Is there a cruiser that can handle a 540lb man who's looking to learn how to ride??
Just a comment. Yesterday while at my local MVD office I watched a woman flunk her riding test for her MC license the 2nd time. The course here in AZ at least is not really set up for lager bikes.Any of the big cruisers from victory, Indian, Harley, Yamaha, etc will carry your weight, if you have any doubts see how many of them with 300+ pound guys with 250+ pound wives on the back you see riding around the country with saddle bags packed with 100 pounds of essential junk. Keep the tires inflated to max pressure and they will be fine.
The problem will be learning to ride on a big, heavy bike like that, they can be a handful until your used to handling the weight and inertia. Not sure what the solution is, a small learning bike will struggle with your weight.
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Best advice yet. Thanks!!!Looks like the Harley Trike might fill the bill.
Here's some info that shows GWVR of the FLRT Freewheeler as 1700lbs over a dry weight of of 1085 lbs:
2020 Harley-Davidson Freewheelerยฎ FLRT - L5VIN296230 - Riding High Harley-Davidsonยฎ
But, I wouldn't personally go that direction, because the leaning in the corners, and all the 3 dimensional freedom of movement is, for me, the most enjoyable part of riding.
Personally, If I was a XL sized individual, I'd get myself a 2nd hand cruiser bike, like that C50 805cc you mentioned, or a Yamaha VStar 1100cc, or a Honda Shadow 1100cc, with some decent power, good brake reviews, and a nice low seat that I could easily get a leg over. I'd negotiate tough on a machine that was in need of new tires, and I'd use the money I saved to get it set up with rubber with high load rating, and some higher capacity rear shocks and some stiffer fork springs.
I'm not recommending it, but there's a thing called "going darkside", where you put a car tire on the rear wheel. Usually folks do this to get vastly better tread life, but it will generally also result in higher tire load rating. The rear tire carries the bulk of the weight during normal riding, but a lot of load transfers to the front during braking.
If I ended up over the gross load rating by 100 lbs, that would be my business. As Mike pointed out, there's lots of guys out there bending the rules. Smoky isn't out there waving bikers over onto the truck scales. Even if worse comes to worse, if you can point to a list of things you did and a stack of receipts spent pursuing safety, so much the better.
The nice thing about riding vs. driving is that it does burn a few extra calories. With this concept in mind, the sooner you start, the better.
What about a 2005 Victory Kingpin.Sorry, the forum did not post it the way I wrote it.
Just because it is no longer in production doesnโt automatically make it not a good bike. It is a very good bike and will be with us for many years. It just isnโt factory backed any longer. I would not be afraid to own one myself.why is your recommendation a motorcycle that is no longer in production?