วันเสาร์ที่ 17 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2553

Great Ways To Accessorize Your Motorcycle Helmet

Are you tired of having to wear that plain old, boring motorcycle helmet that has no style or class whatsoever? Do you want to spice things up a bit and stir up a little attention with the motorcycle helmet that you wear when you head out on that long trip with a big group of riders? There are a number of ways that you can accessorize your helmet to give it a little more flare, rather than settling for the stock helmet with no decoration at all.

If you've purchased a plain black half helmet or full face helmet and want to give a little extra something to liven it up a little, you could try a number of different things. First, and on of the most popular helmet accessories on the market is the motorcycle helmet Mohawk. This item is a pretty simple design which has become very popular over the years. The helmet Mohawk is made of hundreds of little threadlike fiber strand which are attached to a single strap that is typically about 15" to 17" long. The strands are fastened to the strap in a row to form what looks like a Mohawk. Attached to the strap are a number of suction cups which stick to the helmet to make the entire thing stand on end, giving your helmet the appearance of having a Mohawk. Helmet Mohawks come in a number of different colors including red, blue, yellow, orange, green, and more.

Another great item that you can purchase to accessorize your motorcycle helmet is the helmet Blade Warhawk, which is essentially the same concept as the helmet Mohawk, but with little items that look like the blades of a saw. So when you affix the saw blade strap to your head, it looks like you have a saw blade that has chopped through the middle your helmet and is now protruding outward from the helmet. This items are built in the same manner as the traditional Mohawk and are typically only available in the color black.

If you're simply looking to add some more graphics or stickers to your motorcycle helmet, you may want to consider looking into rhinestone patches or word stickers that can be attached to your helmet. This items are easy to find and can be easily attached to your helmet to give it a little extra character.

Accessorizing your motorcycle helmet does not have to be a chore and can be done by choosing from a number of different items including the motorcycle helmet Mohawk, blade Warhawk, rhinestone helmet patches, and word stickers.

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Motorcycle Helmet Mohawks - The Perfect Accessory For Any Helmet

The motorcycle helmet is one of the most visible pieces of equipment that the motorcyclists wears on every ride that is taken, and sometimes riders want to be able to show off a little by sporting the latest and greatest accessories. One of the hottest items on the market today are the motorcycle helmet Mohawks for a number of reasons including the fact that they can add a little more color and creativity to the helmet, they allow the rider to express themselves more, and they don't cost a lot of money and are high quality items.

The helmet Mohawk is one item that can really help spice up your helmet if you've got just the basic flat black coloring or a minimal amount of graphics. Helmet Mohawks are available in a wide range of colors including red, orange, purple, green, blue, and yellow, just to name a few. This great item can help add the much needed life to your plain old helmet. Chances are you're not happy about having to wear the helmet in the first place, so the helmet Mohawk will give a reason to be excited about putting on the helmet when you head out for a ride.

One reason that your excitement level will increase when you put on your helmet with the newly attached helmet Mohawk is that it gives you a sense of individuality, or a little more attitude to your rider persona. This great item will help you stick out of the crowd a little better in order to let everyone feel your presence.

Motorcycle helmet Mohawks are fairly inexpensive which means that they can be easily purchased without a lot of commitment on your part as far as budget goes. You can typically find these items in the range of $25 to $30 depending on the style of Mohawk that you are looking at buying, and you can typically find them online pretty easily.

Helmet Mohawks are attached to the helmet with suction cups and most Mohawks that you find out there will have enough holding power to remain attached in high winds so you won't have to worry about them falling off.

If you've been wanting to add a little extra to your motorcycle helmet, but just aren't sure what you want to do with it yet, you may want to consider the helmet Mohawk as your first option. You'll be happy with the way that it makes your helmet stand out in a crowd.

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Buy Sale New or Used Bikes Online

There are numerous benefits to buy a used bike. We can save a lot of money. As a general rule, bikes lose a higher percent of their value when they roll out of the showroom. One can make sure to get a good deal on buying a used bike. The buyer must check out the price guide of a used bike and read the reviews of various makes and models. Many of these reviews are posted on the web and they can give us some subjective information on what these particular riders think about the bike.

