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2016 or 2019 model
#21
Duh right? ROFL

You have to do what makes you happy, that's the bottom line. If the Miata does it for you, thats all that matters. Ive been having some fun driving my wifes Mustang convertible, but "for now" it won't replace my motorcycles, which I still love to ride, even if not fast.

Yea the NT 1100 in a DCT would be a fabulous sport touring bike I think. As far as US bound sport tourers, the Suzuki GSX 1000 GT might make a decent mount, or the Yamaha 900 Triple GT I suppose.

Hard to beat a SV 650 or Versys 650 for good cheap fun entertainment though.

I am enjoying my Honda NC 750X DCT, and its very versatile with manual paddle shifters or automatic with modes. All your left foot has to do is sit on the peg, or help hold you up at a stop. Not exciting, but still satisfying if you get my drift.
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#22
(09-24-2023, 05:51 AM)VLJ_imp Wrote: mickey, yep, I've done the sell everything/buy it all back again gambit a few times with guitar gear, and I vowed to stop doing that following the last round.

So far, so good, guitar-wise. Haven't sold anything in a decent while. Anything I sell or give away now, I won't replace.

I vowed not to do that with the bikes, especially the gear. No way I was going to replace all my various suits, jackets, Arai helmets, cold weather electronics, gloves, linings, etc. That'd be crazy, even for me.

Also, nothing has come out recently that has really lit my fire. The NT1100 looked interesting, in a solid, steady, reliable, kinda boring way, but it never arrived on our shores. That was the only large bike that caught my eye. The only new sport-tourer, anyway. Otherwise, it would have been a Speed Twin, or one of its cheaper, simpler, slower Bonneville siblings, or one of the new middleweight P-Twins from Honda or Suzuki. Or, most likely, an old SV650, the obvious choice in a cheap used ride.

If all I had to buy was the bike, I probably would have done so by now, and it probably would have been a $2-3K used SV650. The boot thing, though, I don't know how to get around that one. Any motorcycle boot will rip the back of my reconstructed heel right open.

In the end, I suppose the answer I always come up with is the same answer I always have to ask, which is...why? Why bother with the hassles and expense, just to put around again on the same backroads I've ridden a million times, that I can still have decent fun on with the MX-5?

Putzing around slowly on a sporty bike wouldn't be all that much fun, and I have zero interest in going fast again, so that's out.

My red CB1100 would have been the one.

Duh, right?
Man, you really connected with me on this one. I am recovering very nicely from having my right shoulder replaced. They cut out the bone and muscles and insert a new metal and plastic joint, which is better than the torn muscle and bone, but is fragile. Any damage to that arm/shoulder and you basically have an arm that hangs limp and useless. I could probably ride in a few more weeks, but I just can't get past that fear of going down and losing that arm. I am hanging on to my CB and the last thread of hope at this point.
Meanwhile, a picture of my MX5 which was rear-ended, not once, but four times by a 20 ton gravel truck in September, 2019. Pushed the rear clear up to the axle and totalled it. It was a beauty and a lot of fun, but maybe too small for the idiots on these roads.

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#23
I can't see ever getting a DCT if a manual is offered, unless it's on something like a Gold Wing, but that's just me. I enjoy shifting. That's a big part of the satisfaction for me, that mechanical feeling...operating the vehicle. In terms of a DCT helping me with my foot situation, it's the wrong foot. I'd need one of those thumb-switch rear brakes, since it's my right foot that's the problem, assuming I could get a boot on in the first place.

There was absolutely zero chance that I would accept an automatic in the MX-5. Maybe in a 911 GT3, if I'm chasing lap times, but if it's simply for fun I want a manual every time, and even more so on a motorcycle. To me, motorcycling was always a sport, not just a leisurely sightseeing activity. An automatic is almost anathema to the motorcycling experience, even if it has paddle shifters or whatever the "manual" option is with the DCT.

