag carrying hardware, making a good sporting profile.
All sport tourers have some allowance for carrying gear. lately the designs have been remarkable. With an 8 year old FJR the original bag design hasn't changed much. Carrying handle up, the bag can be thrown on a motel luggage cart like a suitcase.

Handle down you can see how the tab has risen and that's what locks it on the frame. Simple.

Camping? Remove the soft inner bag and throw it in the tent. hard bag stays on the bike.

Yamaha tank bag with "Performance Touring" logo, cut to fit the contour of the tank, includes a pop up section raising capacity another 4 inches.

So loaded up, I head out to Marietta OH, 320 miles from Indy, Hotter than heck. Arrive without issue, if you ignore the misdirection from the clerk at the Speedway station. 4 miles form the Event headquarters Holiday Inn, it takes me 30 minutes to find it.

MSTA used to be HSTA (Honda Sport Touring ASsoc). Even though membership was open to all brands, Honda in the name was always a block to many. So after years of discussion, we changed to MSTA. I know there is a thread now about a club having serious difficulties. MSTA is over 20 years old, and politics and money has never been a problem. Fun and meeting people and serious riding is all I've experienced with MSTA. Google the PACE to see how we like to ride in grops.

Within hours of arriving I met Tosh Konya of Ohio retired American Honda employee I've known thru the club for 20+ years. Within mintues of that I met new member Matt Dennis from Philadelphia, 420 miles, and soon after that Katherine Becker from Ypsilanti MI, 330 miles.

Coincidentally, all three now ride the new to USA Honda NT700. A Hawk dirivative with integral side bags, fairing with adjustable shiled, and driveshaft.

We decided to ride together on Saturday. That's the way it works with MSTA. About 180 showed up, largest regional event ever (the national event drawss about 450). We all break out into gorups of 4 to 10 or so, and ride , then get back togeter Sat night for a banquet and parkinglot talk.
Here's a rest stop:

A stop at the Miner's Memorial. The Big Muskie drag line bucket in the background, largest ever made.

It was absolutely unbelievabel in size.
All four of us, I'm third from left.

The rides namesake, the Mail Pouch barns that we "fly by".


The Saturday ride thru the heartland was wonderful, green pastures, rolling hills, beautiful farms and rural homesteads.
Some other sport touring bikes, and some sport bikes thrown in. It took about 5 hours to go 200 miles.



And just what i wanted to see, a 1970s metal flake paint job, euphimistically called the "Bass boat"


The ride home Sunday was glorious, nearly 100 miles of supreme riding roads, before i reentered the world of superslab and headed home. A total of 820 miles for the weekend, about half being 2 lanes of the best riding I've done in a while.

When i first joined MSTA I was riding Phaedrus I and I hope to reintroduce Phaedrus II to the group by next spring
« Last Edit: August 29, 2010, 08:17:54 PM by MCRider »
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."

Offline CBJoe

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #1 on: August 30, 2010, 04:08:57 AM »
Very Cool Ron,   

Thanks for the write-up.  I've been drawn more and more to the Sport Touring Style recently and have been lusting over the idea of owning one.   It'll be a LONG time till i could with good conscience get one, but that wont stop me from looking.

For now, I'll just have to deal with the Bonneville for the longer rides.  Wife and I've done a few 500 mile round trips on it and the only think really lacking was the fairing.  I need to get something that deflects the wind a bit more than the bug catcher that it's got right now.

Joe
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CB750K2 Hot Rod Revival http://forums.sohc4.net/index.php/topic,171693.0.html
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'66 CM91 (C90'ish)

Offline azuredesign

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #2 on: August 30, 2010, 05:22:17 AM »
Thank you for the thread and photos, I also enjoy sport touring and the FJR, which I rode for 1800 miles in SW Texas along with the Kawa Concours14. The only thing I missed between the Yam and Kawa was the extra gear on the Concours.

Offline MCRider

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #3 on: August 30, 2010, 07:55:03 AM »
Thank you for the thread and photos, I also enjoy sport touring and the FJR, which I rode for 1800 miles in SW Texas along with the Kawa Concours14. The only thing I missed between the Yam and Kawa was the extra gear on the Concours.

The KAw Concourse14 is an awesome bike.

Many have lamented the lack of a 6th gear on the Yamaha. In 5th, the instruments say 70mph at 4000 rpm with a redline of 9000. A 6th would truly be an overdrive on the Yam, the Concourse too probably.

The more cynical among us believe the magazine's emphasis on top gear rol on performance has something to do with it. A 6th gear rollon below 90MPH would be real doggy.

FYI: I got a consistent 44 mpg regardless of riding conditions, highway or byway. Pretty happy with that.
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."

Offline MCRider

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #4 on: August 30, 2010, 08:06:55 AM »
Joe: Heck you're just a kid. I went thru a couple of periods, over 10 years, where i didn't ride at all, geting my life sorted out. Plenty of time, and its just as much fun later.

