Total newbie needs Advice
While I love the Road King I would not recommend it for a first bike. There are certain things that will happen to you for the first time, like putting your foot down on gravel, wet painted lines, or the first time you park facing downhill and cant pull through, where you will appreciate a bike thats 200lbs lighter.
Good of luck with what you decide.
Sportster. Look at some of the old 1%'er club pics.....lots of those guys rode Sportsters all over the country, and today's rubber mounted Sportsters are Cadillacs compared to those bikes. Good luck.
Last edited by hd4evr2008; Nov 24, 2017 at 09:04 AM.
OP: I agree with this. I know some people who started out on a full size HD and did fine, but I know LOTS more who started out full size, got intimidated by it and then found that they "didn't have time to ride" (haha) and let the thing sit in the garage for a few years, and then had to sell it at a HUGE financial loss.
Sportster. Look at some of the old 1%'er club pics.....lots of those guys rode Sportsters all over the country, and today's rubber mounted Sportsters are Cadillacs compared to those bikes. Good luck.
A couple of years ago my Street Bob had an electronic gremlin pop up the day before I was to leave for Sturgis. (my fault, an aftermarket thing) Anyway, I took my wife's Sportster 1200C instead. 850 miles to get there, about 800 while I was there, and 850 to get back. Everything was great. If I liked the styling of it more, I'd consider one of those. One thing though, whatever you get, If you change out your handlebars for something you like more, don't worry about it if someone thinks they look stupid.
If this ",the penalty for a 'misstep' is much worse on a street bike then it is on a dirt bike" scares you, perhaps you should give it some serious thought?
I'm not claiming all the 'what should I get threads?' are bogus, but....
Last edited by rjg883c; Nov 24, 2017 at 09:46 AM.
You should be thanking RJG for giving a **** about you, instead of crying like a little girl.
My 64, 230 lb son bought a Suzuki Boulevard 800 for his first bike, and thats the kind of bike you should look for. If you want a Harley look for a Superglide with mid controls.
Stick around. The advice on here can save your life, or prevent serious, disabling injuries. You dont get any do overs on a bike.
And if this is a serious thread, which I doubt, the penalty for a 'misstep' is much worse on a street bike then it is on a dirt bike.
Here goes, and I mean this with the utmost sincerity, and hope that you'll love motorcycling, and have a long, joyous life with your knees in the wind.
1. Before you do anything, take an MSF course and get your motorcycle endorsement.
2. You need to understand this one point, more than anything else: Taking a Basic Riders Course and successfully getting your endorsement prepares you for being able to get home from the parking lot without killing yourself. Having an endorsement does NOT mean you know how to ride. It means you're now ready to start learning how to ride. Keep that in mind.
3. If your budget is $5,500 and you want a Harley-Davidson, you basically have two choices, a used Sportster or an older used other model Harley. A Road King is not a learner's bike. You might "grow into it", and you might grow into a casket. That is exactly the same as giving a 16 year old the keys to a Corvette instead of a Corolla, because "they'll grow into it."
4. For $5,500 you have available to you roughly 187 different motorcycles that are not Harleys and would be far, far, better to start on than even a used Sportster. Sportsters weigh 575 pounds. A Dyna weighs around 675 pounds. A Road King weighs around 800 pounds. These are not beginner's bikes. You can buy an awesome used bike for $2,500 that would be perfect to ride for the first six months or so, and then you'd be able to sell it for basically what you paid. Get a used 500cc or so cruiser, and have at it. When you drop it, and you probably will, you won't break anything expensive.
5. Then, and only then, are you ready to test ride some different Harleys and decide what is best for you.
We're just trying to help. You asked for help. I'm being sincere and respectful.
Good luck.
Last edited by IdahoHacker; Nov 24, 2017 at 11:39 AM.
The Best of Harley-Davidson for Lifelong Riders
And it was.
Light enough to flick around, big enough to run highway all day long, economical, and just a blast to ride. Kept that bike for years until I left for the military. Worked my way up through Jap literbikes and finally moved to HDs about 6 years ago. Theres a difference.
Now I wont say that you CANT start on a 900 lb bagger, but I will say that you probably SHOULDNT start on a 900 lb bagger. So much of it depends on where youre gonna be riding, how youre gonna be riding, and who youre gonna be riding with. There is no perfect starter bike, but I agree with the others that something smaller and cheaper is a better starting point for most riders.
I just demod a new FatBob last week and it was an awesome bike, IMO. Light, nimble, flickable, smooth, and easy to ride. Of course, its about $13,000 above your budget limit.
Best advice I can think of? If you have friends who ride, get them to help you figure out what kind of bike you need - and they can also help look over any used bikes youre interested in. If you dont have friends who ride, listen to the experienced riders on this forum and pay attention to them - they didnt get to be experienced riders by doing stupid stuff...
Good luck whatever you decide - and let us know what you end up doing...
Take a class! This is step one and mandatory since you have no real world experience. If you pass, thats the time to start looking at bikes, not before. Many people get on the road and decide quickly enough it’s not for them. It can be unnerving or everyone would do it. You have to be on your A game every time you ride. Too many brainless texting fools out there.
If you still want to ride after the class, don’t forget equipment in your budget. You want a decent helmet, jacket and boots and gloves. That stuff adds up. Buy the bike you want, and the bike you’re comfortable with. It’s your ***, not your buds. These days there are so so many great choices from HD to Honda, Yamies, etc. keep an open mind.
Last edited by kngpn; Nov 24, 2017 at 05:52 PM.













