Riding Blog

This weblog at mikeuhl.com is the personal web site of Michael "Mike" Uhl. Entries to this weblog and web site represent my personal opinions. The site is not owned, operated, or affiliated with my employer or any organizations other than those owned and operated by Mike Uhl.

Photo (right): That's Lisa and me stopped along US 550, "The Million Dollar Highway," in southwest Colorado on our way north into Silverton, July 2017. 

Entries are copyright (c) Michael A. Uhl, as of date of posting.

You are welcome and encouraged to participate in the discussion on this site. Comments are owned by the poster. I reserve the right to remove any irrelevant, inflammatory, or otherwise inappropriate comments. Questions may be directed to me using the "Post a Comment" feature available on every blog page.

FYI: I ride a 2015 Harley-Davidson FLHTK Ultra Limited Special Edition.

Thank you and please enjoy my site!

Entries by Michael A. Uhl (122)

Wednesday
Jul222015

End of the Road for my Electra Glide

(July 22, 2015) This may be the end for my 2006 Electra Glide Classic. In spite of my extraordinary efforts at keeping her going, the time may have come for me to put her down. The cost and effort of replacing the crankshaft assembly is so high that scrapping her and going with a new (or new used) bike is looking like the smarter move. Even Kevin, my mechanic, has urged me to walk away on this one.

Here are my options, as I see them:

  1. Go without a bike (and lose my mind)
  2. Buy a new bike (very expensive but good long-term solution)
  3. Buy a good used bike (seems like the best choice)
  4. Work with Kevin in rebuilding my engine (least expensive choice, short-term, but it will keep me grounded for another 8-12 weeks)

One of the local dealers told me last week that the absolute maximum they'd give me for my bike is $3,920, and only if it had no significant mechanical problems. As trade-in value, my bike is basically worth zero.

My current plan is to go with option 3, if I can get financing from my credit union. Otherwise, I am stuck with option 4.

Bike for Sale

Know anyone who wants to buy a 2006 Electra Glide Classic (FLHTCI) with some key upgrades but a busted crankshaft? She has just about 111,000 miles on her. All they have to do is offer me $5K or more.

Keep the shiny side up!

-The Long Rider

Sunday
Jul122015

Worn crankshaft has me grounded

(July 12, 2015) If I wasn't such a rational person, I'd swear my bike is cursed. I mean really, how many different things can go wrong with one motorcyce? I seem to be finding that limit.

June 22 was the last time I got to ride my bike. As I rode to work it began to make an awful sound, emanating from the bottom end of the engine. I managed to ride it back to my garage and since June 23, it's been sitting at Jockeys Cycle in Morrisville. Kevin & co. at Jockeys have diagnosed the problem as an excessively worn or broken crankshaft. As I am short on funds, we're trying to come up with a solution I can afford. It's tough not having a ride in the middle of summer.

As soon as we come up with a plan or a fix, I will write about here.

Keep the shiny side up!

-The Long Rider

Thursday
Jun182015

Convoluted Tube (Fuel) Failed

(June 18, 2015) As if to prove everything on my bike will fail at some point, the “convoluted tube” inside the gas tank, which carries gasoline from the fuel pump assembly to the fuel filter canister, came loose, apparently from age-induced fatigue. That’s what had me stranded in Fuquay-Varina, NC last Saturday morning. The guys at Jockeys Cycle ordered me a new one from Drag Specialties and I was riding again today. They took care to use really good clamps to secure it.

Here’s a great writeup on a do-it-yourself replacement of the fuel filter that gives you a good look at the tube that needed replacement: http://www.hdforums.com/forum/touring-models/355156-06-ultra-fuel-filter-replacement-how-to-w-pics.html. In the series of photos provided by MR VTX, you can see where the tube is clamped to the fuel filter canister. That’s where my tube let go, leaving me with zero fuel pressure.

The photo, top right, is Kevin holding one end of the old tube for you to see, protruding from the top of the tank. The photo below is of the new tube he and his team installed this afternoon.

Now, maybe, I can get some long-distance rides in before the summer ends. I feel like it’s almost over even though technically, it hasn’t even started yet!

Keep the shiny side up!

-The Long Rider

Sunday
Jun142015

The woes of riding a high-mileage bike

(June 14, 2015) My patience and wallet are growing thin. In spite of meticulous maintenance by me and the competent mechanics at Jockeys Cycle—and J&D Cycle before them*—my bike continues to develop new problems. Yesterday, as my friend and fellow rider Mike Russo and I were heading out of Fuquay-Varina, NC on our way back home from a visit to Fuquay Gun & Gold, my bike just quit, as it did last Wednesday. I’ve now been stranded twice in less than four days; that’s bad even for me. Apparently, there is something less obvious wrong with my fuel system than simply a faulty pressure regulator. Of course, as with most problems on my bike, it’s never quite what it seems.

I am extremely grateful for Mr. Russo’s patience and generosity. While I waited by the side of road, fortunately in the shade, on a very warm spring morning, Mike rode home, got his pickup truck, drove over to Jockeys Cycle and got his trailer, and drove all the way back to Fuquay-Varina to get me. That was about 25 miles each way. I definitely owe Mr. Russo some gas money and beer. We left my bike in the trailer at Jockeys and will talk with Kevin on Monday (tomorrow) about it.

