Iron Butt Saddlesore 1000
#21
#22
I hear you, the judgement starts to diminish towards the end of the ride and looking down at the odometer and then calculating that into hours is the only way to get by. My throttle wrist was like Jello for the last two hours. Looking forward to using the cruise control on my next IB run.
#23
Left Daytona, Fl at noon on a Saturday figuring to get halfway to Akron, Ohio and find a hotel. Weather was beautiful ( until the Ohio border,) so I went straight through. Got to the house in Akron at 5:00 a.m. Sunday morning. 985 miles in 17 hours.
Last 2 hours from Marietta, Oh to Canton, Oh in the fog was the tough part.
Last 2 hours from Marietta, Oh to Canton, Oh in the fog was the tough part.
#24
IBA member #44945. Aug 2010. Sierra Vista, AZ to Peco, TX and back. Right about 17 hours with about an hour of that waiting out a super cell.
Instead of mounting the gigantic IBA pin they award you on my vest, I had a small patch made up that says IBA 44945 in 1/2" letters.
Instead of mounting the gigantic IBA pin they award you on my vest, I had a small patch made up that says IBA 44945 in 1/2" letters.
#25
Thanks! I think I can do a Bun Burner on the Road Glide. The added comfort and protection along with the cruise control might just give me the edge I need. Definetly have to work in a sleep break.
#27
Let's hear your story.
Mine started on June 22, 2012 in Chesterfield. MI. at 4:00 A.M. on my 2006 Heritage Softail Classic. Headed north to Mackinac City, Mi. and south to Franklin, Ohio and finally back to Chesterfield, MI.
Total time 20 hrs.
Total mileage 1070
Most memorable part of the trip. I traded in the Heritage for a 2012 Road Glide Ultra.
Mine started on June 22, 2012 in Chesterfield. MI. at 4:00 A.M. on my 2006 Heritage Softail Classic. Headed north to Mackinac City, Mi. and south to Franklin, Ohio and finally back to Chesterfield, MI.
Total time 20 hrs.
Total mileage 1070
Most memorable part of the trip. I traded in the Heritage for a 2012 Road Glide Ultra.
So I’m back from my Ironbutt. We rode the Lower Lakes 1000, which has to be run around both Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, with both the starting and starting point being at the same spot. Four of us went, and for all of us, this was our first Ironbutt. The bikes were as follows:
Me – 2009 Street Glide
Gary H – 1998 Ultra 95th anniversary edition
Mike H – 1987 Tour Glide
John – 2002 Triumph
Our ride started in Toledo, Ohio where we stayed in a hotel for the night in the Perrysburg area. We are all from the Columbus area and that would have added about 250 miles to the trip. The plan was to meet our starting witness at 4:15am, and be on the road at 4:30am. Unfortunately for all of us, depending on who you ask we got anywhere from 1.5 – 3 hours of sleep the night before, so when I called Mike H at 4:16 to see where they were and he said “oh ****” in a tired voice, I knew we were getting a late start. (he actually was awake, but just a bit behind schedule) We made it over to the rendezvous point, got everything signed and were on the road around 4:50am. Not much traffic at this time of day so it was smooth riding into Detroit where we were going to take the Ambassador Bridge over to Canada, except for the exit was closed due to construction. Not wanting to figure out where we are going, we just head to the tunnel. So we are driving on the highway about 60MPH when we come up on the exit, which is another tunnel by the Joe Lewis Arena. (note, no speed limit reduction postings) We get through the tunnel and to my surprise it’s a red light and cross-traffic in front of me. (in other words OH ****!) We slam on the brakes, and I’m pretty happy I got the ABS option on my bike. It very likely saved me from something bad. Everyone is in one piece and nobody **** themselves, so we head to the tunnel to Canada, The guard turned us around, and said no motorcycles in the tunnel, take the bridge. I told him the exit was closed, and he gave me directions. We make it to the bridge through the war zone of a construction job and get over into Canada. The border guard was the normal “Friendly” character that they usually have at the crossing. At least this time they didn’t pull me over, put me up against the wall and frisk me as they go through all my stuff.
All right. We are in Canada and only running 60 mins behind schedule. We find our way (accidentally) to 401 E. We’d been watching the weather all week and it looked great. Highs in the mid 70’s and high 60’s, with a 40% chance of rain for about 35% of the trip in the NW corner of our route. After about two hours of our ride on the 401, it starts to drizzle, then rain. I had my gear already on, as did John, but Mike and Gary had to put theirs on at a gas stop. Riding in the rain seems like a bad thing, but if you have a bike with a faring, it’s not so horrible as long as you are moving, and behind the faring/windshield. The rain slowed, then stopped, and was off and on for the next 12 hours. I’m glad I brought my full face helmet for this trip.
Nothing too eventful happened until we hit Toronto, ON. I would like to know WTF is everyone in that city doing out before noon on a Saturday that would cause a complete traffic jam, and the traffic flow to stop multiple times. It was like Chicago during rush hour. We get through Toronto, and now we are two hours behind schedule. (about 4 hours later I meet some dude in NY on an older Goldwing who is from Toronto, and he said the traffic is like that every day, and that the city is commonly joked about being the Canadian National Parking Lot)
Mike H, (guy with the Tour Glide) likes to ride fast. I think his bike idles at 70MPH. I’m not so interested in speeding in shitty weather in another country. But I’m going with the flow. The only problem is he likes to ride fast and has no idea where we are going. He leads the entire group except for me, past the exit to the U.S. I make it through customs, pull into the welcome center, and make a call. They are on their way back over. Holy ****, another hour lost. What we thought was going to be a 19 hour trip is shaping up to possibly not qualify.
