Featured Letters to the AMA
I recently learned of a great information source that may be valuable to share with the AMA community. While searching for gas stations in my area that sold ethanol-free fuel, I found a Pure-Gas database (https://www.pure-gas.org) of over 16,000 gas stations and marinas across the country. They are user-reported and offer e-free fuel, and I figured the knowledge could be beneficial to readers and members as one interim bridge to a saner U.S. fuels policy. There’s also an app for iPhone and Android. The site indicates it was created in 2009 and is run by fellow rider Sam Hokin. Many thanks to Sam for his creativity, time and money in making the information available! Please share if you haven’t done so before, as I feel it may be helpful to others. I’m betting Sam wouldn’t mind.
Chris Cullen
Really enjoyed the AMA Alps Challenge tour series! It's worth repeating that Edelweiss Bike Travel also rents bikes for riders who prefer self-guided adventures. Back in ’95 a buddy and I rented a rowdy pair of Hondas from Edelweiss. Good memories include getting out of speeding tickets on the German autobahn, strafing summits and carving canyons through Austria and Switzerland, racing twin Testarossas along the Italian coast, bungee-jumping in Paris, and getting lost for a few days in Amsterdam.
Jim KirchnerStreetsboro, OH.
Browsing through the February issue, I’m seeing stuff that really catches my attention, as always. Loved the story of John Burns slipping into the third leg of the Edelweiss Alps tour, but it was his Half-A-’Busa Burgman column that I could really relate to. Having ridden so many motorcycles over the years, including Gold Wings in several countries in Europe, the U.S. and Canada, I find myself wishing I had a Burgman 650 back then. There are no Alpine passes that can stop a Burgman 650, none! I rode a Suzuki 750 on most of them back in 1982, so I know the roads. The “twist and go” element of the Burgman’s 638cc make it an actual sports-tourer, just without the clutch. Once you learn how to ride a big CVT bike, there’s no need to shift or slip the clutch, even in hairpin corners. You just keep a bit of throttle and trail the rear brake. I have ridden close to 1 million miles on two wheels, and am on my fourth Burgman 650, having crashed two of them. On Burgmans alone I have over 180,000 miles.
I am a 13-year AMA member, and retired U.S. Army.
Dave J.Auburn, WA.
I rode my BMW GS down to Guerrero Negro, Mexico, ages ago to see the whales, and then stopped in to see Super Hunky on the way back, as he lived right across the Mexican border in a home overlooking the Pacific. I had an ulterior motive, as I wanted his permission to rerun a hilarious photo that had run in Dirt Bike a few issues earlier in my publication, CityBike. Rick and his fellow rascals had photographed Hunky launching a full-bagger Harley-Davidson, even getting a little air, on the cover of an earlier issue. He quickly agreed to let us have the shot. He was also active in creating the Sahara club, and I do recall a book of his with catchy title —Monkey Butt! He was a real dirt bike legend, for certain…
Brian HaltonSan Fransisco, CA.
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Just thought I'd pass this motor oil nugget along to AMA members: Shell Rotella T4, 15W-40, is JASO-MA2 rated. Not many automotive-type oils have this rating. Also might mention that there have been some bikes using synthetics that have experienced starter clutch drive slipping with synthetics. Revert to standard oils and problem resolved. Not a long list; just something to be aware should anyone have the problem when using/switching to a synthetic. Otherwise, good stuff. Bring on Summer!
Larry ZimmerBrighton, MI.
I fully support the AMA continuing to protect the motorcycle community from the inadequacies of autonomous vehicles. This was again brought to mind while reading the Rights Refresh piece in the January issue of American Motorcyclist, along with an accompanying note on distracted driving. But another point of view occurred to me while waiting in the doctor’s office and watching a little old lady — I don’t think she was 5 feet tall — make her way slowly out of the office with the aid of a cane, and then struggle into an SUV and drive away. In her case, our risk as motorcyclists is probably no different between her piloting the multi-ton SUV and the autonomous piloting of an AV; with her right-to-drive privileges only being addressed after some calamity has occurred.
On the subject of distracted driving, it is comforting to note that additional states are introducing legislation to address this matter, but the legislation is of no value to us if it is not enforced. I am horrified at the number of drivers who feel the need to glue their phone to their ear while driving, glibly putting the health and welfare of others at risk. Humans cannot multitask despite the protestations of insistent cell phone drivers. But in the decades cell phones have been readily available to consumers, I have never once heard of someone being stopped or fined for use of a cell phone while driving. Thank you for all your efforts, I recognize you cannot address all the issues we face, but any progress is always appreciated.
On the subject of distracted driving, it is comforting to note that additional states are introducing legislation to address this matter, but the legislation is of no value to us if it is not enforced. I am horrified at the number of drivers who feel the need to glue their phone to their ear while driving, glibly putting the health and welfare of others at risk. Humans cannot multitask despite the protestations of insistent cell phone drivers. But in the decades cell phones have been readily available to consumers, I have never once heard of someone being stopped or fined for use of a cell phone while driving. Thank you for all your efforts, I recognize you cannot address all the issues we face, but any progress is always appreciated.
Bill BewlayChapel Hill, N.C.
When I started reading Aaron Frank’s To The End Of The World And Back pieces in the November and January issues, I didn't look closely at the pictures or his bike, and assumed another KTM or BMW. Oh, I was wrong! It was a Versy 300! I know that bike, as I've done many 1,000-mile trips on Pippin, my very own Versys. Great read, both halves. I know we all wish to do something like that in our lives. So thanks, Aaron, for showing us that little ADV bikes do just fine, and that you don't need to be a Mike to travel the world, or even locally. I hope you can have Kiva and friend Bridget tell their story of riding North to South in a future issue. I’ll be waiting.
Robin HoegermanAMA Life Member
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