Been up since 4am this morning! A bit stressed as the general building work is a few days behind schedule but the garage is in the process of going up today and will be finished by mid-afternoon. Allegedly, all of the other building work should be finished by Saturday.
Oh, and I'm picking the bike up tomorrow!
The River Calder used to flood at least once a year but further up the valley at Charlestown where there were no buildings. It did particularly block the road though.
Due to a lack of river maintenance (dredging etc), the flooding now happens in the centre of Hebden Bridge where the Colden,Hebden and Elphin rivers meet and also a little further down in Mytholroyd.
Hopefully they will have avoided it this time round.
Looks v good
The train of thought that started with the Classic 350 and has trundled through the Interceptor 650, the Z650RS, the W800, the T100 etc took me to the local Triumph dealership, where they very helpfully have a 2019 Street Twin in stock. I spent a short while sitting on it. Seat wasn't too low, ground wasn't too close, handlebars seemed in a natural position, extra inch on front wheel didn't alarm.
A low mileage 2019 model is around the same price as a 2024 CB500. So now I've two distinct choices to keep in mind. One is rather more characterful than the other. I have to decide if that's correct for me or just correct for some very pleasant daydreams. A decision best made after the experience of doing my training. Had best get cracking with that.
Friend of mine has a 2022 CB500. He's about to swap it for a Speed Twin 900...
When travelling around on my 125, I'm using 3rd to 6th all the time, up and down, up and down, which I rather enjoy, it's very engaging. Reviews of the CB500s often say that that engine also needs endlessly careful gear selection, and previously I've thought, well I wouldn't be complaining about that. However, when I'm out for 8 or 9 hours, I begin to remind myself of Jaap Stam's description of the Neville Bros.
When I was leaving the Triumph dealership, I did worry that I had been cheating on Miles Kingsport in Hull. Tut tut.
Just bought the bike in the middle of this photo, will get it in a week or so when its registered.. My first brand new bike since 1999.. Too wet today to take a demo out for a ride. But it was sold when I fired it up.. surprisingly loud for a new bike, each one is SVA'd, so don't have to meet Euro regulations.. Hope I don't live to regret it..
Big crowd,some people travelling from far stayed overnight to make it a easier journey and make a weekend of it.
I took some of them overnighting from up North to caffeine and machine the night before.
Neither Allen (we have some engineers he might have found interesting to talk technical) nor Henry turned up,no cameras maybe the reason.
The next one will be in August which I am working around the IOM so regulars to my meets can make it.
Thats a good start,I dont know what layout you have in mind.
With mine I off set my door so I could easy swoop in and then put all my racking on the other side.
That way I could also push the bike straight out without manoeuvering.
EDIT I see the garage is up now very nice,it will make life easier for you.
Last edited by bwest76; 23rd May 2024 at 19:12.
Just back from a couple of days in the Lakes. We had planned to do six passes (Wrynose, Hardknott, Honister, Whinlatter, Newlands and Kirkstone). Everything was right - except the weather, which was horrible, so the plan went out of the window.
This was a typical view, with the low cloud:
However, it brightened up a little and we even had a brief glimpse of blue sky at the top of Kirkstone.
thats a 3 bike garage you are having built , you can have one for distance one for blasting and one for sunday best :)
Living where I live, and riding where I like to ride, if I had a garage I wound put a roof over the area immediately in front of it, so that if I finished a ride in the rain I could wash it and leave it to dry under shelter before taking it indoors.
This won't be everyone's cup of tea on here but I'm chuffed with my rebuild of the Triumph Bobber...
Got 75 miles under my belt since collecting the bike yesterday, and I have to say I felt quite awkward at first (it's been months since I've ridden, mind). Anyway, loved it and can actually change gear with my dodgy foot, albeit changing up requires some concentration!
Four people stopped to talk about the bike in Epping this morning, and one of them took a video!
Great news Tony, no stopping you now!