The fairing on the FJR is great, great coverage for relative small size. The whole FJR package with bags is about 550lbs (non-ABS) not much more than a CB750.

The real luxury though is the electric windshield. I usually keep mine in the lowered sporty position. I put spacers under the leading edge to tilt it back a tad more, a common trick.  But when I'm tired or the weather turns chilly, push a button and it becomes a different motorcycle, no wind blast.
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."

Offline azuredesign

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #5 on: August 30, 2010, 09:54:59 AM »

FYI: I got a consistent 44 mpg regardless of riding conditions, highway or byway. Pretty happy with that.

I think I was pretty much around low 40's and a bit less on the C14, as we were booging along having only 4 days from DFW to Big Bend and back. What I loved about the FJ was that the bike had 45k on it(it was a 2005) and still was very strong. The fellow who rented them to us said that the C14 was faster, but the FJ was better made.

Offline MCRider

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #6 on: August 30, 2010, 10:04:45 AM »

FYI: I got a consistent 44 mpg regardless of riding conditions, highway or byway. Pretty happy with that.

I think I was pretty much around low 40's and a bit less on the C14, as we were booging along having only 4 days from DFW to Big Bend and back. What I loved about the FJ was that the bike had 45k on it(it was a 2005) and still was very strong. The fellow who rented them to us said that the C14 was faster, but the FJ was better made.
Rented? wow, I didn't know that was possible. Yeah the C14 is faster, but at those speeds, hard to see the difference (or so I tell myself). I may have my FJR as long as my CB750.
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."

Offline ron.cieri.313

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #7 on: August 30, 2010, 05:44:33 PM »
Mc...u r killing me...I've been lusting after a silver FJR and or a maroon NT700 for the better part of year...well the FJR for over 2 years and the NT for the last 3 months...I had only seen a silver NT prior to that.

What to do you think of a 85 or so VFR?...as that might be a sport touring project I could actually afford...no hard bags of course of them but I could make due I think.
Making the world a better place, one motorcycle at a time.

Offline MCRider

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #8 on: August 30, 2010, 06:01:58 PM »
Mc...u r killing me...I've been lusting after a silver FJR and or a maroon NT700 for the better part of year...well the FJR for over 2 years and the NT for the last 3 months...I had only seen a silver NT prior to that.

What to do you think of a 85 or so VFR?...as that might be a sport touring project I could actually afford...no hard bags of course of them but I could make due I think.
Two of the 3 NT s are silver as that's the only color the ABS comes in. The maroon was preferable but no ABS. The third is a silver non-ABS bot by choice.

I really like the VFRs. There have been many in the MSTA over the years. But at several points along the way they've had some problems. Somewhere and it may have been mid-80s they had regulator failures to the point where owners carried spares. and when they changed to the varable valve timing, many didn't like it. But do your homework and you'll find what you want.
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."

Offline ron.cieri.313

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #9 on: August 30, 2010, 07:03:20 PM »
Thx MC...I know in '85 they change the valve setup from the problematic early 80's and they are such great looking bikes!
Making the world a better place, one motorcycle at a time.

Offline azuredesign

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #10 on: August 30, 2010, 11:19:41 PM »
Rented? wow, I didn't know that was possible.
http://www.sportryderrentals.com/
It looks like they no longer have an FJ, but still have a C14.


Offline Spanner 1

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #11 on: September 01, 2010, 11:22:08 PM »
Tosh is a really cool guy, MC.... I had the pleasure of meeting him here in Nashville when he arrived to do a North Texas ride with my next-door neighbor. He was riding a Pacific Coast 800 then, what bike is he on now?... his life story was very interesting too, and his Honda career. I'm sure he is still doing some 'extreme' rides in various parts of the World !!
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If your sure it's an ignition problem; it's carbs....

Offline MCRider

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Re: The FJR Sport Tourer and the Mail Pouch Fly By Sport Touring event.
« Reply #12 on: September 02, 2010, 05:44:08 AM »
Tosh is a really cool guy, MC.... I had the pleasure of meeting him here in Nashville when he arrived to do a North Texas ride with my next-door neighbor. He was riding a Pacific Coast 800 then, what bike is he on now?... his life story was very interesting too, and his Honda career. I'm sure he is still doing some 'extreme' rides in various parts of the World !!
Wow, small world! When I met him he was on the PC, one of the first I'd seen. He built a custom rack that covered the rear seat so with that and the trunk he could really pack the gear.

Now he has the NT700V; update to the NT650V Deauville.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_NT700
Ride Safe:
Ron
1988 NT650 HawkGT;  1978 CB400 Hawk;  1975 CB750F -Free Bird; 1968 CB77 Super Hawk -Ticker;  Phaedrus 1972 CB750K2- Build Thread
"Sometimes the light's all shining on me, other times I can barely see, lately it appears to me, what a long, strange trip its been."