Used bikes are generally an excellent value, especially when compared to the price of new bikes. With a little research and some basic knowledge about bikes we can get a profitable deal. There are a number of used bikes now available in perfect condition. Used bikes are not only economical but also come along with dedicated bike accessories. They allow us to enjoy the benefits of a fair deal, spend less money and access a quality bike within the minimum prize range.

The buyer should check the condition of the bike over closely. When taking the bike for a test ride, one must apply the brakes. One must also carefully inspect for defects of the body like scratches, dents and loose and ill-fitting accessories. One should check the maintenance history of the bike and insurance of the bike and make sure that the VIN number is the same on the bike and the title. Almost all brands of used bikes can be found online. The main purpose behind buying used bikes is generally to save money. In most cases used bikes have proven to be a lot cheaper than new ones.

When buying used bikes for the first time, we should consider first whether we are after a brand name or looking at the power of the bike. The buyer should make sure that every part of the engine is working well and pay special attention to the brake, wheels and tires of the bike. Wheels and tires are two of the most important parts of used bikes. There are some brands that gain value with time; this is the case with a Harley Davidson. The older the bike, the more value it has.

To conclude, buying a used bike is very economical and practical. So, we must get ready to hunt for a great deal and get one of the many brands of used bikes. One must check out the online automotive directory for bikes and see what special sales are available for bikes that fit our preferences.

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วันอาทิตย์ที่ 11 เมษายน พ.ศ. 2553

The Future Of Custom Choppers

..The question now is whether or not the business of building choppers can survive through this recession with only magazine ads and internet buzz to keep it a float. I would suspect many small shops that are barely hanging on will close their doors before the end of the year...

With the cancelling of the TV show 'American Chopper", the future of custom choppers is left without a major marketing aid to constantly remind us how much we love choppers. The only custom motorcycle themed show to last more than a season, one has to wonder if the cancellation will have a profound impact on the industry as a whole or is the internet enough to keep it going?

The boost the custom motorcycle business received from the television show created around a group of guys who built custom choppers rivaled the dot com craze in the late nineties as far as the swell of new companies entering the business. As with any artificially created demand, eventually consumers came back to reality and many of the newly created motorcycle shops were forced to close their doors.

Once an almost completely underground market, the interest that was generated in those who would normally not be interested in choppers also propelled small companies into huge success and created an internet niche that has remained as large as it was during the custom motorcycle craze. Since websites are much less expensive to maintain than brick and mortar businesses, the economic slump did little to affect the huge number of websites that were built around custom motorcycles.

The question now is whether or not the business of building choppers can survive through this recession with only magazine ads and internet buzz to keep it a float. I would suspect many small shops that are barely hanging on will close their doors before the end of the year. Some may simply turn back into one man operations that can no longer afford a crew of bike builders.

The good news for hands on builders is that each one only needs to produce 5 or 6 choppers a year to keep their heads above water. And the few customers looking for choppers in these tough times are also the sort to not search for bargains as much as getting the bike they really want. Most blue collar workers, the type that were stretching their budgets to get into their own custom bikes when times were good are certainly not going to risk their families financial future on a $30,000 toy.

So this really leaves only the well to do and hardcore bikers as potential buyers of custom bikes in general. I believe the average Joes will come back to buying choppers but not until this economic slump is truly over and Americans are no longer afraid to spend money again. But we have certainly seen the heyday of the custom chopper industry. There's just simply no way it will be what it was during the American Chopper craze.

Probably more than half of those that bought custom bikes just because of the show have already traded them in on more practical motorcycles, if they're even still riding. When times got tough many just couldn't justify keeping something in the garage for an occasional ride that was worth more than a lot of Americans make in a year.

While there is future for choppers, it isn't going to look anything like the recent past.

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Honda Ruckus Variator: Improves Speed + Acceleration

..The Honda Ruckus scooter turns heads like no other. This economical scooter has a distinctive look that attracts people from all over, you gotta love it....


My friends often ask what they should modify first when they get their Honda Ruckus, and my suggestion would be to upgrade with the Polini Variator. The Polini Variator improves acceleration and increases top speed on the Honda Ruckus Zoomer (if tuned correctly).