Coincidentally, I spent several hours last Sunday going through my scanned motorcycle receipts, which I store in an Evernote database, and keyed the information into an Excel spreadsheet. I wanted to see how much I’ve actually spent on my Electra Glide since I purchased it for $15,000 from my friend Mitch in 2009. (FYI: It had 36K miles on it at the time I purchased it from him.)

The total stunned me. I’m too embarrassed to tell you, not so much because of the amount itself, but because I spent so much on the damn thing without more consideration. I should have kept closer track of what I was spending. I will admit that I’ve spent more on maintenance since 2009 than I paid for the bike itself. Reviewing the history of repairs and modifications gave me a lot of food for thought and motivated me to share my thoughts about it with you.

It’s a very difficult decision: continue to maintain this bike, which I and my mechanics know very well and which has been customized to my preferences, or start over with a new bike? I’ve spent so much on maintenance that it has become clear to me I’ve approached that level where perhaps buying a new bike every 3-5 years is preferable. I'd pay a little more than I am now, but I would get more: the latest upgrades and warranty coverage--and in theory greater peace of mind. Guys like Bill Amerson of the Patriot Guard Riders takes this approach. Bill rides an average of about 25K miles per year, the only person I know who rides more than I do. And he’s been riding like that for years. Ol’ Bill, as he’s called, earned his 200,000 miles HOG mileage program patch last summer. (I still have 9,000 miles to go just to reach my 175,000 mile patch.)

Still, I do ride more than the average person, having ridden two Harleys more than 166,000 miles since July 2000. I put 92,000 on my 2000 FLHRCI Road King Classic and 74,000+ (110,000 - 36,000) so far on my 2006 FLHTCI Electra Glide Classic. That’s an average of about 11,000 miles per year. What I’m pondering about here generally applies more to the high-mileage rider, someone who spends a lot more on maintenance each year than the typical rider. We ought to ask ourselves: at what point mileage-wise are we better off trading in the old bike for a new one? And by better off, I’m being very subjective; I’m not merely looking at the dollars and cents. By the money alone, I’m still better off with the older bike, but there are other important factors to consider. For example...

My friends Cutter and Z want me to go with them to the Black Hills Motor Classic rally, aka Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, in South Dakota this August for the 75th anniversary. If I had a new bike, as these gentlemen now do, concern about breaking down along the way would be much less of an issue. (As it is, I probably can’t go anyway: my body needs more time to recover from some problems I’ve been having and I can’t afford it financially.) A new Ultra Classic Electra Glide Custom, the bike I want, would offer a water-cooled engine (heads only) with a six-gallon fuel tank, six-speed transmission, and a 45 mpg efficiency that makes my current 30-32 mpg look really sad. On the other hand, I’d worry much more about the new bike being stolen than the old one. I would probably also have to take time and spend money modifying the new bike to fit me comfortably.

For the last couple of years, when a seemingly-endless string of problems with my bike provoked a steady series of calls for me to buy a new one, I’ve resisted the idea of giving in and getting a loan to buy a new bike. I hate owing money and making payments. But here I am, thinking about it. I’ve even had passing thoughts of going back to Honda. The price of the Harley bikes and then especially the total-cost-of-ownership seems absurdly high to me right now. 

Keep the shiny side and have a great summer!

-The Long Rider 

 

*I’ve had two different local Harley-Davidson dealers work on my bike as well, but the quality of their efforts left a lot to be desired.

Wednesday
Jun102015

It pays to save parts that still work

(June 10, 2015) It has been my experience that dealers are sometimes called "stealers" for a good reason. I've had them sell me parts I didn't need, despite their claims to the contrary. Early on, I learned to ask for the old parts; oftentimes, they were still functional and worth saving.

My friend Mike Russo has had the same experience with dealers. A few years ago, a local Harley-Davidson dealership insisted he needed a new battery. He asked for the old one. When my voltage regulator failed a couple of years ago, I swapped in that unused battery for mine as a test. I decided to keep that battery in my bike and Mr. Russo kept mine, and kept it charged.

Well, last week, his tender loving care paid off as we installed that battery in a recently deceased friend's Ultra Classic. The bike fired right up and I rode it off to get it inspected.

Last week, I pulled into a gas station on my bike for some petrol. After I finished pumping, I went into my Tour-Pak as usual to get my iPhone to record the pump data and odometer reading. The rear Tour-Pack latch fell off in my hand in two pieces. I've now ridden so many miles, I've gotten used to parts breaking in all kinds of circumstances. In this case, I wasn't as irritated as usual because I quickly remembered that I had a spare latch in my garage.

A bunch of years ago, the other latch had broken and I had to purchase a pair of latches to replace the one. When I got home, I went into the top drawer where I keep old parts--smaller parts in are in the top drawer--and quickly located the latch. I felt quite pleased with myself. It isn't often I get to solve a problem like this so easily.

After about 20 minutes, I was good as new.

As always, keep the shiny side up!

-The Long Rider

 

P.S. My pressure regulator failed this afternoon, leaving me stranded for a short time, until Blake from Jockeys Cycle could come and get me with a trailer. This pressure regulator has only about 20,000 miles on it and has been in my bike only since March 10, 2014. I'll write more about this later.   

Page 1 ... 6 7 8 9 10 ... 25 Next 5 Entries »