Flat Line. DOTSOTR?
Well, I did run out of gas a few times but that was my stupidity.
A flat tire is a major pain in the ***. It can happen anywhere at any time. Back in the day most if not all wheels were spoke, meaning you had a tube, a balloon if you will, ready to pop.
Today I will not ride out of town on a spoke wheel. Cast Wheel, Tubeless Tire and a Plug Kit with compressed air is how I roll. I love the look of spokes and my vintage bikes retain their original wheels, but I don't ride them far or fast.
I still see a lot of Harley's running spokes. Old style, Classic, Standards. When you get a flat you are kind of stuck. I don't think most of you carry a tube patch kit and the tools to change a tire on the side of the road. Anyone done that lately?
Today we have cell phones and roadside insurance. Still a pita. In the old days we had neither. I guess I have been lucky, in 40 years I have had that can be recalled , 8 flat tires.
I have vivid memories of the 2 high speed deflation"s , near death. 3 flats became adventures, and the last 2 were Plug and play. My favorite was pulling into the garage and seeing a huge screw poking out of my sidewall just after doing a 100mph romp over the bridge, yep LUCKY.
So I just wanted to hear some of your stories, If you would, Please share your Flat Lines. Good and Bad.
Picked up a nail in Harlan, Ky, ( Coal Country.) Nearest HD dealer 165 miles away,(Cincinatti.) Used a can of Fix-a-Flat to try to get to the nearest town, made it maybe 10 miles. Coal mine foreman stopped and gave me about 100 lbs of air out of his truck's compressor, and I followed him to a closed for-the-night gas station.
The mechanic was still there and told me " I don't know nuttin' 'bout Harley's but if ya' give me that tube I can surely fix it."
I used their auto lift to raise the bike, ( balancing act!) and pulled the rear wheel off and got him the punctured tube. ( All the while running back and forth to the lift because it kept dropping slowly to the floor every couple of minutes.)
He did a great job of repairing the tube, ( I should have carried a spare, I know, more on that later.) and I got it buttoned up and gave him the world's biggest tip.
Back on the road and 20 miles later, the tire went flat again. ( Turns out that Fix-a-Flat goop eats Tire Cement!) Hoofed it 2 miles to an all night gas station, bought all their cans of Fix-a-Flat, ( doesn't matter now!) and walked back towards the bike.
A Sheriff saw me and gave me a lift the rest of the way to the bike, telling me where the only hotel was, 8 miles or so down the road. ( It was pushing midnight by then.)
Here's what was pretty cool: I'd dump the Fix-a-Flat into the leaking wheel, drop the empty can on the ground and hop onto my idling Ultra and blast down the road for a mile or two before it went flat again, and the Sherrif would pick up my littered empty cans and follow me with his lights on!
Repeated the process and got another mile or so, this time running a red light with him right behind me.
Made it to the hotel on the third can. He pulls up along side me, hears it still leaking and remarks " Hell boy, you coulda made it another couple hundred yards!" Laughs and
shakes my hand and drives off.
Next day my wife and her girlfriend in Tennesee drive our Suburban up to meet me (about 125 miles.) We rent a U-Haul trailer, buy a 2x12 for a ramp with clothesline and haul the bike to Tennesee. The bike stayed in the U-Haul for the week until I drove it back to Ohio to replace wheel, tire and exhausts...( Gooped beyond belief from Fix-a-Flat.) All in all about a $1,200 experience. ( And a wrecked vacation for me.)
I don't run tubes anymore.
Last edited by Stiggy; Jan 14, 2012 at 06:53 PM.
On smaller bikes, I've had several instances of clutch cables breaking on me. Getting home wasn't too bad as long as I didn't hit any red lights. Unfortunately, every light in town turned red just as I'd get there usually.
Fortunately I had my cell phone with me. I called HOG roadside assistance and they got a flatbed headed my way. Then I called my wife. She had driven to Rolling Thunder to accompany me on the parade and was now driving back. About 5 minutes later I waved to her as she passed. As it was a holiday, the nearest HD dealer would not have been open. As I was only about 30 miles from home, I had it droped off at home.
I considered myself very lucky. It could have happened anywhere on the trip, but it waited until I was nearly home. There was no significant damage to the bike, and Rolling Thunder was awsome! What a trip!
Last edited by qtrracer; Jan 16, 2012 at 12:00 PM.
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My luck I just got over the hill, pushed it back to the top and coasted the sucker in, bought the bike and got a full tank of gas to boot