I've been going through Autotrader ads for Speed Twin 900 aka Street Twin. Here are a few prices. There was a significant upgrade in 2019, so that's my cut-off. There was another upgrade in 2021.
£8,800 - New
£8,500 - 500 miles, '23
£8,000 - 2,200 miles, '23
£7,500 - 1,400 miles, '21
£7,300 - 4,000 miles, '23
£7,000 - 645 miles, '19
£6,500 - 5,000 miles, '19
£6,000 - 9,000 miles, '20
I get that low mileage is worth paying for, but to me, but to me they all look pretty low. The one at £6,500 stands out to me (mostly because it's red, local, and around the same price as a new CB500). It is worth paying another £500 for something the same age which has scarcely been ridden?
Is there a point when very low mileage over several years actually becomes a concern, do bikes mind sitting about, inert?
A 2019 bike is right on the cusp, so you'd need to ensure that it isn't a late 2018 MY. Otherwise it's your choice (I'd pay the additional £500, all other things being equal, although I'd want to know whether it had been serviced at all as - if not - that might add to the cost differential).
i'd go for the speed twin over the street twin (a friend of mine owns a street twin and my washing machine has more power than it)
couple of things with triumph motorcycles ive noticed>
deprecation has been a lot less for me compared to other bikes (they hold there value well compared to other brands ive owned)
the major service costs (valve clearances) are eye watering
they are very well finished bikes and im sure i'll own another speed triple at some point (or a speed twin)
Last edited by pugster; 26th May 2024 at 06:26.
Tony, great to see you back out on the bike after all the crap you have been through. Made my morning seeing this, hope you get back to feeling natural on it & have a great summer ahead.
Going through the reviews over the years, the improvements seem mostly to have come before the recent name change, the big one being for 2019. eg from MCN:
The old 900cc machine was a little gutless. However, that has been rectified thanks to an increase in power from 54bhp to 64bhp. The upgraded engine revs quicker and to 500rpm higher. The result is a 2019 model that pulls stronger in the mid-range and feels more alive underneath you. There’s significantly more torque throughout the rev range. Tap back one gear for a fast overtake and the new Street Twin delivers, whereas the old model was a little shy
I've watched demos from the various years, which bear this out. Since I know I would be perfectly happy with a post-2021 CB500F, which is £6200 brand new, I'm not keen on throwing money that I don't have to at a Street Twin.
Last edited by Der Amf; 26th May 2024 at 08:44. Reason: layout
Cheers
That particular one is at a Triumph dealership (and they've done all its servicing) so getting that clear should be straightforward. I am educating myself on the visual changes that have come with the upgrades. The 2019 came in a nice plain red, very me.A 2019 bike is right on the cusp, so you'd need to ensure that it isn't a late 2018 MY.
Edit: just noticed that the sod-all mileage for only £500 more was a private seller, I shouldn't have included that in the comparisons, obvs.
Something else I've been educating myself on is the reputation for SuperBike Factory. Blimey.
Last edited by Der Amf; 26th May 2024 at 08:07.
Had a nice ride out to The Kingsley cafe yesterday for a coffee and called in at the Red Lion in Cassington on the way home. Coming home through Cumnor we had an unscheduled stop as I felt the back end start to slide, we pulled in at a handy pub to find my rear tyre completely flat. No nails or screws evident in the tyre so I assume the tube gave up the ghost. Had to wait a couple of hours for recovery but I can think of a lot worse places to break down than a nice country pub on a sunny day, especially as I could drown my sorrows as I wouldn't be doing any more riding that day. My mate stayed with me until the AA arrived which was good of him considering he could only drink coffee!
What you need to do is to go and test ride them all if you can, taking a week or so trawling round the dealers going for a ride will save you heartache later. You have to remember journalists may say it’s underpowered but what’s that against? They ride so many bikes it’s are they just into the modern frame of mind and think everything should be 150hp.
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that Vincent is one gorgeous motorcycle,as a life long dyed in the wool brit affectionado its the dogs danglies.