Have you had your fill of virtually everything  under the sun being called "old school" (or old skool, oldschool and  oldskool; take your pick)? I know I have. What was once a genuine urban  turn of phrase suddenly finds its way into everyday language, and its  trendy tone is spewed casually from grade schoolers to grannies. Thanks  for nothing, mindless advertising agencies!  Now that you know how I feel about that, let me share a great piece  of slogan: "An iron fist in a soft-bellied world." Huzzah! Bring that  copywriter a beer - a Harley-branded beer.
  Clearly meant to get your attention and anchor your emotions with  that zinger, Harley-Davidson wants to let you know that they've carved  out another bike from their 1,200cc Sporty platform, and slammed it with  tough looks and attitude. The XL1200N Sportster Nightster is low,  bobbed and blacked-out. With a gut full of torque, low seat-height,  minimalist features and subtle colors, this Harley really had me  thinking it was one that I would gladly have in my garage. It even  turned the head of a non-biker female friend.
Clearly meant to get your attention and anchor your emotions with  that zinger, Harley-Davidson wants to let you know that they've carved  out another bike from their 1,200cc Sporty platform, and slammed it with  tough looks and attitude. The XL1200N Sportster Nightster is low,  bobbed and blacked-out. With a gut full of torque, low seat-height,  minimalist features and subtle colors, this Harley really had me  thinking it was one that I would gladly have in my garage. It even  turned the head of a non-biker female friend.
 

The Nightster has the same 73 cubic-inch, rubber-mounted,  fuel-injected, air-cooled Evolution five-speed Twin with a compression  ratio of 9.7 and churning out a claimed pavement-ripping 79 ft-lbs. of  torque that all the other 1200 Sporties have. But the mill in this bike  comes in a "rawboned finish." Rawboned? Just know that it (like most  other components on the bike) is black. That black simplicity finds its  way across much of the rest of the bike. The low-rise bars, clutch and  brake levers, headlight housing, speedometer, mirrors, turn/stop lights,  steel-spoked wheels, and drilled-out belt-drive guard all come in a  slick black finish. Heck, even the front fender clamps are black.
 The Nightster sets itself apart stylistically and functionally from the other Sportsters beyond all that black. 
About the only thing that hearkens to chrome cruiser traditions is  the staggered exhaust with slash-cut mufflers. Slowing the Nightster is  the job of a single disc brake up front. Only one rotor means you can  see the jewel-like pattern that the spoke heads create in the  wide-flange black hub of the 19-inch front wheel. The rear is a 16-inch  spoked job that matches up perfectly with to the front. Gone is the  taillight. No, really, there's no taillight. However, there are two red  LED turn signals that pull double duty as indicators, and (have you  guessed it?) brake light. It just plain looks cool. Both fenders are  chopped to reveal more rubber with the front looking very flat track-ish  in profile. In an effort to go a little retro, fork gaiters cover up  the fork stanchions. A bobber-inspired side-mount license plate not only  cleans up the look of the rear fender, it also has a pivoting mechanism  that allows the plate to be turned from its rear-facing position to one  90 degrees rotated, facing outward to the side. (Hmm, wouldn't that  make it difficult to see by, say, the police or a toll-booth camera... -  Ed.)
 
A number of paint options are available. The black on black looks  particularly menacing, but our test unit came in two-tone Suede Blue  Pearl and Vivid Black. That color combo may not strike fear in the  hearts of hardened criminals or card-carrying members of the N.O.W., but  once I saw it up close I was surprised at just how well the two colors  went together. It looks great and takes nothing from the devil-may-care  attitude the overall theme hopes to inspire.
 
After my eyes finished glazing over with desire to ride it, I rode  it. When I sat on the firm solo saddle I discovered yet another  departure from all other 1200 Sportsters: The Nightster has the lowest  seat height at a scant 26.3 inches. That certainly would have made the  bike all the more appealing to my aforementioned lady friend. What's  more, the whole ergo package welcomes the short of stature; my  five-foot, eight-inch frame was just shy of feeling cramped. From the  seat to the bars to the pegs, it is all a little stuffy. I couldn't help  but think that if I were a few inches taller I might have to  reluctantly pass on a purchase of this black beauty.
 It's hard not to be enthused about riding such a good looking, minimalist machine. 
Once the fuel-injected powerplant thundered to life, I forgot for a  moment about the cramped cockpit and started blipping the throttle.  Intoxicated with a sense of self-entitled badass-ness, I twisted the  throttle time and again to hear the exhaust and feel the torque reaction  of the engine. Every stoplight brought another opportunity.
 
All that cage-annoying throttle pumping could only lead to one thing:  Pull in the light clutch (reduced in effort on all '07 Sportsters),  nudge the clean-shifting tranny into first, keep the revs  up...red...green...go! Slam the throttle open, dump the clutch and hold  on as the Torquinator lays down a long blackie worthy of bikes with much  more horsepower.
 
Ride the bike long enough to build some heat in the rear tire and you  can get a respectable-for-a-cruiser wheelie out of the Nightster from a  dead stop. This ridiculous fun only serves as more fuel for the type of  riding this bike seemed to beg from me. I couldn't help but keep the  throttle turned up, the trouble-free fueling blasting me through traffic  making me an easy target for law enforcement.
 After I left the confines of the city behind via the sprawling L.A.  freeway system, I quickly discovered that the Nightster is no distance  machine. In keeping with the bobber theme, the bike has traditional twin  coil-over shocks that are adjustable only for preload. The ride is  tolerable, but the pitiful 2.4 inches of rear suspension travel will  leave your posterior begging for more stops along the way.
 
Searching out one of my favorite canyon roads I was reminded of one  more key area where the XL1200N differs: ground clearance. With a mere  3.9 inches of clearance, hard parts will suffer. Thankfully the footpegs  are graced with extra-long feelers. The fireworks display trailing  behind is impressive, or so I'm told.
 I suspected (before scrutinizing the spec chart) that perhaps this  Sportster had a more aggressive rake and trail combo or shorter  wheelbase than its brothers. Not so. In fact, at 60 inches, the  wheelbase is a fraction of an inch longer than a number of the other  XL1200 models.
 
What I did learn was that Mr. Nightster requires minimal effort to turn. How so with a longer wheelbase?
  
Part of the reason is that this price-conscious Harley weighs  substantially less than the other 1200 Sporties. At 545 pounds dry  (claimed) it bests the Roadster model by a full 20 pounds, according to  Harley-supplied numbers. This spec sheet factoid corroborated what my  senses were telling me about the Nightster's handling in the twists and  turns.
  The single front disc brake, as opposed to the dual rotors on the 1200R, reduces rotational mass for lighter steering.
 Eventually I had to give up on my aches-and-pains-be-damned mentality  as the tight ergos had my knees aching. It was time to reel in my  enthusiasm for the day. It's hard not to be enthused about riding such a  good looking, minimalist machine. If you're a woman, (this isn't  sexist, many women are drawn to Sportsters), a newer rider, believe that  other bikes are just too big or are simply drawn to Harleys, the  Nightster might be the one for you. With an MSRP of $9,595.00 it's in  line with its teammates. Just keep the lean angles mellow, spend plenty  of time cruising the strips and ride off into the night(ster).
 
0 nhận xét:
Đăng nhận xét