Find a trike builder near you. I Googled 5 in WV. Some builders are very fast. I have heard of a week or two after they get the kit in hand. Buy Champion and do it yourself.
I have 2009 road glide and was looking at RS for either conversion kit or should I just keep looking for a RoadGlide already to go that has a few miles on it. I know what my bike is worth and I see a few Ultras out there in excess of what a complete bike would be. I just do not have anyone near me. so another expense is travel to have kit installed. and the wait. I'm looking for direction but might not like what I hear but I just sold my side car and I want a trike.
Anyone near WV want to chime and get together so I can see the difference everyone is talking about.
Thanks in advance
Chuck
Find a trike builder near you. I Googled 5 in WV. Some builders are very fast. I have heard of a week or two after they get the kit in hand. Buy Champion and do it yourself.
Ridin' three and free. Ain't never goin' back
2003 1800 Gold Wing Trike w/Roadsmith kit. Northeast Region Trike Riders on F B.
My dealer in Bowling Green Ky says it will take 3 days to install my Hannigan kit with independent rear suspension. After looking at several kits and touring the plant I chose the Hannigan Transformer kit for the looks, independent suspension, and large trunk.
I'd do some homework. Calculate the cost of performance up grade on your '09, big bore, adding a reverse, triple tree and such. Then go out to KBB, CycleTrader and NADA and compute values, retail, wholesale and trade, from '09 to date. Then add in the $15,000.00 base price for the IRS rearend "not installed".
I had a 2010 loaded Ultra and figured all this out. Would still have a '10 Ultra where in I could buy a new '13 TG for just about the same $$$$ and not take the big depreciation hits on a conversion down the road.
8~\o
"Anybody can become an American but ya have to be born a TEXAN"
"Ya know I haven't been everywhere but it's on my bucket list"
You could also consider a California Sidecar conversion and have the factory do the conversion for you. I have one and love it (love my Hannigan too). I mention CSC because they are in Arrington, VA, which appears to be only 240 miles from you.
When I bought my last Deer Rifle I decided I wanted something that would last for the rest of my Life. Something that would be "bullet-proof" (pardon the pun). Something that was awesome visually. Something that was made with the best materials and Processes as well. Something that stood the best chances of providing years of service with little or no "headaches or heartbreaks". Something I would be happy with and not settle so that it would be One and Done and be all I ever wanted now and stand the test of time too...
I figured I could buy a Savage for around $350. A Rem 700ADL for about $400
It would take somewhere around $800+ to get a Browning A-Bolt in the same caliber.
Sure the Savage (or Rem 700 ADL) was cheaper. Sure lots of them were out there. Sure it would kill a Deer.
Sure it would "Do"...
Given the Criteria, Desires, Needs, and Goals,,,, No Brainer-Bought a Browning.
You can get a lot of things that will "Do". Took that path many times myself. In hindsight and retrospect, wasted a lot of "cheaper" money and priceless time with things that "will do". Wish could go back and do most of them over.
All the best in your decision. All the best with what that choice brings as well
If it were me and I was happy with the bike I had, I'd go conversion. There has to be dealers within a reasonable distance from you. You get a Triglide and you have solid axle and for me anyway, that would be a deal breaker. Get something already converted and you have practically no idea of how it was treated by it's former owner, etc. There are lots of really quality conversion kits available and there are probably some reasonably close to you. My conversion took 5 weeks and part of that was because I told the installer I was in no hurry for it. It was late November in Ohio, so I had till spring to get it back before I would have been itchy for it.
Looked at new TriGlides without Independent suspension last year, 38K+, no I wasn't going to do that, so I converted my '06 Stratoliner 1900 (which I loved) with a CSC trike kit, independent suspension (handles and rides better than solid axels, in my opinion), electric reverse, added a CSC tour box and custom color match for $15K out the door from Mitchell Motorsports Trikes in Kyle, Texas. I've put 11,000 miles on it so far, no problems, it looks pretty good and I dearly love riding it! Even the State of Texas loves it (I have a title and insurance!). Do your research, then make your decision, you will be pleased and happy with your choice!
O J Miles - now riding "Lucille", a 2017 Spyder F3-Ltd. Roadster.
