1 painting in the off-season Thu Jan 15, 2015 3:13 am
k-wopper
Silver member
Hi Guys,
After last years mechanical re-build I was looking forward to a great summer of riding which did happen - with a twist.
I took a job in northern British Columbia up near Alaska. Normally it would be fly up and drive a company vehicle while there but the thought of a 1600km trip with a destination and paid expenses was too much to miss. The old girl ran great. Much better than my numb butt! One trip up for orientation then all the way back to Vancouver for regrouping and orginising some shipping. The next trip up was with the panniers and Givi top box loaded and everything hanging off the sides. It was glorious. Lots of waving to the other bikes and chatting with others making the summer tourist trip to Alaska.
For those not from around here- Alaska is a bucket-list trip for many riders and the west coast route takes highway 97 north from the U.S. border to the Alaska and Dempster highways. Side note to those making the trip. Buy your tires in the U.S or close to the border and I'll tell you why.
Prince George is the last city where you will decide to head north to the Yukon and Alaska or turn West to the pan-handle and then north that way. On a map this looks like an ideal place to stock up on gear and it is with the exception of motorcycle parts. There are 3 dealerships none of which are Bmw. The Harley dealer who will turn up his nose at any other make and a Honda/Kawasaki dealer who is more into quads and snowmobiles and a Yamaha dealer who is friendly but hadn't even heard of Heidenau tires.
Which gets us to the subject of tires.
On my first trip back to Vancouver my Metzlers were getting a bit "skinny" and I decided to price out a new set but I procrastinated and thought I'd be OK to make Prince George an 800km jaunt) and get a new set of slicks on the lay over.
Here's how it went. No tires of the size I need in town (of any manufacture) but could be brought in for MSRP. "Oh well" i'll order them and have them installed on the way back.
"No problem" they say "would you like them installed on the bike or will you be bringing just the rims?" Oh oh, i'm starting to get a bad feeling! "How much?" I angelicly ask.
"oh that will be $135.00 on the rims or $270.00 on the bike. Yikes! Quick math in my head says $425.00 tires + $270.00 install + 12% tax = $779.00 I've bought motorcycles for less and these were not the top-of-the-line tires either.
Long story short I passed and as it was Summer riding I soldered on with what I had. A bit of a ramble but all I am saying is if you plan to go to Alaska (a great trip don't get me wrong. Plan ahead.
But I am not finished yet.
I am back in Vancouver and have stripped the plastic bits of the bike for a nice new paint job DIY in the garage in the middle of winter because that's just how we roll isn't it.
Cheers,
Rob
p.s. new tires on rims in Vancouver $335.00
After last years mechanical re-build I was looking forward to a great summer of riding which did happen - with a twist.
I took a job in northern British Columbia up near Alaska. Normally it would be fly up and drive a company vehicle while there but the thought of a 1600km trip with a destination and paid expenses was too much to miss. The old girl ran great. Much better than my numb butt! One trip up for orientation then all the way back to Vancouver for regrouping and orginising some shipping. The next trip up was with the panniers and Givi top box loaded and everything hanging off the sides. It was glorious. Lots of waving to the other bikes and chatting with others making the summer tourist trip to Alaska.
For those not from around here- Alaska is a bucket-list trip for many riders and the west coast route takes highway 97 north from the U.S. border to the Alaska and Dempster highways. Side note to those making the trip. Buy your tires in the U.S or close to the border and I'll tell you why.
Prince George is the last city where you will decide to head north to the Yukon and Alaska or turn West to the pan-handle and then north that way. On a map this looks like an ideal place to stock up on gear and it is with the exception of motorcycle parts. There are 3 dealerships none of which are Bmw. The Harley dealer who will turn up his nose at any other make and a Honda/Kawasaki dealer who is more into quads and snowmobiles and a Yamaha dealer who is friendly but hadn't even heard of Heidenau tires.
Which gets us to the subject of tires.
On my first trip back to Vancouver my Metzlers were getting a bit "skinny" and I decided to price out a new set but I procrastinated and thought I'd be OK to make Prince George an 800km jaunt) and get a new set of slicks on the lay over.
Here's how it went. No tires of the size I need in town (of any manufacture) but could be brought in for MSRP. "Oh well" i'll order them and have them installed on the way back.
"No problem" they say "would you like them installed on the bike or will you be bringing just the rims?" Oh oh, i'm starting to get a bad feeling! "How much?" I angelicly ask.
"oh that will be $135.00 on the rims or $270.00 on the bike. Yikes! Quick math in my head says $425.00 tires + $270.00 install + 12% tax = $779.00 I've bought motorcycles for less and these were not the top-of-the-line tires either.
Long story short I passed and as it was Summer riding I soldered on with what I had. A bit of a ramble but all I am saying is if you plan to go to Alaska (a great trip don't get me wrong. Plan ahead.
But I am not finished yet.
I am back in Vancouver and have stripped the plastic bits of the bike for a nice new paint job DIY in the garage in the middle of winter because that's just how we roll isn't it.
Cheers,
Rob
p.s. new tires on rims in Vancouver $335.00