Thats why i didnt suggest a Buell
fucking heathen
Yes - I know how to do that (London filtering standard practise), it just increases the faff levels.demographic wrote: ↑Fri Jan 15, 2021 8:38 am How wide is the rest of the route into the place?
Mine has a back alley then til this Tuesday it had a narrow gate that I couldn't get my GSXR or KX through in a totally straight line.
I could however get it to the gate posts, then turn the bars a bit so one would pass the post, move the bike forward slightly, lean it slightly and get the other bar through.
What I'm saying is that in my case I could get a bike that was wider than the opening through all the same.
Fortunately that gate is now knackered and I've just built a wider one and IIRC the new opening is about 900mm, can't remember where the euro profile lock is though so its currently just screwed shut.
That's one of the reasons for it, hence not concerned overly with performance or kerb appeal.
I understand your dilemma, as I have a similar one (although nothing as severe as yours). I live in a terraced house, with the passage I use to get bikes in and out running between my house and my neighbour's. Narrowest part of the c. 6 metre passage is about 850mm wide, so at least 100mm wider than your bottleneck. I was very surprised to realise just how wide most bikes are these days. Any kind of Adventure bike is a no-no, as is any sports-tourer. Even sports bike widths have gradually crept up over the years.Rockburner wrote: ↑Thu Jan 14, 2021 11:50 am So - bit of backstory: I've moved in with a new partner who lives on a main road, no parking, very narrow alley into the back garden (no shed) with an even narrower gate.
Additional info:
The back gate opening is 74cm (29") wide. That's the narrowest gap the bike would need to fit through.
Having seen RB ride, he would die of boredom on that as they are happy at 55-60 mph but seem to be a bit noisy above that as a 411cc single putting out 24 BHP ish