I don't know why I just thought of it, but something about this topic made me think of the one other bike that interested me of late, which is that green and silver Moto Guzzi V100 Mandello. That thing is gorgeous, and I've never owned an Italian bike. That would have been a cool first Italian for me.
Nachodaddy, it's crazy that you mention that, about your Miata. My red 2020 MX-5 got rear-ended at a stoplight, twice. The second time was literally thirty seconds after leaving the body shop, after getting it repaired following the first episode. I had just pulled out of their shop, onto the street. A hundred yards later I'm sitting at a stop light...bam!

"You gotta be sh**ting me..." I thought, in utter disbelief.

The woman who hit me was nearly apoplectic with apologies, but still, two in a row like that? It's an eyeballs-searing bright red car, in broad daylight, and the sun was high in the sky. The sun wasn't in her eyes. How does someone miss a bright red car with its brakelights illuminated like that?

And yet it happened twice in one month. Jeez.

That's why I now have the white 2023 instead of that red 2020.
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#24
(09-24-2023, 07:42 AM)VLJ_imp Wrote: I can't see ever getting a DCT if a manual is offered, unless it's on something like a Gold Wing, but that's just me. I enjoy shifting. That's a big part of the satisfaction for me, that mechanical feeling...operating the vehicle. In terms of a DCT helping me with my foot situation, it's the wrong foot. I'd need one of those thumb-switch rear brakes, since it's my right foot that's the problem, assuming I could get a boot on in the first place.

There was absolutely zero chance that I would accept an automatic in the MX-5. Maybe in a 911 GT3, if I'm chasing lap times, but if it's simply for fun I want a manual every time, and even more so on a motorcycle. To me, motorcycling was always a sport, not just a leisurely sightseeing activity. An automatic is almost anathema to the motorcycling experience, even if it has paddle shifters or whatever the "manual" option is with the DCT.

I don't know why I just thought of it, but something about this topic made me think of the one other bike that interested me of late, which is that green and silver Moto Guzzi V100 Mandello. That thing is gorgeous, and I've never owned an Italian bike. That would have been a cool first Italian for me.
Nachodaddy, it's crazy that you mention that, about your Miata. My red 2020 MX-5 got rear-ended at a stoplight, twice. The second time was literally thirty seconds after leaving the body shop, after getting it repaired following the first episode. I had just pulled out of their shop, onto the street. A hundred yards later I'm sitting at a stop light...bam!

"You gotta be sh**ting me..." I thought, in utter disbelief.

The woman who hit me was nearly apoplectic with apologies, but still, two in a row like that? It's an eyeballs-searing bright red car, in broad daylight, and the sun was high in the sky. The sun wasn't in her eyes. How does someone miss a bright red car with its brakelights illuminated like that?

And yet it happened twice in one month. Jeez.

That's why I now have the white 2023 instead of that red 2020.

Maybe red set her off subconsciously...like a bull with a cape.

I know, I know...bulls are color-blind. Don't ruin the comment!
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#25
VLJ, I guess we can be glad we weren't on a motorcycle in front of those people.
BeerBiker
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#26
VLJ: A Miata / MX-5 is a lot of fun I had a 2003 model, purchased new in 2004.
At that time I lived in SoCal and enjoyed the canyons.
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#27
The V100 is indeed a full-breed motorcycle VLJ. Beware: It is not a lightweight.


Miata: A great alternative. Only if I could stop hitting my forehead on the windshield frame (doh!) when loading into the convertible.
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#28
My wife and I had trouble getting in and out of a Miata, hence the Mustang. My brother has a 2012 (?) hard top convertible Miata
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#29
(09-24-2023, 11:20 AM)The ferret_imp Wrote: My wife and I had trouble getting in and out of a Miata, hence the Mustang. My brother has a 2012 (?) hard top convertible Miata

It is indeed snug, arguably perfect for aggressive cornering.

Thought, I would hate to get a Charlie Horse while crammed in it.
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#30
It's certainly not for big people, tall people, achy people, lotsa luggage people, Costco people, silence-seeking people, dragracing people, family outings people, cross-country people, camping people, tech gadgets people, sleep-in-your-car people, giant display screens people, offroad people, boat-trailering people, sneak-people-into-the-drive-in-movie people, autonamous driving people, wheelchair people, Harley people, or tuba players.

I definitely missed a few.
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