When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
yup, sold my twincam to goback to an evo as well!! i missed the old school feel and looks!!!
If my wife would let me, I'd probably sell my 2010 Ultra too. Thing is, it's paid for, the wife loves it, and she will NOT get on the Road King, even if I made a place for her. Well, maybe around the block a few times, but after a 700 mile weekend on a Dyna, she won't go much further than down the street unless it is on the Ultra.
So it goes, the Evo Road King for me, the Ultra for us.
Bet they'll both last forever splitting my 12-20K mi/yr across 2 bikes :-)
Some of us have been digging these things since we bought them new! I 'refresh' mine every now and then. It's become a rolling project - may never finish it. You're in good company here....
I feel motorcycles are very much like wine, they simply get more enjoyable as they get older. Anyone with a checkbook can get a new bike, but only age and time can make it a classic. Now, contrary to our forum title, most Evo's aren't classics as of yet, but they still have aged over the years. To me, thats what makes them cool. Not a damn thing wrong with a new bike, and I'll buy another one sooner or latter. But a new bike just lacks that little bit of cool that a well ridden bike has earned. IMHO
"If you doubt this then take a look around, how many Shovels are taking those long weekend rides these days, another 10-15 years and the EVOs are going to be where the Shovels are now. Maybe sooner because people don't fix things today like they did 25-30 years ago."
Maybe, but I don't think so. The Evo is alot more reliable than the shovel ever was. It took 12 spark plugs to get me to Sturgis and back to Minnesota on my good running shovel in '78, for example. The two Evos I've had would get new plugs every year or two....with more trouble-free miles per year as well.
We've been to Poland twice in the last couple of years on my Evo, planning on Slovenia in May. The thrill of getting back home after a fortnight and 2,500 miles is immeasurable! Just starting it each day while travelling is something the 'moderns' we travel with have no understanding of.
"Why do you ride that old thing?" Much of it is actually quite new, but I don't let on! Just reply: "Why do you ask?!"
I`ve been to London on my Harley once. And I did London-PL journey once on a Suzuki RF600R. The difference was that anything happened while I was on Harley it was all fun and pleasure (because nothing really bad happened). Rain or shine, got lost on the B-roads, cleaned carb on the side of the road etc. It was a good experience and I recall it very often. But on the Suzuki the journey was tiring and "heavy". The only fun was when doing 140MPH on Autobahn. Other than that it was all boring.
I`ve got friends on TwinCam`s and all those new-era Harleys. They ask me too, why I`m riding an Evo? Why I don`t want a TC? I don`t need TC. Evo is enough for me. It is a sort of compromise between classic motorcycle and modern reliability. I grew up on classic motorcycles so having a classic means a lot for me. But i need some reliability to do long runs. Classic motorcycle + reliability = Evolution. It is last of the "real" Harleys, at least for me. Carburetted Evo, of course. Mine is 1988 year, pretty old but it`s "newest" bike I posess. All others are little 2T from `60s, which are reliable too, but doing 1000 miles trip on 9HP motorcycle is not fun at all.
Performance? If I`d need performance, I would buy Busa or something. I did "my time" on fast bikes, did all those stupid things you can do on sports bikes etc. I`ve been a motorcyle courier for more than 3 years in London, doing really stupid things on the road, been chased by Police, been knocked off couple of times etc. All I want now is chilling out on the bike. Just keep moving forward, watch the landscape, hear the engine rumble and come back home in one piece...
Usually I'm the oldest bike on a group ride. It just kills the TC riders when I pull away from 'em on the on-ramp and when we really get out and twist it. And my Evo is old and kinda tired. Wait until I freshen 'er up!
I still have a soft spot for Shovelheads....it's a more 'brute-ish' design, but as for reliability, you can't beat an Evo.
7 Surprising Harley-Davidson Products that Are Not Motorcycles
Slideshow: The bar-and-shield logo shows up on far more than motorcycles, some of the company's most unexpected products have nothing to do with riding.
Slideshow: From the troubled AMF years to modern misfires, these bikes earned reputations for reliability issues, questionable engineering, or disappointing performance.
Crazy Bunderbike Build Looks Amazing, But Is It Impossible to Ride?
Slideshow: The Swiss custom shop has taken a Harley Softail and stretched it into something so long and low that it looks closer to a rolling sculpture than a conventional motorcycle.
Engraved Rebellion: Inside Bundnerbike's Glam Rock II
Slideshow: A standard cruiser becomes an intricate metal canvas in the hands of a Swiss custom house known for pushing Harley-Davidson platforms far beyond their factory brief.
Slideshow: Harley-Davidson's challenges aren't abstract; they show up in dropping shipments, shrinking dealer traffic, and strategic decisions that aren't yet translating into growth.