We regroup in NY. The sky looks BAD. The Triumph only has about a 145mi range before reserve, and 100 miles already on the trip meter. It’s 5:00pm at this point, (12 hour mark) and we have 520 miles to go. We head out on I-81 south, and the sky opens up. F*** it, it’s a straight road, we cruise about 85MPH to the fuel stop. Gas, coffee, water, documentation, bathroom, on the road in 10 minutes. Still raining, hop onto I-90 headed East, and we are in and out of construction for a good part of the highway. By the next gas stop it’s starting to dry up, and everyone is hungry, we figure we will grab a quick bite to eat. It’s about 8:00 and we have about 350 miles go to. By 11:00 pm, the lack of sleep is starting to wear on us. Pretty much the rest of the route was uneventful. Lots of construction, no more rain. We pulled into the gas station where we began our trek at 3:30ish.
1060 miles, 22.5 hours, 4 states and two country's later and we made our goal of 1000 miles by motorcycle in less than 24 hours. And we did this on about 2.5 hours of sleep.
A GPS track of our trek......
Some observations:
The ride itself was really wasn’t that difficult. What was hard was the lack of sleep. The 2.5 hours I got was really starting to show itself to me about 9:00. Come 1:00AM, I was questioning myself on continuing. In hindsight I probably shouldn’t have. I was having difficulty towards the end of the trip focusing, or keeping a good line. – Sleep is your friend.
I wore some compression underwear from LDcomfort. These were awesome. No hint of Monkeybutt.
Corbin seats – If you don’t have one, get one. 22.5 hours straight in the saddle and I was not sore.
Canada Highway 401 – Craptastic. I didn’t think there was a worse road than I-70 through Kansas as far as scenery goes. I was wrong. This road is remarkably unremarkable, and should be avoided if you are looking to see anything interesting on a ride through Canada from Windsor to upstate New York.
If/when I decide to do another Ironbutt I will have a GPS of some type mounted. I’ll also have a Tour Pak. The guy with the Tour Glide had one, and it was just much easier for him to have all his documentation, snacks, atlas etc handy on the road instead of having to dig through his bags with everything else.
My knuckles hurt, especially on my left hand, and my left fingers are somewhat swollen. We’ll see what that’s all about, and my ears are ringing. Other than that and being tired (only got about 4 hours of sleep after the ride) I feel pretty good today.
mikebaby
#28
My IB # 7147. You can do the saddle sore (1000 in 24) and the bun burner (1500 in 36) together.
Following are the guidelines for earning an Iron Butt Association Pin and License Plate Back and a Certificate of Completion for a 1,000 mile (or more) ride in 24 hours (SaddleSore 1000) or 1,500 miles in 36 hours (Bun-Burner 1500). It is possible to complete both the SaddleSore 1000 and Bun-Burner 1500 on the same ride. For example, in the first 24 hours you ride 1,000 miles and then continue on the second day and ride another 500 miles or more.
Following are the guidelines for earning an Iron Butt Association Pin and License Plate Back and a Certificate of Completion for a 1,000 mile (or more) ride in 24 hours (SaddleSore 1000) or 1,500 miles in 36 hours (Bun-Burner 1500). It is possible to complete both the SaddleSore 1000 and Bun-Burner 1500 on the same ride. For example, in the first 24 hours you ride 1,000 miles and then continue on the second day and ride another 500 miles or more.
#29
I have done a couple.
1st was 10 years ago, Great Falls, Montana to Winnipeg, Manitoba by way of Glacier Nat Park. 1727 KM (1073 miles) in 22 hrs on a Ducati Monster! That was a marathon ride.
2nd on a 99 Electra Glide Std. Winnipeg, Manitoba to Sparwood, British Columbia via North Dakota and Montana Highway 2. 1036 Miles in 21 hrs. A lot easier, but it was end of May, and there was still Snow on side of road in the mountains.
We did Winnipeg to Sturgis (750 miles) non-stop each way every years for 6 years.
1st was 10 years ago, Great Falls, Montana to Winnipeg, Manitoba by way of Glacier Nat Park. 1727 KM (1073 miles) in 22 hrs on a Ducati Monster! That was a marathon ride.
2nd on a 99 Electra Glide Std. Winnipeg, Manitoba to Sparwood, British Columbia via North Dakota and Montana Highway 2. 1036 Miles in 21 hrs. A lot easier, but it was end of May, and there was still Snow on side of road in the mountains.
We did Winnipeg to Sturgis (750 miles) non-stop each way every years for 6 years.
#30
June this year for me on the longest day, 1108 miles in 22 riding to the bottom of the UK, across and back up riding in a sponsored run to raise money for the British Legion (veterans association). The last 200 miles were in the dark and the rain - not good. I like the patch. I just wanted to know I could do it.