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I had a stroke while riding my bike in April 05. I lost use of my right arm and leg. I have had some recovery but I still am unable to work. I had to sell my bike to pay off the loan on it. If there is anyone out there that could help a disabled and broke Biker get back in the wind with a trike or a bike with a side car, I would be forever grateful. Please Email Frank I would like to thank my family, friends, and my Biker brothers and sisters for all the support. Thank you, and God Bless you all. If you would like to help, please Shop for Motorcycle loans, Leather, Biker Boots, Tools, Apparel, Helmets, Parts and Accessories. I would like to thank everyone who shopped here. If you would like to post a Biker Event, Biker  Link or Biker News - Email Frank

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Franks Biker News May 23rd archive

American Motorcyclist Association members receive preferred pricing from Allied Van Lines - PICKERINGTON, Ohio -- Moving a motorcycle can be a stressful experience. Moving a house full of goods can be downright daunting. Allied Van Lines helps members of the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) take the stress out of both.
For years, Allied Van Lines and its agent, The Federal Companies, have been the exclusive domestic motorcycle transport partners of the AMA. Now, Allied and Federal have teamed up to offer AMA members preferred customer discounts and $75,000 in free valuation coverage on household goods transport as well.
"Beyond just saving money on a move, it's important that our AMA members can put faith in the services our member benefit partners provide," said AMA Director of Business Development Jim Moore. "Through our past relationship, both Federal and Allied have proven that they care about the needs of our members as well as the valuable possessions our members need to relocate from time to time."
To take advantage of the preferred pricing and free valuation coverage, AMA members simply provide their AMA number when placing a call to Allied's agent, The Federal Companies, at (800) 747-4100, ext. 210. Allied's preferred customer discounts for household goods vary depending on the size of the shipment, the miles moved and the time of year.
"Allied Van Lines understands that every move is different," said Allied Special Products Vice President and General Manager John Ainlay. "Motorcyclists often have a number of unique needs, for good reason, and we're happy to offer our innovative services, advanced technology and custom solutions to make sure their moves go as smoothly as possible."
Allied Van Lines and The Federal Companies offer Personal Moving Plans for each customer, which include a number of services beyond basic loading, transportation and unloading. Additional options include specialized packing and unpacking services, assembly and disassembly services, shuttle service and storage. More information about Allied Van Lines and what they offer can be found at www.allied.com .
The Allied Van Lines preferred customer discounts for household goods moves are just one in a long list of AMA member benefits and savings, which now include free AMA Roadside Assistance for all members who sign-up for automatic renewal or three-year memberships. For more on the benefits of AMA membership, see www. AmericanMotorcyclist.com  and click on Member Services.
Not an AMA member? It's easy to join and redeem this valuable offer, as well as take advantage of numerous other savings. Simply log on to www.AmericanMotorcyclist.com  , select Join/Renew in the Membership menu and follow the simple steps. As an AMA member, not only will you get a great package of benefits, you'll be supporting America's leading advocacy organization for the motorcycling lifestyle.

About the American Motorcyclist Association
Since 1924, the AMA has protected the future of motorcycling and promoted the motorcycle lifestyle. AMA members come from all walks of life, and they navigate many different routes on their journey to the same destination: freedom on two wheels. As the world`s largest motorcycling organization, the AMA advocates for motorcyclists` interests in the halls of local, state and federal government, the committees of international governing organizations, and the court of public opinion. Through member clubs, promoters and partners, the AMA sanctions more motorsports competition and motorcycle recreational events than any other organization in the world. AMA members receive money-saving discounts from dozens of well-known suppliers of motorcycle services, gear and apparel, bike rental, transport, hotel stays and more. Through its Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum, the AMA preserves the heritage of motorcycling for future generations.


