|
Make Model |
Harley
Davidson
FLHS 1340 Electra Glide Sport |
|
Year |
1982 |
|
Engine |
Air cooled, four stroke, 45° V-Twin, OHV, 2
valves per cylinder. |
|
Capacity |
1337 |
|
Bore x Stroke |
88.8 x 108.0 mm |
|
Compression Ratio |
8.5:1 |
|
Induction |
|
|
Ignition /
Starting |
- / electric |
|
Max Power |
65 hp @ 5000 rpm |
|
Max Torque |
69 ft-lb @ 3000 rpm |
|
Transmission /
Drive |
5 Speed / Belt |
|
Front Suspension |
|
|
Rear Suspension |
|
|
Front Brakes |
2x discs |
|
Rear Brakes |
Single disc |
|
Front Tyre |
MT90-16T |
|
Rear Tyre |
MT90-16 |
|
Dry-Weight |
343 kg |
|
Fuel Capacity |
19 Litres |
A couple of things struck me as I
sat at traffic lights alongside Tiny’s FLHS en route to the location chosen
for a photo shoot. The first was the tickover: a lazy off-beat lolloping
heartbeat which, even through a pair of reasonably well-muffled silencers,
drowned out any hint of engine or exhaust noise from the stock Road King I was
piloting. The second was the size: while Tiny’s nickname is applied with an
element of sarcasm, his bike could adopt the same moniker without any
suggestion of irony, and I was very much aware that I was riding a
significantly bigger machine. And it wasn’t just the seat height: the tank
mounted dash sat inches higher than its forebear’s.
I was reminded of the day I took
my own shovelhead Electra round to see a mate of mine, Dave the Wing - and
there are no prizes for guessing how he came by that appellation. Having never
put the two bikes side-by-side before, we were amazed at just how small the
Harley looked alongside the bike that was considered to be its nemesis.
Chatting to Tiny later he concurred and had recently had a similar
conversation with an old friend, both remarking that it wasn’t too many years
ago that an Electra Glide was considered a giant among giants, but then
remembered also that a Bonneville was often regarded as being too big. If
you’ve still got them, dig out your old copies of “Motorcycle Scooter and
Three-Wheeler Mechanics” and chortle as you read of how big and unwieldy the
later six-fifty British twins were considered to be.
It could be argued that a 1981
motorcycle is too new to be a classic, but it is fair to say that the bike was
already getting on for being a classic as it rolled off the production line.
Except for an overbore to meet power expectations when strangled by emissions
laws, and a charging system, it wasn’t massively different to the first
Shovelhead Electra Glide in 1966, and that wasn’t a million miles away from
the first Duo Glide of ’58, and there are very few who would instantly pick up
on the differences and actually care about them: and they’re still hanging up
their anoraks so we can dismiss them while they’re not listening.
Checking out older bikes gives
you the opportunity to realise how much things have changed over time and it
is quickly apparent, if you take the time to look, just how many old Harleys
are actually on the road. Sure there are museum pieces, and one or two bikes
that seldom come out from under dust sheets, but for every one of those
pristine, restored and cherished models, there’s half a dozen that have, like
many of us, steadfastly refused to grow old gracefully. Still keen to blow the
cobwebs away, and often with the volume control set a little loud for their
peers, or even the next generation, but stuff them: life’s too short to live
it from the sidelines.
That is very much the case with
this FLHS. You’ll like the next bit, because it scuppers any chance of making
sense of Harley model designations - and hang on a second while I go and get
my own anorak back.
The FLHS models started out as an
“Electra Glide Sport” when first shown as a first limited-edition undressed
dresser in 1977, was relaunched as a “Sport Electra Glide” when reintroduced
in 1981, when it took a lighter exhaust system and Wide Glide controls, before
becoming a Sport Glide II in 1982 when it was laden with unguarded panniers
and the bigger seat from the Glide. Thankfully it is a lot better looking than
either the next Electra Glide Sport in 1987 with the Tour Glide’s dash but not
its fairing to hide it from view, or the next Sport Glide, the FXRT, which
involved bolting a big and clever, but not very pretty barn door to the front
of an FXR. Why do I know all this? We’ll come to that in a moment.
