Los Angeles, June 13, 2000 -- Remove your  brain. Right now. Read not another word unless you have already done so.  Why? Put plainly, Harley-Davidsons, in general, are viewed as unique,  overpriced, modern antiques. Not much reason in that, really. So when  you take one of their bikes which retails for over $15,000 in stock form  and let Harley's Custom Vehicle Operations program (CVO) "showcase  Screamin' Eagle high performance parts," to "reflect Harley-Davidson's  racing heritage," what you have is a recipe for some hard-core eyebrow  raising and head scratching that would make the Three Stooges proud:  $22,495 and it won't comfortably seat a family of four or win a World  Superbike title? Pardon us while we remove our own collective brain.  
Our new CEO, Philip Strauss, has owned a number of bikes over the  years and more than one of them has been a Harley-Davidson. Always eager  to check out the latest addition to the 
MO stable, Strauss took  the Screamin' Eagle Harley home for the weekend to do a little bit of  personal taste testing. When he pulled up to the Rock Store (a local  biker hangout) on Sunday morning, he encountered something he's never  received on any motorcycle prior: laughter. Well, he'd encountered  laughter before, but usually it was directed at him, not his ride.  
This  weekend's incident included more than just an isolated snicker. There  was a myriad chuckles from men and women, young and old, directed at our  CEO aboard the nearly $23K steed.

Harley-Davidson reportedly looked to the Screamin' Eagle Pro Stock  race team for inspiration in building this limited edition (only 1500  will be made) FLTRSEI. So what's so special about this bike? For  starters, on top of the standard Road Glide, you get more than $7,500 in  Genuine Harley-Davidson custom accessories and a choice of two paint  schemes, both featuring the Screamin' Eagle on the front fairing. In  addition to the paint and chrome bolt-ons, there are also a few  performance-enhancing modifications which have been performed to elevate  the Road Glide from Floundering Beagle to Screamin' Eagle status. 
 
Harley  says the powertrain uses Screamin' Eagle performance parts, "configured  in a special street-legal package," that includes big-bore cylinders,  flat-top pistons, more aggressive cams, an intake calibration cartridge  and an air cleaner. The changes result in a ten-percent increase in  horsepower and a 14-percent gain in torque.

Compared to Philip's personal Fat Boy, we expected the Screamin'  Eagle Harley to be the Big Boy on the street and leave the Fat Boy  behind even though it had a high-flow air filter, Vance and Hines pipes,  re-mapped ignition and a Mikuni Smooth Bore carburetor. With a big-bore  kit and so many modifications (not to mention, again, the price and  "influenced by the drag-race team" statement) we expected the Fat Boy to  get eaten alive by the Road Glide. Unfortunately for Harley-Davidson, a  lightly tweaked Fat Boy beats up on the bigger bike at every  opportunity. Not to mention the fact that it sounds a lot more brutish  and appropriately obnoxious. 
 
Which  brings us to another complaint we had about the Screamin Eagle Road  Glide; it's too quiet! This thing's supposed to be a lion but it sounds  like a tabby cat who's had a bit of vicodin mixed into his Friskies.  We're all against the "loud pipes save lives" argument (we think caution  and rider skill saves lives), but what's the point in building a  free-breathing motor if you're going to keep things plugged up at the  back end and effectively negate all the hard work? When you come up with  the answer, please drop us a line.
All  this arm-chair quarterbacking and that's not what this bike is all  about. The Road Glide was meant for the open road. Load up a few  garments, a wife, and head out for a weekend away from all the chaos  that is the day-to-day shuffle. Here the bike shines as you start to  look at both it and the world in front of you in an entirely different  way.

What is a heaving, wheezing horse-drawn wagon around town becomes a  thoroughbred once it breaks out of the gate and gets an opportunity to  stretch its legs. At 75 mph, this bike is in its element. Everything is  just about perfect here except for the odd bit of buffeting from the  relatively short windscreen. Harley has a taller windscreen than the  tinted one that was fitted on our particular bike and, though it may not  be as aesthetically striking, it would probably be the hot ticket for  sustained cruising at speeds over 70 mph. When the dash-mounted  speedometer clears 80 mph, the motor stays smooth and encourages even  more rapid progress, but the buffeting from the rushing wind made riders  over six feet tall feel like they were doing a headstand on top of an  unevenly loaded washing machine. 
 Surprisingly,  the buffeting lessens with a passenger aboard. What was miserable at 80  mph is now tolerable, and the Screamin' Eagle motor has 
no  problem pulling a passenger along. You hardly notice anybody is back  there. But the passengers were quick to notice their right calf toasting  and their butt getting sore. People complained when we did not include  this bike against the BMW K1200LT and the Honda GL 1500 Gold Wing but we  had good reason; the Harley is not nearly as comfortable or competent  as is either offering from competing manufacturers.
At speeds above 90 mph the Harley started to "float" on the road.  Where most ground-based vehicles are engineered with some degree of  downforce above a certain speed, the harder the pilot twisted the Road  Glide's throttle, the more the bike felt disconnected with the road's  surface. The motor would willingly pull beyond 110 mph, but those speeds  became far too sketchy for any sort of real rider comfort. Still, if  our touring plans were more localized and placed an emphasis on outlaw  style and a high "ooh - aaah" factor, the Eagle would be our choice. 
 The layout of the gauges is extremely tidy and features classy,  chrome-bezels. The radio features only a tape deck, but the audio  quality is on par with that of Honda's Gold wing, though only as loud as  the BMW K1200LT which is just a shade quieter than the Honda. We would  appreciate a CD-player option on this Road Glide, and the passenger  would certainly appreciate a set of speakers mounted someplace on the  back of the bike since, at speeds above 45 mph, the music becomes  indistinguishable from ambient noise. As for the mufflers themselves,  they're too quiet to make beautiful music on their own, yet just loud  enough to drown out the music. Harley should make them quieter or just  ditch the stereo and give us something that sounds like the Screamin'  Eagle moniker would suggest. 
  
Harleys are about emotion, and not rational thought processes. Sure,  there's resale value, but we have a grandfather clock with good resale  value. So what? Harleys are about the feeling you get when riding one.  They're about pulling into a parking lot and being on the 
 receiving end of admiring glances. This bike will definately garner  its fair share of glances and comments even if they're not all positive.  The motor is not modified to suit the faint of heart or weak of spirit.  Obviously, neither is the paint job.
 Harleys  are still about style first and performance second. And while this bike  is no slouch in the style department, its Screamin' Eagle upgrades  bring the performance closer to where they belong, though still fall a  little short of expectations. But if a brash, in-your-face attention  grabber is what you seek, then this Screamin' Eagle is just what you're  looking for and you can put your brain back in now and enjoy the ride. 
 
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