Jesse James is very much alive - Los Angeles Times - With his new Spike TV show, 'Jesse James Is a Dead Man,' the West Coast Choppers owner cements his no-holds-barred status.
By Susan Carpenter May 24, 2009
The asphalt at the Famoso drag strip was hot, the bike licked with red and orange flames when Jesse James stepped up to the starting line and threw a leg over the 1,000-horsepower, nitro-powered dragster. A flicker of green light, a twist of the grip and James was off -- a one-man Cacklefest on a mission to beat the clock.
Seconds later, at a top speed of 161 miles per hour, James hadn't just reached the end of the quarter-mile track. He'd also won the respect of the seasoned racers who trained him and sighs of relief from the production crew that was capturing it all on camera for his new Spike TV show, "Jesse James Is a Dead Man."
James had, yet again, defied the program title, just as he'd done a day earlier, when he caught himself on fire, and a couple months prior, when he rode shotgun in an F-16D fighter plane, subjecting his 210-pound frame to 9 Gs.
James, who turned 40 last month, insists he isn't experiencing a midlife crisis and doesn't have a death wish. The Long Beach motorcycle builder with a hard-knock upbringing who came out of nowhere seven years ago to star in the rip-it-apart-and-rebuild-it TV show "Monster Garage" and later married Hollywood star Sandra Bullock sees himself as just "a regular working-class dude, you know. . . . Really. Honestly."
Identified as an "entrepreneur" and "TV star" on NBC's most recent "The Celebrity Apprentice," which Joan Rivers eventually won, the father of three is owner of West Coast Choppers in Long Beach -- a sprawling set of brick buildings that's as much an industrial complex as it is a garage. The five buildings are staffed with 50 employees who run the workwear line he sells through 1,500 Wal-Mart stores, the eco-friendly Cisco Burger diner he operates next door, his Pay Up Sucker! video production company and, of course, West Coast Choppers -- the custom bike shop that caters to a star-studded clientele of actors, athletes, rock stars and anyone else who can afford his $80,000-to-$300,000 machines and from which all his other businesses began.
A distant relative of the 19th century outlaw, James hasn't just continued his namesake's rebel tradition, he's also built it into the most famous name in modern motorcycling. But you wouldn't know it from looking at him. A renaissance man in rockabilly attire, he wears a version of the same thing almost daily: Dickie's work pants, custom Vans slip-ons and one of the plain white T-shirts he buys at three for $10 from the Compton indoor swap meet.
It's an outfit he was wearing on a recent weekday morning, when he was enjoying a rare moment of near solitude doing what he likes to do best: working by himself, moving from lathe to grinder to drill, finessing a piece of metal in his shop.
"When am I happiest besides when I'm going really fast or smashing [things]? Setting stuff on fire. This," he said with a piece of pipe in his hand, standing midway between a pinstriped Snap-On Tools cabinet and his welder.
The piece of pipe was for a bumper extension on his pickup. The next day James was headed to El Mirage to flog his Honda XR650 on the dry lakebed -- practice for an upcoming motocross race for his Spike TV show. In the previous two weeks, James had put 1,000 miles on the bike and traveled back and forth to the desert so often that he'd blown up the transmission on one truck, which is why he was working to extend the bumper on his backup.
But the fittings for the gate extension were a little off. By how much?
"Two-thousandths of an inch," he smiled.
Job well done
Anyone who's seen the artistry and craftsmanship of a West Coast Chopper knows James is a perfectionist. From the arc and weld of his bikes' frames to their paint and elegant, edgy profiles, James' machines are well-honed rolling sculptures. A working-class aesthete, James brings that same sense of quality to everything he does -- whether it's devising a trans-fat-free menu for his solar-powered burger joint, sourcing high-quality fabrics for his American-made clothing line or, as he's been doing for the last few months, practicing stunts for TV.
Though James says he doesn't "get along too good" with his dad, it was his father who taught him the value of an honest day's work and the pride of a job well done as the two worked side by side at an antique auction furniture business in the '70s. It was his grandmother, with whom he used to sell Limoge glass at the Rose Bowl, who taught him the value of "customer service and being nice to people."
In person, James is indeed nice -- with a twist. In fact, he's exactly like he appears on TV. A quick wit who's liberal in his use of expletives, his manner is methodical, his words blunt though soft-spoken. Considering the number and breadth of his projects -- and the barrage of requests they generate -- he's remarkably calm and focused.
When an underling asks how to handle a Polish motorcycle dealer asking to be a West Coast Choppers annex, James suggests he just build the owner a bike.
When one of his builders asks what to do about the cracked water cooler on one of his customs, James tells him the bike needs to be finished Monday.
When an office manager asks James to try on a helmet, he obliges.
When James reads a message on his BlackBerry requesting his appearance on "The Tyra Banks Show," he just laughs.
It's hard to believe that just 10 years ago, no one had even heard of Jesse James, the bike builder. The ubiquitous Maltese cross that serves as a symbol for West Coast Choppers? It wasn't plastered on men's backs or the windows of Ford F-150s the way it is today.
"We'd go back and forth to Sturgis or Daytona and sell, like, one T-shirt and give 10 away and not sell a bike," says the man who, with his Discovery Channel show "Monster Garage," spurred the chopper craze earlier this decade.
The world economy may be teetering, but business is still booming for James, who continues to build -- and sell -- about 15 bikes a year.
"Luckily, we're still selling stuff. I think motorcycles is just one of those things that kind of transcends the economy," said James, who grew up in Long Beach, where he split his time between the homes of his divorced parents and spent his teen years in and out of juvenile hall. "It's like, I'm just gonna build me a bike and get away from it all, you know?"
James' version of getting away from it all: bringing his body to the brink by doing his own stunts every week, and doing it for an audience. "From the mind of Jesse James" is how the guy-centric cable channel Spike show is billed, and that's pretty much how the weekly show evolved.
"When I sat down to think about who could I do a show with, Jesse James was names 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5," said Spike TV vice president of development Sharon Levy, who approached James about doing a weekly show last year. "He's such a Spike guy, it's crazy. We wanted him to be himself: funny, brave, completely authentic, living on his own terms."So, stunts -- but not just any kind. The kind that would make even seasoned daredevils think twice.
For the sidecar episode of his new show, James was, again, putting it all on the line. First in a row of 12 candy-colored race trikes on the track at Willow Springs, he tucked in behind the controls, gunned the engine -- and stalled. With the green flag dropped and cameras rolling, Jesse James may not be a dead man, yet, but at that moment, he probably felt like dying.