The Polini Variator transmits the power of the engine to the rear wheel while keeping the engine in an exactly defined rev-band. The Polini Ruckus Variator is also the biggest diameter Variator on the market, this mean a higher top speed compared to other Ruckus Variators. Polini Variators are also made of a high quality plated aluminum alloy so wear under the higher horsepower conditions are virtually eliminated. With a stock Variator, after 2,000km you will notice visible ripples on the surface that can make the scooter feel as if it is "shifting". This can also cause excessive belt wear.

Polini Variators use a drive face bushing that is a high quality self lubricating bronze with closer tolerances and wear characteristics than on the stock unit. These Variators transmit power to the wheel and do it consistently. Strong, consistent acceleration and torque! Very easy to fit and to modify.

The Honda Ruckus scooter turns heads like no other. This economical scooter has a distinctive look that attracts people from all over, you gotta love it.

The stock scooter is powered by a 49cc single cylinder 4-stroke engine and includes a 1.5 gallon gas tank, dual headlights and oversized fat tires that grip the road for easy handling. Modifying the Ruckus with scooter parts are becoming more and more popular for a personalized look and more speed. In the Ruckus scooter world, customizing with ruckus parts for aesthetic reasons are equally important as modifying for speed.

Ruckus exhaust accessories Ruckus parts Yamaha scooter parts Zuma 125, Dr Pulley, Stage6, Polini, Yoshimura, NGK, Malossi, NCY & OEM replacement parts at DrowSports.

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A Ride Without Motorcycle Leathers

..Since that time I've clocked countless miles on everything from Hondas to Harleys, and if there is one thing I have learned, it is that there is no substitute for a set of high quality motorcycle leathers...


Have you ever wished you had a good set of motorcycle leathers? I will never forget the winter of 1987. My wife and I were living on the North shore of Chicago. She was working as an elementary school teacher and I was finishing grad school. Money was tight, so a second car was out of the question. The hassle of sharing a vehicle has always been more than I can stand to endure, so I began looking for some other form of cheap transportation. In those days I had yet to own a motorcycle, but I had always wanted one. While driving by the local shopping mall near our neighborhood, I noticed a motorcycle sitting beside the road with a for sale sign hanging off the front forks. It looked pretty small, but as the chrome glinted in the sun I found myself strangely drawn to pull over and check it out.

The bike was a 1972 Honda CB350, and for being 16 years old at the time, it was in great condition. It looked like it had been barely ridden and then tucked away in a garage somewhere. This was about 23 years ago now, so I honestly can not remember what color it was originally. I painted it metallic flake blue within the first year of owning it. To me, this bike was priceless, but I paid only $300 for it later that afternoon.

Now that my transportation problem was solved, I began regularly making the 20 mile commute to school. Which if you have ever been in Chicago traffic, you understand that a trip of that distance could take an hour or more. It must have bought the motorcycle in the summer because I remember how much I loved tooling around on it for the first few months. But then the temperature began to drop and the snow began to fly. I quickly learned that there is a good reason for Chicago being known as the windy city. Riding a motorcycle alongside Lake Michigan in the winter is like running naked through a meet packing plant with 100 high speed fans blowing on you. I mean it was cut you to the bone frigid!

Although I did have a full face helmet, I never seemed to have clothing that could keep the icy wind from penetrating down to my soul. I even remember forgetting my gloves one night and having to put my socks on my hands just to survive the ride home. My ankles still hurt when I think about it. Even though we now live in the south eastern United States, and you can ride nearly all year round, just thinking about those frosty mid-western motorcycle rides can send a nasty chill up my spine.

Since that time I've clocked countless miles on everything from Hondas to Harleys, and if there is one thing I have learned, it is that there is no substitute for a set of high quality motorcycle leathers. Whether you ride a crotch rocket or a big old hog, nothing beats a lined leather jacket and a broken in pair of chaps on a long cold ride. When God made cows, he really knew how to insulate them from the cold. If you are currently in the market for some new leathers, take a minute and check out the link listed below.

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วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 18 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2553

Touring Mighigan's Upper Penninsula By Motorcycle

One of the reasons I ride is for the spirit of facing the road and life with a can-do attitude, and another is for the joy of seeing the landscape unfold. If that's part of your riding psyche, too, you'll feel right at home in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, or "The U.P." as the locals call it. Stretching 310 miles from Sault Ste. Marie near its eastern end to Ironwood near its western border, it's a wild land separated from the Lower Peninsula by the Mackinac Bridge, and from Detroit (293 miles to the south) by major cultural differences.


