Monday, 23 March 2015
Mostly Ironhead 3d Harley Davidson Models
I was back at Mostly Ironheads this afternoon to drop off some paperwork and took a few 3d models. I didn't have a chance to set pieces up in the middle of some open space, so these are a bit spotty, but they give an idea of what kind of detail you could get with a more careful modelling.
Mostly Ironheads Website
Mostly Ironheads on Facebook
Saturday, 21 March 2015
Mostly Ironheads
The Connie is off getting safetied, and the Ninja has found a new home. I'm bikeless! |
I'd contacted the owner, Lloyd, over the phone during the week about getting the Concours safetied. He doesn't usually work with 'metric bikes', but he was willing to look after me. Mostly Ironheads is a full service shop that, in addition to offering everything you need to maintain your bike, also offers you some genuine historical motorcycling perspective. While chatting with Lloyd he showed me a 1934 Harley Flathead engine that he was in the process of rebuilding. In the front of the shop you'll also find a collection of customized Harleys from various decades. I'm going to bring the 3d-scanner when I return for the Connie next week and get some models of this classic American iron.
It's convenient to wander around department store styled dealerships and bike shops, but it isn't all that interesting beyond what you're shopping for. Places like Mostly Ironheads run at a different speed. The proprietors are always happy to spend some time chatting with you and the chances of seeing something genuine and learning something about motorbiking are much higher.
If you're travelling through Elora, Ontario on two wheels (and many people do to have lunch by the river in the summer), be sure to pop down behind Dar's Country Market to Mostly Ironheads and have a look at a hidden piece of Ontario motorcycle culture.
Mostly Ironheads Website
Mostly Ironheads on Facebook
3d models of some historical Harleys
Monday, 16 March 2015
Tragic Emptiness, New Possibilities
...and then there was one. |
I was asking $3900, but figured it would need some work done to safety, so I had a $500 cushion in there. It went for $3200 as is, no extra cost on my part. I'm happy with that, I bought it for $3500 safetied two years ago and put four thousand miles on it.
I've spent the last couple of days putting time into the Concours, getting it ready for launch...
I need to put some miles on this bike so I can begin believing that I can trust it. I took it around the block today to warm up the final drive before changing out the fluid - that's the last fluid change on the bike, everything is new and synthetic now.
I'm still wandering around online looking at a very different second bike. The KLX250 is on my short list now after seeing that one with a big bore kit. We did our bike course on Yamaha 250s and I loved how light and flickable they were. Having a small enduro would be the night and day difference I'd be looking for in having two bikes, not to mention it'd be very cheap to run. If I had five grand laying about, I'd chuck it at a new one.
I suspect the Concours will need more TLC than the Ninja did, but if it turns out to be pretty bullet proof, a second bike with character could be this interesting '70s Yamaha. I'd be able to get my scrambler vibe on with that!
Monday, 9 March 2015
Emotionally Fraught Vehicle Sales
The last time I was this emotional about selling a vehicle was when I sold the last car I ever owned as a single guy. That Mercury Capri 5.0, 5 speed was a monster, the Millenium Falcon of cars. It was the kind of thing that you could drive from Toronto to Montreal in 2 hours and 57 minutes! Everything since that car has been a compromise, an appliance.
Seventeen years after that Capri was sold I found myself looking at a flat black 2007 Kawasaki Ninja in a cold garage in Fergus. I didn't have my license yet, but I went for it. It was the first machine I'd owned in almost two decades that was a thrill rather than a necessity. It was the first vehicle I'd owned in years that I took pictures of.
I've owned the Ninja for two seasons. I've commuted on it, gone on long rides on it and learned how to ride with it. On one of my first rides I realized it was able to do more for me than any car I've ever owned, maybe any car I would ever own; it made me fall in love with motorcycling.
Bikes tend to provoke a more emotional relationship no matter what the machine. The two of you spend a lot of time exposed to the dangers of the road together. The bike's agility and power can get you out of any number of tricky situations when the distracted people in cages don't see you. Bikes reward competence with a wonderful feeling of empowerment. I enjoy the exclusivity of biking as well, not everyone should do it. The Ninja never failed to reward me for my efforts.