Triumph Thunderbird review - Telegraph.co.uk - The British manufacturer has scored a hit with the new Thunderbird cruiser, but can it steal sales from Harley-Davidson?
By Kevin Ash
Last Updated: 11:46AM BST 21 May 2009
The gap in its range was a glaring one for Triumph: a rival to Harley-Davidson. With nearly a quarter of the Hinckley factory's total sales being made in North America the Triumph name is clearly accepted, yet Triumph's offerings could only top and toe the cruiser-dominated market.
At the bottom end are the entry-level, Bonneville-powered America and Speedmaster while the exotic and massive 2.3-litre Rocket Three and its derivatives deal with the high end, yet in between is where the majority of sales are made, mostly by Harley-Davidson. Expectations had been that the three-cylinder Rocket Three would steal significant numbers of these customers, but it's not been as successful as Triumph hoped: it's just too big and too different.
So Triumph commissioned Californian designer Tim Prentice to produce a bike that would more directly rival Harley, and he came up with the Thunderbird. The 1,597cc engine capacity is right there with the Harley twin's 1,584cc, while everything else about the bike is generic cruiser, from the raked-out forks to the teardrop tank to the long, low stance. But Triumph has broken with tradition for the engine, using the classic British parallel twin layout.
Triumph reckons it can get away with this because the British brand is still well thought of in the States, and it's probably right. The question is, even with a different motor, does the bike offer enough to tempt Harley regulars?
I'm not entirely convinced, and that's despite the Thunderbird being superior to a Harley in just about every way you can measure. The engine, for example, does everything you'd want from a cruiser, in terms of feel as well as power and torque.
It's a low-revving unit producing a muscular 108lb ft of torque at a mere 2,750rpm, and a sufficient 85bhp at less than 5,000rpm. The crankpins are staggered 90 degrees apart to produce uneven, V-twin-like firing intervals, so when you crack open the throttle the motor thumps lumpily and the bike lunges forward with satisfying urge. The fuelling is perfect, smooth yet immediate and utterly predictable. It even manages to use less fuel than most other cruisers, according to Triumph (and I've always found the company's claims accurate), improving on a typical Harley by 25 per cent with 54mpg in mixed riding and 44mpg at a steady 75mph.
The transmission is unobtrusive with reliable gear selection and the first belt drive on a Triumph for 85 years... as Triumph product manager Simon Warburton said, they couldn't find the original engineer to call on his experience. The inverted-tooth, Kevlar-reinforced belt is of course vastly superior to a vintage version, being quiet, clean and efficient and requiring very little maintenance. And it won't slip in the wet.
Triumph has put a lot of effort into the chassis, determined to endow the Thunderbird with superior handling to a Harley, so it has a stiffer frame and better suspension. In particular, the steering at low speed is very impressive: most cruisers with their forks raked out at something like the Triumph's 32 degrees tend to drop in to corners, and stand up if you brake while leaning, but the Thunderbird does neither, remaining neutral and, as a consequence, is very easy to handle. Whether a hairpin bend, mini-roundabout or high speed turn, the Thunderbird sweeps round impressively demanding the minimum input from the rider. This is a very relevant superiority, not in terms of agility but giving the bike a natural, undemanding feel.
The suspension is soft, inevitably, as low speed comfort is the primary aim so bumps at speed have the bike bouncing around, but still the damping does a good job of controlling the wheels and providing the best ride quality in the class. Add this to the comfortable riding position, which is upright and spacious while avoiding the ergonomic extremes of many cruisers, along with the generous 4.8 gallon fuel tank, and you have a genuinely useful motorcycle as a well as a cruiser, a too-rare combination.
You really can go places on this bike, and there's no shortage of accessories to turn it into exactly the machine you're after, with various luggage and screen options for touring as well as an array of shiny bits: you could spend up to £7,000 on extras if you felt the need.
The finish quality is far more consistent than a Harley's, too. While the American bikes mix some of the very best finish with some unforgivably awful detailing, such as jubilee clips fixing exhausts or bolts and silencers which start rusting from the crate, Triumph's corrosion resistance is regularly good and the Thunderbird's attention to detail is impressive.
The styling is well balanced and nicely themed, too: note the way the final drive cover on the engine is angled to match the slash at the end of the silencer.
Yet I have reservations. Well, not so much for the UK market: it really is a great bike to ride, and the price is usefully lower. But the styling is too generic. Despite the trademark Triumph engine the bike could be any cruiser from any factory, except Harley itself.
Harley-Davidson's cruisers mostly have very particular characters beyond merely being cruisers. I suspect American Harley owners will see the Thunderbird, nod in appreciation at the badge and find it pleasing to look at, but find nothing to really grab their attention and persuade them to forego the home team. Still, this is just the first of many for Triumph – if Harley can make 20-30 bikes using the same motor then Triumph has plenty of scope to add individuality.
And for the British rider, all this matters less anyway: this is a British cruiser with values that are more important to us. The cruiser sector is smaller here but Triumph will grab a useful slice of it with the Thunderbird.

