PLEASE people make sure you have a full tank at thestart of the ride! Superhawks excepted.
The "other" unscheduled fuel stop only took 2.3 gallons to fill, so I am pretty sure that bike could have easily made it the 27 miles to Pepin without that stop, fuel light on or not. according to OEM specs it holds 4.1 gallons.But yep, waiting and having to make unscheduled stops puts a serious damper on the fun factor.
If I was dictator the world would be perfect but I like confusion.
This is turning into a good discussion. Tony, you need to rant more often.I have two pennies, that's all, honest. Here goes my two pennies:Ray probably nailed my sentiment the best. But I have a more opinionated view that some of you guys are way too fixated on mileage and schedules. Doing so will doom you to constantly feel disappointed or let down because you *failed* the ride because you don't allow time for unforeseen events (like Roger running out of gas three miles out of Nelson.)Stuff happens. It might be shortsighted for a rider to forget to top off but it happens. So do get-offs, missed routes, lost routes, encounters with LEOs, breakdowns, etc. If your ride is 400 miles and requires no time to chat at gas stops, then you shouldn't ride with people. I ride alone when I feel like ramming a 500 miler in 10 hours because I know that stopping to fuel while straddling the bike and eating a gas stop hot dog in 10 minutes isn't going to be popular with a group . But I never go into a route thinking I have to finish it by X oclock, or even finish the whole route for that matter.The reason some of us routed a different route at Twistar was so we could get some pictures at the New Glarus Brewery, ride the 5 mile Dugway road and other assorted odd landmarks. We still rode plenty of twisties over a 300 mile route and still had plenty of time to smell the flowers too. It's really no fun to have to adhere to a strict route plan that requires synchronized watches and no chat time.Which brings me to my last point, so I won't lose Lloyd's short memory span, some of the best rides I have been on over the 12 years in the HSTA/MSTA were not the fast, technical curve oriented rides. In the old days there were Gunflint Trail rides, Kite Flying rides, Church Steeple rides, etc that combined distances, all sorts of road textures, road orientations (curvy and straight) and plenty of social time. One of the memorable rides had us changing the route plan because VF-Jay wanted to pick some Watercress down in the Whitewater River Valley. I never heard of it, learned alot about it that day.I'm not sure where the need to ride curvy roads at speed all day started. I know there is a need to ride that sportbike hard I guess. They had sportbikes in the past too, yet the routes were setup for mainly corny fun I guess.