I went with the Ninja because it wasn't tiny so I wouldn't find it weak after getting the hang of riding. That worked well, I'm not selling it now because it lacks in power, I'm just looking to expand my types of riding after having done the sport bike thing. Since my son has taken to riding with me, a bike better suited to two up riding is what I'm transitioning to. Happily, I'm as smitten with the Concours as I was with the Ninja, but that doesn't make selling it any easier.
The Ninja's 649cc engine was remarkably cheap to insure for a new rider and was phenomenally efficient, often getting more than 60mpg. The bike has been a joy to operate, always dependable, always willing to teach me more as I got better.
I love riding, it's a feeling of freedom like no other. As a means of centering myself, motorbikes are a Zen mechanism that put you in the moment like no other machine (other than perhaps racing). I'll miss the Ninja, but selling it means I can diversify my biking. The Concours will let me get some miles under my belt while still offering an athletic ride. With the cash on hand from the Ninja I'll be looking at a dual sport and getting a bit dirtier on two wheels.
Seventeen years after that Capri was sold I found myself looking at a flat black 2007 Kawasaki Ninja in a cold garage in Fergus. I didn't have my license yet, but I went for it. It was the first machine I'd owned in almost two decades that was a thrill rather than a necessity. It was the first vehicle I'd owned in years that I took pictures of.
I've owned the Ninja for two seasons. I've commuted on it, gone on long rides on it and learned how to ride with it. On one of my first rides I realized it was able to do more for me than any car I've ever owned, maybe any car I would ever own; it made me fall in love with motorcycling.
Bikes tend to provoke a more emotional relationship no matter what the machine. The two of you spend a lot of time exposed to the dangers of the road together. The bike's agility and power can get you out of any number of tricky situations when the distracted people in cages don't see you. Bikes reward competence with a wonderful feeling of empowerment. I enjoy the exclusivity of biking as well, not everyone should do it. The Ninja never failed to reward me for my efforts.
I went with the Ninja because it wasn't tiny so I wouldn't find it weak after getting the hang of riding. That worked well, I'm not selling it now because it lacks in power, I'm just looking to expand my types of riding after having done the sport bike thing. Since my son has taken to riding with me, a bike better suited to two up riding is what I'm transitioning to. Happily, I'm as smitten with the Concours as I was with the Ninja, but that doesn't make selling it any easier.
The Ninja's 649cc engine was remarkably cheap to insure for a new rider and was phenomenally efficient, often getting more than 60mpg. The bike has been a joy to operate, always dependable, always willing to teach me more as I got better.
I love riding, it's a feeling of freedom like no other. As a means of centering myself, motorbikes are a Zen mechanism that put you in the moment like no other machine (other than perhaps racing). I'll miss the Ninja, but selling it means I can diversify my biking. The Concours will let me get some miles under my belt while still offering an athletic ride. With the cash on hand from the Ninja I'll be looking at a dual sport and getting a bit dirtier on two wheels.
BTW: why $3900? Because this!
After five people contacted me, the 3rd people to see the bike made an offer and I accepted. The Ninja is sold within a week. Now to consider how to expand my biking options...
After five people contacted me, the 3rd people to see the bike made an offer and I accepted. The Ninja is sold within a week. Now to consider how to expand my biking options...
Dual sport thoughts...
Here's an interesting option: A Kawasaki KLX250 with a big bore kit up to 330cc. Very light, stronger motor close to the Suzuki above in terms of power to weight ratio...
Saturday, 7 March 2015
3d modelling madness
I got a Structure 3d scanner this week at work. We're using it there for all sorts of educational activities, but I find myself painting the various Kawasaki products in my garage.
This thing costs about $350 bucks and straps on to an ipad. You walk around your target 'painting' it on the ipad screen (it looks like you're covering it in clay) and then you're done. Any of these motorcycle models took about a minute of walking around the bike...
It didn't take me long to get some remarkably detailed images of the Concours...
Because it's so easy to paint an object and create a 3d model out of it, you tend to try all sorts of angles.