THE FACTS
Price/availability: from £9,499. On sale from June 2009
Tested: Triumph Thunderbird (two-tone paint, add £300; ABS, add £600)
Power/torque: 85bhp@4,850rpm/108lb ft@2,750rpm
Top speed: 115mph
Fuel economy: 44mpg at 75mph
Fuel tank/range: 4.8 gallons/210 miles
Seat height: 700mm/27.6in
Transmission: six-speed/belt final drive
Weight: 746lb/339kg (kerb)
Alternatives: Harley-Davidson Dyna Super Glide Custom, £9,630. Kawasaki VN1700 Classic, £9,899. Yamaha XV1900A, £10,499
Verdict: Dynamically excellent, feels good with useful touring attributes but lacks styling distinction


 

Falmouth targets noisy motorcycles - Cape Cod Times - Falmouth targets noisy motorcycles
By Aaron Gouveia
agouveia@capecodonline.com May 22, 2009
FALMOUTH – Rod Baltz has been listening to the ocean waves lap against the shore from his Falmouth summer home since 1967.
But over the last few years, Baltz, 85, said nature’s soundtrack on coastal roads like Grand Avenue is often blocked out by excessive noise from passing motorcycles. As a result, Baltz helped form the Quiet Roads Association and sought help from the Falmouth Police Department to ticket people with defective or modified exhausts in an effort to cut down on noise.
“The noise is embarrassing and it’s an imposition on residents,” Baltz said. “We’re not a bunch of firebrands or anything, but it’s a quality-of-life issue.”
Falmouth Police Chief Anthony Riello said his officers began focusing on noise abatement last summer. Using existing patrols as well as part-time help funded from the general overtime budget, police monitor “hot spots” like Grand Avenue, Menauhant Road and Central Avenue and pull over any motorist with an exceptionally loud vehicle.
Officers inspect the vehicle to see whether the muffler is an original part. If not, that is considered an after-market alteration and is illegal, Falmouth police Sgt. Douglas DeCosta said.
Officers ticket violators at their discretion. Police Sgt. Douglas DeCosta said the fine is $35 for a defective exhaust or muffler, and $50 for a modified system.
Last year police issued 63 citations, DeCosta said, and officers will be on the lookout for noisy vehicles starting this weekend.
Richard Strawn, 59, of Marstons Mills, has been riding motorcycles for 35 years and periodically rides his Harley-Davidson Sportster along ocean roads in Falmouth.
Strawn said most bikers are responsible and strive to make sure they are in compliance with all laws and regulations. However, he said motorcyclists in certain areas are unfairly targeted by law enforcement personnel and stopped for indiscriminate noise complaints.
“They can stop you just because they can, just in certain areas that have certain townspeople that get a bug up their butts about noise,” Strawn said via cell phone, while attending a motorcycle rally at the Statehouse.
Riello said his officers do not haphazardly target bikers, adding that responsible motorcyclists have nothing to fear when traveling through Falmouth.
“Our officers can tell if someone is on a crotch rocket going 90 MPH,” Riello said. “But motorcycles do make a certain amount of noise, so no one will bother four or five motorcyclists riding their Harleys.”


