Road King or Heritage
#23
In a nutshell this is a succinct and honest answer. I am constantly torn between my FatBoy softtail or getting an RK, which are great bikes. Fact is for my 'current' riding needs (100 or less miles at a time) the FB softy is perfect, and doesn't look like a bagger, but rather looks like a REAL motorcycle.
#24
The problem IMO with the king is that in stock form the rider is up on the bike with the bars by their knees. The only way to make it cool is to slam it with apes which pretty much negates the superior handling. So if your thing is riding great distances while not looking cool go with the king. If you want to ride the best looking bike harley makes get some tail!
#25
I had a Evo Heritage, loved it. Had a twin cam 88 Roadking, liked it.
Now ride a 103 Ultra Limited. The old and the new Heritage's fit me like a glove, love the legs forward, low seat height. Now that they come with ABS, being able to stop without skidding in panic insinuation is real important for me! But, here's the one issue I have with buying a newer Heritage, and I can not figure out in this day and age why HD still hasn't put cruise control on them. I love the fly by wire cruise control on the touring bikes.
I'll pass on any bike that does not have ABS brakes, and cruise control now days, once you have them you'll won't go back to the throttle locks. The new Indian that kind of looks like a heritage comes with electronic cruise control and ABS brakes. (But the fenders are so stupidly ugly).
Now ride a 103 Ultra Limited. The old and the new Heritage's fit me like a glove, love the legs forward, low seat height. Now that they come with ABS, being able to stop without skidding in panic insinuation is real important for me! But, here's the one issue I have with buying a newer Heritage, and I can not figure out in this day and age why HD still hasn't put cruise control on them. I love the fly by wire cruise control on the touring bikes.
I'll pass on any bike that does not have ABS brakes, and cruise control now days, once you have them you'll won't go back to the throttle locks. The new Indian that kind of looks like a heritage comes with electronic cruise control and ABS brakes. (But the fenders are so stupidly ugly).
Last edited by jamesroadking; 11-14-2014 at 04:49 AM.
#27
A Heritage (or my Dyna) will never ride like a touring rig, However, after I upgraded the suspension on my Dyna, it's a bit closer. I'm not all beat up after a long ride. My point is, upgrade the stock suspension on the Heritage, and I think you will truly have a bike for all rides. That being said, the RK has the cruise control you can't get on the Heritage. It may not should like much of a difference, but I would take that over a radio.
#28
The problem IMO with the king is that in stock form the rider is up on the bike with the bars by their knees. The only way to make it cool is to slam it with apes which pretty much negates the superior handling. So if your thing is riding great distances while not looking cool go with the king. If you want to ride the best looking bike harley makes get some tail!
#30
I think the RK and the touring line are awesome for doing 80 mph on the highway for a long time. However, I don't know many people who are comfortable on it in its stock form (ie. ergonomics/seat/handlebars/height/etc). The Heritage is more a "jack of all trades," including the looks department (for me anyway).