The scanner will also take a swing at rooms, though I'm not so good with them yet. This is an image of the garage. The Ninja is on the left, the Concours is further in on the right.
The file generated is basically a list of vertices connected by lines. The sensor measures distances and constructs a 3d mesh out of them. The result is a three dimensional image.
How could something like this be used?
You could scan a fairing or other part, get accurate geometry out of it and then modify it digitally before printing out a replacement.
I think I'm about five years away from being able to 3d print my own digitally modelled custom fairings for any bike. The hold up right now is a 3d printer big enough to manage large prints.
This thing costs about $350 bucks and straps on to an ipad. You walk around your target 'painting' it on the ipad screen (it looks like you're covering it in clay) and then you're done. Any of these motorcycle models took about a minute of walking around the bike...
It didn't take me long to get some remarkably detailed images of the Concours...
Because it's so easy to paint an object and create a 3d model out of it, you tend to try all sorts of angles.
The scanner will also take a swing at rooms, though I'm not so good with them yet. This is an image of the garage. The Ninja is on the left, the Concours is further in on the right.
The file generated is basically a list of vertices connected by lines. The sensor measures distances and constructs a 3d mesh out of them. The result is a three dimensional image.
How could something like this be used?
You could scan a fairing or other part, get accurate geometry out of it and then modify it digitally before printing out a replacement.
I think I'm about five years away from being able to 3d print my own digitally modelled custom fairings for any bike. The hold up right now is a 3d printer big enough to manage large prints.
Sunday, 1 March 2015
There Are These People Called 'Hipsters'
Hipsters with their coiffed hair and well tended beards (even the women) ride their Scramblers to interesting places |
I've been reading the somewhat baffled traditional motorcycle media's reviews of the new Ducati Scrambler. With few exceptions these articles are being written by Baby Boomers who find the idea of "hipsters' to be very mock-worthy. That Ducati is aiming the Scrambler at a younger audience really seems to get up the nose of Boomers, who are used to everything being about them.
Being a Generation Xer I'm skeptical of any kind of social organization and assume nothing is ever about me, but I also find that I have more culturally in common with other people of my generation than I do with any other social distinction (race, class, education, religion, politics, citizenship...). When living in Japan the GenXers we met had so many shared experiences with us that we just fell in together; the times in which you find yourself define you. If you're looking for a review of social organization by birth cohort (generation), then this piece by The Social Librarian will catch you up. See if it doesn't do a decent job of describing your people.
I'm not sure why people can't treat generational differences in the same way they treat cultural differences. You'd be a big jerk if you decided to travel around the world and spent all your time talking about how every other culture is stupid compared to yours, yet people don't seem to hesitate when doing that about other generations. That Baby Boomers, themselves once torn apart in the media because of their newness, are now having a go at hipsters shows just how bad their memories are getting as they age.
Being a Generation Xer I'm skeptical of any kind of social organization and assume nothing is ever about me, but I also find that I have more culturally in common with other people of my generation than I do with any other social distinction (race, class, education, religion, politics, citizenship...). When living in Japan the GenXers we met had so many shared experiences with us that we just fell in together; the times in which you find yourself define you. If you're looking for a review of social organization by birth cohort (generation), then this piece by The Social Librarian will catch you up. See if it doesn't do a decent job of describing your people.
I'm not sure why people can't treat generational differences in the same way they treat cultural differences. You'd be a big jerk if you decided to travel around the world and spent all your time talking about how every other culture is stupid compared to yours, yet people don't seem to hesitate when doing that about other generations. That Baby Boomers, themselves once torn apart in the media because of their newness, are now having a go at hipsters shows just how bad their memories are getting as they age.
At 3:16 you get a good look at how the media
inflamed this situation rather than reporting it
accurately. You'd think Boomers would remember...
As a bald forty something who can't grow a nice beard, I still find that I enjoy hipster bike media even though I could never pull off the look...
If Hipsters make beautiful films and love riding,
then I think I'm a fan...
According to the urban dictionary, hipsters "value independent thinking, counter-culture, progressive politics, an appreciation of art and indie-rock, creativity, intelligence, and witty banter." What's not to like about that? Unless you're a cranky, old, conservative, Boomer motorcyclist who thinks that the pinnacle of motorcycle evolution is a Harley Fat Boy, you'd have to think it delightful.