Police respond to another New Hartford motorcycle accident - WKTV - ‎4 - NEW HARTFORD, N.Y. (WKTV) - The New Hartford Police Department has investigated its second car-motorcycle accident in as many days.
Police say a motorcycle operated by Danny Morgan, 56, Oneida, was struck in the rear by a vehicle driven by Barbara Furmanski, 61, Clinton.
It happened Thursday evening on State Route 5 at Woods Highway.
A passenger on Morgan's motorcycle, Myra Bouhan, 43, Oneida, suffered a back injury and was transported to Oneida City Hospital.
Furmanski was issued a ticket for following too closely.

Lawmakers vote down motorcycle helmet bill - Bangor Daily News - AUGUSTA, Maine — Maine motorcyclists can continue to decide whether to wear helmets when they ride, with the Senate defeating a measure on Thursday to require helmets.
The vote was 25-9 and the House defeated the bill earlier in the week.
“We take our freedoms too much for granted in this country,” Sen. Elizabeth Schneider, D-Orono, told the Senate in opposing the bill. “It’s picking away at those fundamental freedoms we too often take for granted. I think this should be considered one of those freedoms.”
She said motorcyclists should wear helmets when they ride, but it should be an individual decision. Schneider also denounced the mandatory seat belt law as an infringement on individual liberty.
Sen. Dennis Damon, D-Trenton, said the seat belt law has saved lives and reduced injuries and is a good reason to support a helmet law.
“We hear this refrain of let those who ride decide,” he said. “We heard it at the hearing, but at what cost?”
As at the public hearing in April, there were several leather-clad members of motorcycle clubs in the halls of the State House lobbying lawmakers to defeat the bill.
Damon said the testimony at the public hearing overwhelmingly showed that using a helmet would reduce deaths and injuries. He said the cost to society was demonstrated at the hearing with testimony about one accident in which a Mainer that had not been wearing a helmet died after a long hospitalization.
“His total costs, born by the state of Maine, by you and me, was in excess of $10 million,” Damon said.
Sen. Lisa Marrache, D-Waterville, a family practice doctor, also supported the bill. She said all the medical studies she has read indicate wearing safety gear saves lives and reduces the severity of accidents when they do occur.
“Not wearing a helmet puts you at an incredible risk of head injury,” she said. “You may survive it, but you will not be normal afterwards.”
Sen. Stan Gerzofsky, D-Brunswick, a motorcycle enthusiast, argued there are risks in walking across the main street of many towns in Maine, and that individuals decide what risks they will take all the time.
“Remember, we all get to choose,” he said. “Whether it is an inalienable right or a privilege, how we conduct our lives. That’s what this bill is all about.”
Several senators said the medical expenses are only one of the costs to society with loss of economic activity from individuals killed or badly injured also a serious consideration.
Sen. Deborah Simpson, D-Auburn, said she was surprised to find the military urging passage of helmet laws. She was surprised at the losses the military is experiencing as the result of motorcycle accidents.
“More Marines died in motorcycle accidents last year than died in Iraq and Afghanistan,” she said.
Twenty states and the District of Columbia have laws requiring use of helmets by adults; 17 states, including Maine, have laws requiring some younger motorcyclists to wear helmets, and three states have no helmet laws at all.
Gov. John Baldacci has signed into law a measure sponsored by Rep. Emily Cain, D-Orono, that requires motorcycle operators or their passengers under age 18 to wear a helmet.
The law already requires helmets for those under 15 years old. A law requiring helmet use by all was repealed in 1977. The age 15 and under provision was added in 1983.
While the issue is dead for this legislative session, both sides expect another helmet bill will be before lawmakers in the future.

Run For The Wall Visits Capitol - WOWK - CHARLESTON -- The "Run For the Wall" is an annual cross country motorcycle ride that promotes healing among veterans. Riders from all across the country rolled into the capitol complex to pay tribute to those who have made the ultimate sacrifice.
The group is made up of veterans of all wars, fathers, mothers, grandfathers and grandmothers.
Emma Johnson's grandson served in Iraq.
"It's very emotional. Especially when they walk up and hug and kiss you. Somebody from California or Hawaii, thanking you for his service. It's very emotional."
Governor Joe Manchin proclaimed it "Run for the Wall Day" in the Mountain State.Towns all across America welcome the motorcycles back every year.
West Virginia co-coordinator Duane Maxey says, despite the economy, the response has been good.
"All across the country we've had almost a thousand registered riders. Some ride for a day, some two days. Many though are making the trip all the way from California to Washington, D.C."
On Sunday the group will meet up with other riders to form the "Rolling Thunder" parade from the Pentagon to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington.

 

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