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Harley’s premier bagger - FLHX Street Glide
By
Sean Coker
Thundering through the Columbia Gorge on a 2008 Harley Davidson
Street Glide, I was bobbing and weaving through turns until the Sex
Pistols’ “Holidays in the Sun” begins playing over the Harmon Kardon
stereo. Then I decided to cruise.
At slower speeds my thoughts drifted to Harley Davidson’s blend
of new and old technologies. Cradle frames matted with air-cooled,
pushrod engines with two-valve, hemi-combustion chamber heads are
nothing new. At the same time the Street Glide’s fly-by-wire
throttle linked to sequential port fuel injection and monitored by a
Delphi engine management system are revolutionary.
Up ahead, a series of chicanes erases moto-philosophy from my
mind. Braided lines and 4-piston brakes slow the bike an appreciable
amount before accelerating through the left hook corner; floorboards
scratching the ground.
The Street Glide is a luxury model of Harley’s touring line and
pulls like a Massy Ferguson tractor from off idle to the bike’s
5500-rpm rev limiter. Hard acceleration being crucial to maximize
inadequate ground clearance.
2008 FLHX Street Glide
Pluses
- smooth 6-speed transmission
- sweet note that strikes a balance
between being noticed and not too loud
- bagger luggage was large and
waterproof
Minuses
- Mirrors focused on little more than
my gloves
- Lack of ground clearance
- Getting used to Harley’s
turn signals and locking mechanism on the saddlebags.
Colors
Vivid Black, Black Cherry Pearl,
Black Pearl, Deep Cobalt Pearl, Pacific Blue Denim
(new), Pewter Denim (new)
Chassis
Frame Mild steel, square-section
backbone with twin downtubes
Swingarm Mild steel, rectangular tube
sections, stamped junctions; MIG welded
Length 94.5 in. (2400.3 mm)
Overall Width 39.0 in. (990.6 mm)
Overall Height 52.2 in. (1325.9 mm)
Ground Clearance 4.7 in. (119.4 mm)
Rake (steering head) 26°
Fork Angle 29.3°
Trail 6.2 in. (157.5 mm)
Wheelbase 63.5 in. (1612.9 mm)
Wet weight: 786 lbs.
Suspension
Front Forks 41.3 mm telescopic,
cartridge-style damping
Rear Shocks Short, air-adjustable
Front Wheel 4.6 in. (116.8 mm)
Rear Wheel 2.0 in. (50.8 mm)
Wheels: Chrome, Profile Laced
Aluminum Options
Front 16 in. x 3.0 in. (406.4 mm x
76.2 mm)
Rear 16 in. x 3.0 in. (406.4 mm x
76.2
Tires (Dunlop® Harley-Davidson
Series, blackwall):
Front – D402F
Rear – D402
4-piston front and rear brakes
Engine
Engine Air-cooled, Twin Cam 96®
Displacement 96 cu. in. (1584 cc)
Engine Torque 92.6 ft. lbs. @ 3500
rpm (125.5 NM @ 3500 rpm)
Fuel Economy-EPA urban/highway test
32.5 urban/ 45.0 mpg highway
Compression Ratio 9.2:1
Valve Train Pushrod-operated,
overhead valves with hydraulic, self-adjusting
lifters;
two valves per cylinder
Bore x Stroke 3.75 in. x 4.38 in.
(95.18 mm x 111.13 mm)
Fuel System3 Electronic Sequential
Port Fuel Injection (ESPFI)
Clutch 9-plate, wet
Transmission 6-speed Cruise DriveTM
Fuel Capacity 5.0 gal. (18.9 L)
Oil Capacity (with filter) 4.0 qts.
(3.8 L)
Transmission Capacity 1.0 qts. (0.95
L)
Gauges-air temperature, fuel,
speedometer, rpms, voltage and oil pressure
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Despite a 63.5-inch wheelbase, the Street Glide counter-steers
effortlessly as we tack back and forth like a sailboat in low wind
while cartridge front suspension and an air rear shock soak up the
rippled pavement. My 155-pound frame didn’t compress the suspension
enough to establish a proper ride height and I was always riding on
top of the bike’s 4+ inches of travel. Granted, the suspension is
adjustable but I had little time to delve into personalizing the
suspension and instead headed right for the desert.
A loitering deer necessitated pulling in the cable-actuated
clutch and I was surprised by the ease of the clutch pull. The doe
dives back in a thicket of junipers and I heal-toe shift back into
sixth gear. A dash light illuminates signaling sixth gear and the
96-cubic inch (1584 c.c.) engine sings a sweet note into an
intermittent breeze.
Conifer tress and wild sweet peas pixelate the hillside in hues
of pink and snippets of Mount Adams are found in the distance. In
the bright midday sun there is little glare on the gas gauge reading
half full and I decide to break for gas before continuing through
eastern Washington. After filling the six-gallon tank with premium
gas, some quick math reveals the bike was averaging 35 mpg.
Plucking a canteen from the low-slung saddlebags, I sit on a curb
and stare at the denim blue bike. Harley emblems are spaced inches
apart from each other; clustered on the gas tank, mirrors, all six
of the gauges and saddlebags. The bagger bike has a cropped/bat
style windscreen, swept pipes and long saddlebags that would be a
pleasant sight to see in the garage every morning but at a
$20,000+ price tag, I’d be forced to get legitimate,
gainful employment.
Tossing my canteen in the waterproof saddlebags, I fiddle with a
trunk-style locking mechanism that requires some getting used to
in order to latch properly. The keyless ignition system requires that I only
have the key on my person and when I tap the starter, the bike snarls and
shakes to life. Primary and secondary imbalance issues smooth out
as I begin riding and regain the use of my mirrors.
The Street Glide’s 92 ft. lbs. of torque mean these ponies want
to run and when I look at the stereo face reading 3:30, I
remember an employee saying I was going to be charged if the bike
was brought back after 5:00. Stomping on the rear brake I slow
before U-turning and head back toward Paradise Harley.
It’s going to be close, as I have 90-minutes to go 90-miles and
there will be traffic around Portland. Keeping the stereo screaming
and the motor singing like a sewing machine on high, the Street
Glide and I race against time in a desperate effort to avoid paying
a small fee.
Crossing over the Hood River Bridge, the rear wheel chirps when
traction is broken and regained atop the metal grading. I pay the
75-cent toll before using my right turn signal switch located on the
right handgrip and heading west onto Interstate 84.
The sweating sun stares me in the face while I test the bike’s
high speed maneuvering through traffic. Having spent too long in
California, I pull out the lane-splitting card when traffic gets too
viscous; the large, balanced bike is narrow enough to filter through
beneath clotheslining mirrors and automotive fissures.
I
am enamored with this bike; it's big and nimble yet still feels
comfortable after a 350+ mile ride. My only real concern is the
price. Twenty large is a lot to spend on any bike, but if you are in
the market for a modern bagger then the Street Glide is the bike to
ride. Brembo ABS brakes are available as a factory-installed option
for $800, and while my model lacked the feature, anything that can
make a 786-lbs. bike stop quicker is welcome.
Pulling into Paradise’s parking lot at 5:10, if I am going to be
assessed a late fee then I’m taking the bike another day down
California, if only to pay sales tax at some Mexican restaurant and
keep on cruising to a Sex Pistols soundtrack.
This review was made possible thanks to
Paradise
Harley in Tigard, Oregon. |
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