Hipsters are one of the primary movers of the café racer resurgence. They enjoy looking back before the neo-liberal globalization that Boomers have brought us, I can get into that too.
Given a choice between hanging out with a bunch of Harley Boomers at a Tim Hortons or a group of Hipsters at an artisanal beer bar/gastro-pub, I know where I'd head.
I'm left thinking maybe motorcycle magazines need to diversify their writers instead of hiring all the guys they went to high school with in 1970. Maybe then anyone other than a Boomer might get a fair shake in print. In the meantime, go Ducati, go! A successful Scrambler means all those traditional, conservative motorcycle magazines will have to update their staff (maybe even hire someone born after 1965!), or face irrelevance.
The world moves on. Enjoy hipsters while they're here, soon enough they'll grow up and sell out like everyone else has (some first-class GenX skepticism there, eh?).
I'm left thinking maybe motorcycle magazines need to diversify their writers instead of hiring all the guys they went to high school with in 1970. Maybe then anyone other than a Boomer might get a fair shake in print. In the meantime, go Ducati, go! A successful Scrambler means all those traditional, conservative motorcycle magazines will have to update their staff (maybe even hire someone born after 1965!), or face irrelevance.
The world moves on. Enjoy hipsters while they're here, soon enough they'll grow up and sell out like everyone else has (some first-class GenX skepticism there, eh?).
The desperate attempt to pry motorcycles from the well manicured hands of the hipster is ongoing... |
Friday, 27 February 2015
The Desperate American Cruiser
I've been reading Inside Motorcycles, Canada's Source for Motorcycle News. Their February/March 2015 issue has an article that underlines the desperation of the American cruiser.
In it they describe the Victory Gunner as over-priced, unable to corner and smooth. They then go on to say, "...the Gunner is a bruiser, built to lurk about town striking fear into all those fancy Euro and Japanese machines."
If 'fancy' is code for motorcycles that can go around corners and out handle this 'bruiser' in every way, then I'll go with fancy. My tiny Ninja 650r with only 37% of the Gunner's displacement, and not even a full on sport bike will trash this 'bruiser' in any straight line competition, and it corners nicely too. It costs less on gas, less on insurance and looks fantastic. I'll bet it'll have less maintenance headaches too. So far, 'fancy' is looking pretty sensible.
I'm not sure what the Victory Gunner is bruising (other than its rider's tailbone), but Inside Motorcycles has managed to clearly highlight the desperate, reaching nature of the American Cruiser in one short piece. This 'bruiser' is a pretty boy who is designed to make its rider feel like a dude, but not ride like one.
I welcome this 'brusier' appearing out of the shadows and attempting to strike fear into my 'fancy' (and significantly cheaper) Japanese bike. I will be sure to reserve a little pity for the mediocre guy on the 'cool' bike who desperately hopes it's working for him.
In it they describe the Victory Gunner as over-priced, unable to corner and smooth. They then go on to say, "...the Gunner is a bruiser, built to lurk about town striking fear into all those fancy Euro and Japanese machines."
If 'fancy' is code for motorcycles that can go around corners and out handle this 'bruiser' in every way, then I'll go with fancy. My tiny Ninja 650r with only 37% of the Gunner's displacement, and not even a full on sport bike will trash this 'bruiser' in any straight line competition, and it corners nicely too. It costs less on gas, less on insurance and looks fantastic. I'll bet it'll have less maintenance headaches too. So far, 'fancy' is looking pretty sensible.
I'm not sure what the Victory Gunner is bruising (other than its rider's tailbone), but Inside Motorcycles has managed to clearly highlight the desperate, reaching nature of the American Cruiser in one short piece. This 'bruiser' is a pretty boy who is designed to make its rider feel like a dude, but not ride like one.
I welcome this 'brusier' appearing out of the shadows and attempting to strike fear into my 'fancy' (and significantly cheaper) Japanese bike. I will be sure to reserve a little pity for the mediocre guy on the 'cool' bike who desperately hopes it's working for him.
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