
2005 -
In Nov 2005, I bought this Gold Wing from Abernathy's Honda in Union City, Tennessee. Planes, trains, rental cars got me to Union City and with a favorable weather window, I rode the 1150 miles home in about 30 hours. I will begin farkeling it over the winter here in Colorado for touring and long distance riding. More to come!

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Gold Wing Farkels
The following customizations or "farkels" were added from Dec 2005 to present. Most are oriented to Long Distance Riding in either safety or comfort areas.
Fuel Cell
My fuel cell just got installed the first of August 2006 and is a work of art by Wayne, a local expert fabricator who made one for Bud Yates, a fellow IBA friend here in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He plans on making 3-4 more depending on demand so feel free to contact me if you want him to contact you about selling you one! This should extend me out to about 350 miles+ per "tank full". It is a simple gravity fed setup and a vent tube running under the trunk out behind the rear tire. Fuel filters were installed in each hose. A tested design by my friend Bud, who has 10,000 of miles on his fuel cell this one is modeled after!
The construction... note internal baffles to prevent
sloshing
Before the powder coating
Another angle
Attached to passenger grab bars, sits on seat and vent tube shown
How
it looks mounted! Note fuel line to tank
Fits my modified seat perfectly also.
Wingsoft Large Seat
Speaking of my Wingsoft seat modification... I got the large one that allows me to sit back 1" at the base of my seat and a full 2" at the top of my hips. With the extra padding, et al, it makes a great "semi-custom" seat for tall riders. The Goldwing now feels like a motorcycle under me rather than I am sitting in an easy chair. Look at John's website for more pictures and details above.

Ram Mounts for Cockpit Electronics

Dec 2005
After
seeing first hand an install of RAM Mounts on my friend's Ron's Goldwing I
decided he had done it right and copied his install. Imitation is the best form
of flattery. On the left you can see my mounts for my cell phone and
Garmin SP III. On the right is my Sirrus
Satellite Radio and future home for my Escort 8500 radar detector. All
devices interface with the bike's intercom through the
Kennedy Dual set (GPS and Radar) and Kennedy Cellset (Cell phone). All
of the Kennedy stuff is plug and play on the GL1800! The Sirrus radio could
be connected via the aux input wire, but I prefer to operate it like I did on my
ST1100. I simply transmit it wirelessly on FM 88.1 to the
motorcycle's FM radio -- works perfectly. The only thing I had to do was run a
power line from my acc fuse block. All of the Kennedy wires cover power and
audio and they all run up the handlebars out of sight. The nice thing
about these RAM mounts is that when you are just riding locally, you just take
them off and the bike looks OEM.

Sep 2006
Slight refinements on the electronics on the dash. I sold my SPIII to a friend and bought a Garmin 2820 that interfaces via Blue tooth to my cell phone. This solves exposing the phone to the elements. I now carry the cell phone in the trunk or on my waist and make all of my calls through the GPS. I also added a water tight box for the radar detector so I do not have to make any stop when it starts raining. Lastly, although the Sirrus radio remains the same, I got a marine grade waterproof cover for it so I can keep riding through the rain and not worry about my electronics.
Hi - Way Pegs
The Kuryakyn Hi-way pegs (Model 4056) were added in mid Jan and will provide alternate sitting/leg extension options on long rides. After having hi way pegs on my ST during the 2003 IBR, I know these will become very valuable additions. I found them well built, easy to install and rock solid.
Luggage Rack
One
of the first additions was a luggage rack for the trunk. This is a Show
Chrome Luggage Rack purchased over the internet. It looks great,
makes a nice handle for the trunk and I will use it to put a small bag on it for
long distance trips of essentials during stops. Harry turned me onto the
idea on his BMW LT of having a trunk bag (small). It goes on somewhat
easy; perhaps more art than science and you must drill holes in your trunk, but
just close your eyes and do it! :-).
Fuse Block and Ground Plate

After
rigging everything on my ST from scratch it was nice having special made
electrical components that someone else designed just for the GL1800. I
quickly installed a fuse block from Electrical
Connections, a great company with great products. The round ground
block was also installed and allows for a clean grounding of all wires.
Headlight Protector and Fog Lights/Protector
Trunk Net

Added a simple OEM trunk net for all of the little things you need night and day and do not want to waste time trying to find them.
Wide Angle Mirrors
After some research into the additional fish eye mirrors on the market, some for as high as $50, I settled on what worked for me on the ST, a pair of $3 wide angle mirrors. A must have on the highway.
Trunk Light

Again, many aftermarket trunk lights out there for $50+... how about getting a "book light" at Office Max and fixing it to your trunk. If it is good enough to read by it is good enough to find something in the trunk. Battery operated.
Copyright © 1999 - 2007, Robert Broeking . All rights reserved.
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