I was born and raised in Michigan's western Lower Peninsula, and can remember in grade school singing the unofficial state song, "Michigan, My Michigan" (to the tune of "Tannenbaum, O Tannenbaum"). In the 1970s I used to ride up into the U.P. on vacation. Despite a move to California more than 30 years ago I still return to my hometown, but had not been back to the U.P. since 1975. That's why I was especially enthused about the opportunity to ride there for a few fall days last October.

On this latest trip I found the U.P. refreshingly unchanged, and rather than my early 1970s Honda CB450 I was now riding an Electra Glide Classic borrowed from Bald Eagle Harley-Davidson in Marquette. I was also accompanied by Brad Kolbus, from Munising, on his Road King; he publishes a rider's guide to the U.P., seems to know everybody, and knows where to ride and what to see.

Just after we began riding along the Superior lakeshore by Marquette Bay, I immediately pulled Brad over at a vision that seemed right out of a Star Wars movie to ask, "What the heck is that?" It was a huge structure, massive and gray, and hundreds of feet long, a succession of high, close-set concrete archways extending out into the water. Brad informed me that it was the old Lower Harbor Ore Dock, now no longer in use. Railroad cars full of iron ore were shunted onto it, workmen lowered chutes and the ore rattled noisily into the holds of the huge ore carriers that used to dock here.

Next we ride west, where we note signs of the approaching fall season: Pontoon boats up on blocks, firewood neatly stacked on porches and the leaves turning yellow. We reach Big Bay; this little town was the scene of a murder in 1951 that inspired the book Anatomy of a Murder, and the 1959 movie by the same name starring Jimmy Stewart and Lee Remick. We grab lunch at the Thunder Bay Inn, which was the setting for scenes in the classic film. The pub in which we dine was built onto the hotel for the filming.

Though Superior, Michigan, Huron, Erie and Ontario are referred to as "The Great Lakes," they're actually great inland seas. In Munising I board a 60-foot observation boat for a cruise along the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. The captain informs us that Superior alone contains enough fresh water to cover the entire continental United States to a depth of 5 feet! It's cool and blustery this day, and once we clear Grand Island we're in Lake Superior proper where the waves begin to rock and roll. Most of the patrons abandon the cold, windswept open viewing area on top for the glass-enclosed seating on the main deck, as I consider abandoning my lunch over the side. All along the Pictured Rocks we're treated to a humorous, running commentary about the rock cliffs that have been eroded by eons of wind, rain and freezing weather, and painted in shades of brown, tan and green by the runoff of the limonite, copper, iron and manganese. We sail past caves, arches and a rock called the Indian's Head. A wide, filmy waterfall drops like a veil from the striated cliffs.

The next day Brad and I ride from Munising east on M28 along what is called "the Seney Stretch," 25 straight miles through scrubland full of stunted trees and pines. Thirty-some years ago I had stopped in Seney to commemorate that it was right here, where Highways 28 and 77 intersect, that a young Ernest Hemingway had disembarked the train in 1919. Wounded in World War I, Hemingway had hiked north to fish the Fox River, and would later fictionalize the experience in one of his Nick Adams stories called The Big Two-Hearted River. But wait, the Two Heart is actually well north of here; did Hemingway get it wrong? Nope. Like a true fisherman, he had misnamed the river in an attempt to keep his favorite fishing spot a secret.

We ride eastward on a tree-lined two-lane road, and when we pass the sign for Deer Park I recall camping near it on Muskallonge Lake in the '70s. My evening was enlivened when five raccoons came snuffling up from the lake, begging on their hind legs. I gave them some bread, and half an hour later was toasting marshmallows over the fire when something tapped me on the shoulder. Startled, I turned around to find a raccoon, and when I turned back another was running off with the toasted marshmallow as two others were hot-footing it into the darkness with the entire bag between them! They don't wear those little bandit masks for nothing!

