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Edited on Wed Apr-30-08 07:47 AM by ThomWV
Sorry to hear about your luck, better to have a little bad luck the first day than a lot of bad luck the second day I guess. Don't let it get to you.
Three stories for you.
When I bought my current bike (private seller) at the first inspection the very first time the seller hit the button the battery came up dead. It cranked over about 2 times slowly and then clicked itself to death. The seller's mouth just dropped, he was so embarassed. I saw it as a good thing. The seller and I hopped in my truck and headed for the closest Auto Parts store where he laid down the plastic for a new battery - they are dirt cheap - but I stopped him. I did a deal with him in that he paid as much as a standard wet cell battery cost and I paid the difference and bought the best gel cell they had. I think it cost me $30 difference. Back we went, stuck the battery in the bike and it has run just fine ever since.
The point is not to be too discouraged.
Next story, and this one may strike closer to home for you. In July of 1971 I bought a brand new 750 Honda. About the same size bike as your new Sporster. I picked it up (trade in for an old Suzuki I had before it) at lunch time from work. At the end of the day I had to ride it to Ft. Lauderdale to my grandparents home, it was their 50th wedding anniversery and we were all taking them out to dinner. On the way there, about 3 miles from their home, I had a flat tire (rear). In order to push the bike alongside the 2 lane road I had to be in the grass and sand and to push it in that I had to run the engine at idle in 1st gear and essentially jog along side of it while holding it up. July, south Florida, late afternoon, 3 miles jogging while holding up a 500 pound motorcycle. I am not overstating this, it dam near killed me. Know what caused the flat? They had used a staple into the rear tire to hold a cardboard sales sign to the bike back when it was in the showroom. It took about 20 miles of riding for that staple to make its way to the tube. Some dam fool at the dealer had caused it.
Last story. Just last week I got on my bike to spend the day riding around the state. I flipped on the ignition, listened to the fuel pump bring the pressure up, watched the engine check light disappear from the dash, hit the starter button, and everything went dead. A minute or two later it did the same thing again. The problem was obvious, a lose battery cable. On a Decuce if you have the luggage rack on the back its a pain in the butt to get the seat off; needless to say I had the luggage rack on the bike. At any rate all it took was a moment with a 7/16" wrench to solve the electrical problem.
Final point: Shit happens.
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