In standard trim, both the
Electra Glide Sport and Sport Electra Glide were lightened 4-speed Electra
Glides with only a change of engine and exhaust to separate them from each
other, and a complete removal of any trace of a luggage system to separate
them from the Electra Glides themselves, which were now fully dressed as
standard. With the removal of the bags, gone also were the excesses of pannier
guard rails, front and rear bumpers, and the lighting bar that mounted the
spots and the underslung indicators, which were obliged to cling to the ’bars
instead. Missing, too, was the four-channel rack that held the Tour-Pak, the
batwing screen and the crash-bars. Additions? A bucket-load of cool? If I
could find a full specification I’d let you know how much weight that saved,
but suffice to say it could have been more if they’d put smaller mudguards on,
and removed the panniers, but they were already doing that sort of stuff with
the FXs anyway, and anyway, it would hardly have been a Glide then, would it?
Well, perhaps a Wide Glide ... ah!
Walking away from the limited
edition 1200cc FLHS momentarily, the Sport Electra Glide and Sport Glide II,
with their eighty-cube Shovelhead motors, are between a rock and a hard place
in most people’s minds, as indeed are most 1340 Shovels. Purists wax lyrical
about the 1200cc motor’s classic long-stroke dimensions, while lovers of the
1340cc won’t look back beyond the Evo, but to dismiss the big-bore iron-barrelled,
alloy headed shovel is to fall into the trap of dismissing all early motors as
too old-fashioned, too unreliable or just plain impractical, and they are none
of those things unless badly put together or poorly maintained. Any engine is
only as good as the last person to lay spanners on it, and late Shovels are
all tarred with the same brush: condemned for being assembled on an AMF
production line, and with concerns about quality control ringing alarm bells
at the back of your mind. There is a grain of truth in those quality control
issues, but to nowhere near the extent that is popularly believed. They hark
back to a time when the press, clearly peeved that a manufacturer might
question what they were dishing out as the truth was gunning for the Motor
Company in the same way that they now baying for Buell blood - by the early
eighties they were extolling the virtues of GPzs, GSXs, FJs and there must
have been a pre Fireblade Honda that got them all excited if I could remember,
or be bothered to look it up, so it doesn’t take much imagination to guess at
their reaction to an old-fashioned, long-stroke V-twin. It doesn’t take much
more thought to realise that it only takes a friend of a friend’s experience
backed up by an unchallenged, generally hostile press to create a scare that
can last for generations.
Still, that’s their problem. It’s
their loss, and just following Tiny I was made all too aware how much the
character of the motor has changed over the twenty-plus years between his
Sport and the 2003 Anniversary test bike. The bottom end stomp of the older
motor was evident, almost tangible through its earthy exhaust note, and
considerably different to the revvier Twin Cam lump beneath me. I could hear
the motor take the strain under acceleration from low, low revs; almost hear
the torque as the already deep note dropped a couple of octaves further
without a hint of harshness. If I’d tried the same trick on the 88 it would
have stalled, but then you wouldn’t attempt it because it isn’t that kind of
motor anymore. Similarly if I’d tried to set the tick-over to match the
Shovel: not necessarily a bad thing, just different.
The original FLHS models weren’t
especially successful, and each survived a single season with modest
production runs of 535, 914 and 1,062 respectively, and it isn’t hard to see
why. It’s got nothing to do with how good bike a bike it is, and everything to
do with it being an Electra Glide with some bits unbolted. No modifications,
no one-off specific parts, just some bits unbolted and removed. Maybe a
waterslide transfer, but so what? In fact, with a modicum of imagination,
dealers could supply an FLHS without Harley’s sanction, just by removing the
aforementioned items which could then be sold on to another customer - or
quite probably the owner of the stripped down model wanting to make the bike
more flexible, or better suited to the long haul. Everyone a winner. But just
as a dealer could see that, so too could your average Electra Glide owner.
Things were a good deal simpler
then, and not least because the whole instrument panel was contained in the
tank-top dash, and the fairing was only secured by the four screws that held
the headlamp nacelle on. It also helped that the fairing contained nothing but
an echo chamber for the mechanical rustlings of the iron and aluminium motor,
so its removal and refitting was a simple affair. Try removing that on a
modern Glide and you’ve got to find a new home for the speedo, tacho and any
other dials you want to retain, which might involve a Road King’s tank to
house at least the most important one - and that’s before you attempt to get
the composite screen off, and retro-fit the not-inexpensive headlamp nacelle
that was the reason for wanting to make the change in the first place.
On the ’82 Sport Glide II there’s
not many more than twenty-one nuts and bolts that need to be undone and
refastened, by my reckoning, to arrive at the bike in the press shot from the
full dresser of the time. Okay, and the fitting of the indicators off an FX.
