Stolen Bike!
#3
Here are a few photo's of it on Facebook. I'm located here just South of Kansas City, Kansas. Yeah I'm going to be all over CL and eBay to find parts.
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pi...d&id=729882693
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pi...5&id=729882693
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pi...d&id=729882693
http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?pi...5&id=729882693
#6
Yeah it had aftermarket eBay with LED blinker mirrors. It also had over 40k on the clock. I doubt It'll ever be found in one piece. Just keep a look out for the parts.
#7
That totally sucks. You're the 2nd one this week, I believe. The only thing worse than hearing about a crash, without injury, is a stolen vehicle. I've been there too.
How did it happen? Where was it parked?
How did it happen? Where was it parked?
Last edited by VTRsurfer; 11-26-2010 at 06:01 PM.
#9
I parked it in my covered car port sideways and parked my car in front of it. The worst part was I only had liability insurance.
#10
So of course that sucks. As I always do I want to ask (for everyone's knowledge) was the bike covered? Disc locked? chained? Alarmed? I figure the more everyone knows the more alert we will all be. I have had 2 bikes stolen with only liability & know how it feels.
#11
When I had only a carport, I used a super heavy duty chain lock to a steel post plus a Kryptonite U-lock through the swing arm, and I locked the forks. And even then someone stole my cover once. So I started locking the cover as well. Bastards!
A friend of mine who was a parts manager at a Honda dealer sold a Harley owner a super heavy duty chain and lock back in the early '70s. He told the guy that the chain couldn't be cut. The guy came back 2 weeks later and said someone cut the telephone pole his bike was chained to and stole his Harley.
The point is that if someone wants it bad enough, they will take it. But every safeguard you take makes it that much harder.
I had full coverage on my new Isuzu Trooper that was stolen in 1990, but that doesn't make me feel any less violated.
A friend of mine who was a parts manager at a Honda dealer sold a Harley owner a super heavy duty chain and lock back in the early '70s. He told the guy that the chain couldn't be cut. The guy came back 2 weeks later and said someone cut the telephone pole his bike was chained to and stole his Harley.
The point is that if someone wants it bad enough, they will take it. But every safeguard you take makes it that much harder.
I had full coverage on my new Isuzu Trooper that was stolen in 1990, but that doesn't make me feel any less violated.
#13
I also have no collision, just liability, but still have fire and theft, I think.
You wouldn't think bike thieves would choose an such an unusual bike.
You wouldn't think bike thieves would choose an such an unusual bike.
Last edited by nath981; 11-26-2010 at 10:36 PM.
#14
No on everything. I had just pulled the battery and put it on the trickle charger. Later this weekend or next I was going to load it up and store it in my girlfriends parents garage.
#15
#16
#17
The situation sucks. This statement made me laugh big time tho! I am just picturing a couple of boners taking apart the bike and holding up your parts to pictures of stock ones saying to each other, "wtf, man, this isn't right"
#18
Comprehensive Insurance
This auto insurance coverage helps pay for loss of or damage to an insured vehicle, not caused by a collision or vehicle rollover.
Examples of this type of damage or loss include:
Fire
Wind
Hail
Flood
Vandalism
Theft
Hitting an animal
A deductible may apply.
#19
The guy he sold it to was a '70s biker...a little different from your typical poser Harley rider today. That's what the guy told him. But of course the pole might have been somewhat smaller than a telephone pole, and he just didn't want to look like a dumb *** for chaining his Harley to a 4" fence post.
#21
Here in Hawaii there are mopeds (50cc, 5 or less hp) everywhere and moped thefts are very common. I heard a story where the stolen bike was in crappy shape; just barely running. When it was recovered a few months later by the cops, the thief had rebuilt the engine, repaired the ignition, and put newer bodywork on it. The original owner was delighted...
#24
Glad it was recovered..hope you get it back in good shape without any problems..Hopefully a lesson learned and you will step up your security....I sometimes worry about the cheesy lock holding my flimsy shed doors on, but it's out of sight...
#25
Yeah I was really relying on security through obscurity.
#26
That's great news! Hope you get lucky with the condition you get it back in. If not, then hopefully you find blood inside the fairings from the guy who stole it and crashed it like my buddy did when he recovered his stolen zx7.
#28
I'll bet that's disturbingly satisfying.
#29
A woman I knew back in the mid '80s had her 1 year old Jeep Cherokee stolen by, as it turned out, some high school kids. It was recovered after it was driven over the side on Ortega Highway.
Her only comment was, "The little bastards didn't even have enough class to total it".
Glad you got your bike back!
Her only comment was, "The little bastards didn't even have enough class to total it".
Glad you got your bike back!