this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Motorcycles

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Yesterday I was at the gas station putting a small puff of air in my tires after getting my bike out for the first time this year. In a span of 10 seconds this 70-year-old guy gets out of his Jeep and wants to "thank me" on behalf of his massive Harley chapter and shakes my hand and then proceeds to kiss my bike's tank gas cap. I'm totally taken aback and was so caught off guard I didn't know how to respond. Guy ended up being a super nice guy in town for a fishing trip. We had a great conversation, but...what a way to greet a stranger. Now that I think about it, I think the lip marks are probably still on there. Where's my microfiber?

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[–] behohippy 10 points 2 years ago (1 children)

When I had a CRF250L, I'd regularly have women come up and ask how heavy it is, because they're thinking of buying one. I'd put the bike on the ground and show them how to lift it. So... weirdest thing is dropping my bike intentionally to let women pick it up for me.

[–] YellowGas 5 points 2 years ago (2 children)

That's awesome and not what I was expecting! I imagine most of them could pick it up? Any tips for swapping out 70-year-old men for getting women to talk to you? Delete even more chrome?

[–] behohippy 6 points 2 years ago

Step 1) Have a bike that women want to talk about. I think that's about it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

Vespa is the answer.

[–] BenHM3 2 points 1 year ago

File their nails. My last "coating" on my 08 K1200GT (before 2nd gear started popping out) was to tile it with sandpaper. It was grey-colored skate board traction tape. 4" wide, sticky backed, I cut 2:1 rectangles and covered it like the space shuttle. Replaceable tiles if damaged, and as hard as the road. I covered the tank in 3m's calendared-vinyl non-skid, and this is why the entire project worked phenomenally well. I recently covered my K1600GT's tank with the traction tape, and it SHREDDED my riding gear. Lesson: you can indeed sandpaper-cover your bike, but not the panels that the rider contacts.

Friends would walk up, laugh, and do a little nail-file when they saw it.