If you’d been a buyer the previous year, you’d have had a few more bits to
remove and a few chunks of Wide Glide to bolt on - notably the footrests and
controls, and the staggered dual mufflers, and an FX seat to keep things low -
to reproduce the 1981 offering.
It is that ’81 offering that
we’re looking at here, one of those 914 bikes, and while it might look like an
owner’s handiwork there is a large amount of Motor Company input. I have to
say it confused the hell out of me as I’d been looking at the Sport Glide II
press shot, but when I announced cheerfully to Tiny that he had a Sport Glide
and showed him that picture, he told me it couldn’t have been. He’d spoken to
people at the time he bought the bike, and there was an absolute confidence
that the Wide Glide footrests were stock, and that he didn’t think it had
arrived with bags. I postulated that the aftermarket suppliers had nowhere
near the levels of sophistication that they exhibit today, and that an
enterprising early owner had fitted the bits that fitted well, and looked good
so had picked out the FXWG items, but he was having none of it so I looked a
little deeper ... and found it. Against all odds, reason or common sense,
there were two bikes on consecutive years with the same model ID but different
names, and markedly different treatment. What price assumption?
Tiny has had this particular
Sport Electra Glide for 5 years having decided that he really wanted a shovel,
for its lines as much as its character - and if you look at a Shovel motor
alongside an Evo, you’ll know what he means. Geoff at Cycle Enterprises, who
knew and had serviced the bike some years before, put him onto it and the deal
was struck but it had been standing for a few years and wasn’t in the
condition you see it here. No matter, because with the flexibility offered by
the 4-speeds, Tiny didn’t run it looking like this for the first three years
anyway. In fact, when I pulled up at SHD in Stoke for the first time a couple
of years ago it was scheduled to go into the workshop, when Steve, his
business partner, had a quiet moment, to replace the nineteen-inch front
wheel, FX style rear mudguard and Bates headlamp with the contents of a box of
bits and a recently repainted set of dresser mudguards. That box contained the
nacelle that had always been missing, together with the fork shrouds, and the
mudguards had been subjected to a good case of looking at. The inevitable
transformation was almost the antithesis of a traditional custom build: off
with the small lightweight sporty bits, and on with the sort of big, practical
mudguards that actually keep the road dirt off you: the sort of stuff your
mother would approve of. Well, my mum would, but then my mum liked my Electra.
In the name of doing things his
way, Tiny binned the SU carb that was resident when he picked the bike up and
slapped on an S&S which he is more comfortable with, and when the turnout
pipes finally self-destructed he replaced them with taper mufflers on
staggered headers, without realising he was actually taking it closer back to
its original form. Other slight discrepancies are the kicker - it might have
taken the controls from the Wide Glide, but it didn’t go so far as to inherit
that model’s kickstart - and the four-pot calliper gripping a drilled disk.
The kicker is staying, but the jury is out at the moment regarding the
calliper: Tiny still has the banana calliper in the shed, and a part of him is
tempted to take that back to standard - he even has the hydraulic hose on a
shelf in the shop for that purpose - but another part appreciates the improved
braking at the expense of compromising the aesthetics.
The resulting bike has a shape
similar to a Fat Boy, and there is no coincidence that one of Tiny’s other
bikes has been a blacked out FLSTF with an FLH nacelle fitted.
For my part, I find it
astonishing how quickly you can arrive at a low-slung custom with so much
stock sheet metal, and so many bits of the original bike in situ. It is
testament to the flexibility of the
4-speed frame that the entire FX
range was based upon it, from the first Super Glides through Low Riders, Fat
Bobs to the Wide Glide and Sturgis, and there is some justice that even in its
heavyweight form, it played host to the world’s forgotten factory custom. It
was probably that more than anything else that lead to the reintroduction of
the basic shape in 1991 with the Dyna Sturgis, but as far as modifying tourers
goes, the 4-speed was the last opportunity to really do it for yourself. FLHs
ran alongside the FLT chassis that would evolve into the FLHT frame, host all
of the later heavyweights and be far less appropriate for street customs. It
wasn’t all bad though, because the Softails took the mantle of the
custom-builders’ favourite, and the Dyna Glides bolstered the choice of shape
and styles a few years later. What I want to know, is when are Harley-Davidson
going to make a Dyna version of this?
Source
American-v.co.uk