When 2 wheels aren't enough and 4 are too many.
Ahhhh, a hot cup of coffee and a good cigar, after a good ride.......
Looked into this a few years ago. Using my bike and doing the work myself for me it was not worth it. When you figure what my bike was worth, cost of the engine upgrades, rake trees, reverse, kit, paint and the things I forgot it came out with in a few thousand dollars different than a new one. Now I have a bike that is a few years old and a conversion resale was questionable plus no warranty. For me it was worth it to spend the extra money to buy new. What worked for me may not work for you but spend time checking the total cost completely done against trading yours for new.
I could have traded my Ultra Classic in for a triglide for less than I am spending to have my Transformer kit installed along with a few other upgrades. I would rather have the independent suspension, larger trunk, better appearance, and I am going with the mechanical reverse. Plus the taxes on my bike will still be the same. I would not trade my trike for a new TG. I bought my Ultra new and know how it has been treated and cared for.
I have a 2004 BMW K1200LT in the garage. I've owned it since new, and I dearly love the bike, but I have one artificial knee and my Doc tells me that the other one may need replacement soon.
At over 900 pounds with a full gas tank, My Beemer is just too much bike for me to ride anymore. I considered a Hannigan trike conversion, but the kit and suspension mods cost almost as much as the bike did new, and the resale value is just not there. That's why I finally decided to go with a new Harley TriGlide Ultra.
I'm hoping to take delivery on my new trike this afternoon, and the wife and I are already planning some long weekend rides for the summer around the Pacific Northwest. If you get up to Montana, Washington, Idaho or Oregon, we'll see you on the road!
JetDoc
2015 TriGlide Ultra, Black Magic
Touring America on 2, 4, 6 and 18 wheels since 1963. Now on three wheels too!
I doesn't matter how you get to 3, as long as you get there!! You will love it as you get to know it and ride it!
O J Miles - now riding "Lucille", a 2017 Spyder F3-Ltd. Roadster.
When 2 wheels aren't enough and 4 are too many.
Ahhhh, a hot cup of coffee and a good cigar, after a good ride.......
CONGRATS, The BMW is a great bike. As a trike it might have been a little under powered especially 2 up. You will love your Harley just give yourself time to get to know a trike. Remember it steers like a ATV or a Snowmobile even a little like a jet ski. Next remember it is wider in back especially getting gas. Enjoy
Stallion #406 // 2013 Tri-Glide
I suggest riding a triglide then take a ride on other trikes that were converted. You will know what to do after you do that, most likely.
I like the triglide's a lot.
The conversions are different than a HD built one. Not saying it is bad mind you.
Sometimes we have to spend that little extra to get what you really want.
The HD is a good format as long as you spend the extra. I have a mystery kit on a super glide, it is a drag bike. Plenty of oomph. I lost 15% of power when I went to a trike. It still had over 100 hp/tq triked. It was a over kill but it sure made it a lot of fun.
Going to a 107 big bore kit, cams, head work for tq. then adding reverse can raise the build price, then you may need to regear to help the power to do what it is able to do without strain.
I bought one out right because of the price. I sill think I should have waited and had my CVO triked. Don't get me wrong we love the trike but my CVO is by far the best bike I have had in the 50 years of riding.
http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c5...an_cross_f.jpg
20015 freewheeler
2005 113 pro twin super glide
2010 ss106 wide glide
2004 1800 VTX custom
2012 GW RS
Yes a triked CVO would be a GREAT machine. I went the other route. I took my TRi and made what I thought HD would do to make it a CVO except the paint. All Blacked out a 110 engine, Alot of extras Street Glide look in front. Custom Wheels 21 in front 18 in rear. Now I am putting the TTS 110 cams in it. Have fun and ride safe.
Stallion #406 // 2013 Tri-Glide
My experience with joining the 3 wheel community was the time it took for the installer to get the kit delivered. It took the better part of 6 weeks and that was the longest time involved.
If you want a top-notch conversion with IRS,Hannigan Motorsports in Kentucky offers you the option of a turn-key conversion in their factory. Hannigan's customer service is probably the best in the industry and their workmanship is top of the line,too.