Lake Superior is cold, gray and whitecapped on this blustery day, and when the rain begins I huddle into my electric gear and crank the thermostat to "weld." The Classic's fairing and lowers keep the worst of the weather off me, and Gordon Lightfoot's haunting dirge "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" plays through the stereo on our ride to The Great Lakes Shipwreck Museum on Whitefish Point. The song recounts the sea disaster that occurred on November 10, 1975, when the ore carrier sank in a storm with all 29 men, just 17 miles northwest of here. In the Museum's boathouse I meet Tom Farnquist, executive director of the Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society. Speculation is that the SS Edmund Fitzgerald was too close to Caribou Island some 40 miles northeast of here, where 35-foot seas in 45 feet of water allowed the carrier to strike bottom, which damaged her hull and caused her to take on water. She eventually broke in two and sank in 535 feet of water off Whitefish Point. Farnquist has dived on the wreck and personally helped recover the ship's bell, which now comprises the centerpiece of the museum.

Dinner was at the Antlers Restaurant in Sault Ste. Marie, which was packed this Friday night. Yeah, it's a Yooper place all right, with trophy heads and stuffed wildlife arranged along the walls and among the rafters. Suddenly, a siren sounds, lights flash and we ask the waitress what the heck's going on. "Oh, they do that every time they open a new keg," she explains.

In the morning we cross the street from our motel for a view of the famous Soo Locks. Unfortunately, at this particular moment there's not a ship in sight. The International Bridge looms in the distance with Canada just across the way.

It's about a 55-mile freeway ride south to the Mackinac Bridge, then we turn westward on Highway 2 through low scrubland with Lake Michigan on our left. In Blaney Park Brad introduces me to Steve Zellar, who puts on an annual motorcycle event called The Blaney Park Rendezvous. He gives us a tour of his expansive campground that accommodated 3,000 riders last year; his 2010 rally will be held June 18-20.

The thumb-shaped Garden Peninsula hangs down into Lake Michigan, and is home to Fayette Historic State Park. Fayette was established in 1867 as an iron-smelting operation with huge furnaces, an extensive dock and homes; about 500 people lived and worked here. When the charcoal iron market declined, the operation was discontinued in 1891 and Fayette was abandoned. Today, it has been left as an arrested ruin, a gift from the past with its unpainted foreman's houses, the old hotel and castlelike stone remains of the smelter on picturesque Snail Shell Harbor.

We stop in Nahma at the Nahma Inn, a bed & breakfast with 14 charming rooms and a full bar and restaurant. Brad introduces me to owners Charley and Laurie Macintosh (he seems to know everybody) who are planning a bike event there in the near future. Next door is the old general store, which was abandoned in the '50s with some of its merchandise still intact. Its owner, a gentleman named Pat, gives us a tour of its time-capsule interior.

Brad leads us up H13 north into Alger County, and this fall Sunday afternoon we enjoy the turning leaves as the Harley feels surprisingly nimble following the road's hills and gentle curves. Every few miles a trail or two-tracks leads off into the yellow woods, where muddy dirt bikes and ATVs disappear; we long to follow them into the forest.

From there it's west where we visit Da Yoopers Tourist Trap near Ishpeming. As an ex-Michigander it was just as corny as I'd hoped, with life-sized dioramas of a Jeep driven by a deer with a hunter tied across the hood, of deer playing cards, the place full of Yooper bumper stickers and souvenirs. Out front is "Gus," the world's largest running/working chain saw (it's in The Guinness Book of Records), and "Big Ernie," the largest working rifle.

The ghost town of Fayette serves as a symbol for much of the U.P. that, unfortunately, is suffering economically.

Along the roads are abandoned homes and factories. Tourism is now the main economic driver in the area, and there is much about the U.P. to love. To me, the true charm of the place-with its pines and cedars, maples and birches, hidden lakes and bays, and rustic cabins-is how the whole thing comes together. On this fall Sunday we rumble along backroads to The Up North Lodge near Gwinn. The sunlight dapples the red-and-yellow maple leaves, and there's a cool dampness in the air from a recent passing shower. We tromp inside as the fragrance of wood smoke wafts from the stone fireplace. Many patrons turn to nod and greet us. Burgers and pollock, ribs, whitefish and smelt populate the menu, and a football game illuminates the big screen. This welcoming, rustic friendliness confirms that this truly is still Michigan...my Michigan.

By: Bill Stermer
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