I'm not getting any younger, and I seriously enjoy riding my Skorpion ................... but, despite Bill's excellent advice on riding position and balance, I just can't ride for any distance in that racing crouch any more.
So I've modified the bike ....................
Apart from respraying the bike in black, I've fitted 8" raised bars (and played with the fork height to get neutral steering - I'm too old for that twitchy, tucked-in, lightning-quick steering now.....) and I also welded up a set of footrest extensions to bring my feet further forward by about 7" - and the difference is surprising. The bike's lost much of its racing 'feel' and is much more relaxed on the road - bends are now leisurely, sweeping affairs rather than the "set it up and blast through" that the Skorp excels at yet it's still that big single with its bellow and grunt. In a straight line it tracks dead stable, yet can be swung into a bend with just a gentle nudge on those big bars. I'm liking it - and so's my geriatric spine and hips.
For the purists who think I ought to be dragged out and impaled on a rusty kickstart for doing this to a Skorp' - I've designed all the mods so that everything's reversible with nothing more than a socket set.
The question I have is this: Given that none of the mods I've made will affect the bike's performance, do they constitute as "Modifications" for insurance purposes?
The reason I ask is that, in the UK at least, Insurance call centres are usually manned by unimaginative chimps that can only press buttons and read from a script. So, if they ask you, "Is the bike modified?" and you're silly enough to say "Yes!" then, before you can say "But I've only put new footrest rubber on it!", your premium's gone up by 400% and the chimp's marked you down on the database as a serial maniac.
What ISN'T a modification might be another way of looking at it. For example, if I fit a new gearlever from an XT, is this a mod and do I declare it? If I put a different seat on the bike, is this a mod and should I tell my insurance company, knowing that anything even faintly off-piste might cost me ££££?
Where does it start and stop - and what's the best way to avoid getting hammered simply because I want to ride in comfort?