Here at ExhaustNotes.us we’ve been discussing the possibility that we may have more motorcycles than anyone actually needs. Personally, I have more motorcycles than I can afford to insure. I can’t ride them legally so the bikes sit in my shed gathering dust. Berk, who has a much smaller shed, is taking aggressive action on the issue by selling off some unused bikes. It’s inspired me to do the same. But which bikes? How many motorcycles do I need? I don’t want to end up one of those hoarders who die leaving Meacham’s auction house to pawn my junk off to the other hoarders.
For the sake of argument lets say X equals the number of motorcycles that your ability and status in life can keep maintained and running. Besides remorseless economics and mechanical talent there are the bikes that have a sentimental meaning to you that goes beyond reason and harsh reality. We’ll call that value Y. For example, you may never get that Norton put back together but if the fact that it exists in your shed brings you happiness why am I judging?
If all we had to deal with was X and Y we could plot the number of owned motorcycles on a simple two-dimensional graph but life is not lived in two dimensions. Reality demands that we consider Z, with Z being the amount of space you have to store the motorcycles. If the value of Z, Y and X were infinite you could collect all the motorcycles. I mean all of them. No one else could own one because you would have the entire world’s output of motorcycles. The problem is X, Y and Z are never infinite; even if they were and you owned them all who would you ride with? Nobody.You’d be a lonely, bitter soul. By simple logic we have determined an upper limit on motorcycle ownership: all of them minus one for your riding buddy.
Since this is a motorcycle blog I will assume the readers like motorcycles. Hence, pandering to the mob dictates that one motorcycle is the lower limit on motorcycle ownership because a story on motorcycle ownership that didn’t involve motorcycle ownership cannot exist in the intellectual vacuum of the Internet.
There are a vast number of motorcycles between one and all of the motorcycles minus one. We can narrow the field a bit by eliminating BMW motorcycles as no one likes them anyway but that still leaves a lot of bikes. I think it’s better to start from the other end, the end that starts with one.
If you can only have one motorcycle (X, Y and Z= jack-all) then that one motorcycle better be an enduro-type. A combination dirt/street motorcycle is the one to have if you only have one. As X, Y and Z grow larger a street-specific motorcycle is handy for highway rides. That makes two bikes and I really feel two is the minimum number of motorcycles regardless of your situation. You’ll just have to put your nose to the grindstone and increase your X/Y/Z, Bubba.
If we break down street bikes into touring, sport, and vintage categories and dirt bikes into enduro, motocross and vintage you could make the argument that six motorcycles are the minimum amount required. You’ll also need a mini bike for bopping around your ranch and a lightweight moped for running down to the post office. This brings the total to eight motorcycles and I feel that eight motorcycles show a good level of commitment to the motorcycle pastime.
With eight motorcycles on site visitors to your home will rightly expect you to loan them a motorcycle and take them on a little tour of your surroundings. Don’t do it. Your bikes are your bikes and if your visitor crashes one it will poison the friendship. Better to own a loaner bike, one you don’t care about for those pesky hanger-onners. An extra copy of your loaner motorcycle will make visitor rides more fun as neither rider has the upper hand in equipment. So you’ll need ten motorcycles to adequately maintain friendships. A small price to pay in the grand scheme of things.
Once you’ve got ten motorcycles you may as well go ahead and get a couple nostalgic trinkets from your youth. Maybe a nice example of the first bike you ever owned or the motorcycle your ex-spouse made you get rid of because you had kids. Maybe it’s the bike your dear old dad owned or the model of motorcycle that decapitated a school chum. There are all manner of excellent reasons to own up to sixteen motorcycles.
Moving far from town and building a large shed to house all your motorcycles is a tell tale sign that you may be overdoing things a bit. Living on canned soup, scouring the Internet for motorcycles to buy is not the healthiest lifestyle but it’s not the food choices that get you in the end. Once you start building multilevel lofts to store motorcycles in inaccessible places you are one small earth tremor away from being buried alive by motorcycles.
There’s something about walking in a shed without having to turn sideways that appeals to me. Our economy is built on over consumption. I’m at eight, maybe nine motorcycles now and I’m feeling like I should get rid of a few. So how many motorcycles are too many? What is your comfort level?
Don’t do it, Joe!
I had maybe 30 at one time. Funny you mentioned Norton because I sold one couple months back because I never got around to doing it right . I think I am down to 5 . No 6. I am at the point where it’s harder to decide what’s next to go .
I did have 3 Vintsge BMWs. I want another . But a couple bikes need to go first .
I think 3 tunning and rideable and 1 project is a reasonable deal as I am closing in on 70yo,
The CORRECT number of motorcycles to own (C), where N equals the number presently owned:
C=N+1.
I recently purchased a 40 foot high cube container in order to move as many as possible of my bikes from the barns into better storage. I’m currently insulating the interior with bubble insulation to cut down on sweating when we get the days long periods of 100% humidity. Also to get some room in my shop so I can swing a cat. I’m planning on shelves above the bikes on one side , that’s why I sprang for the “High Cube” ‘s 9 & 1/2 foot height. Unfortunately 40 by 8 won’t hold them all , I’m afraid.
Swing a cat? By the tail?
I’m thinking of getting rid of a few bikes. I can’t ride them all. Godzilla, Zed and the Husky make the first cut.
I have two licensed motorcycles. I have always felt if you don’t ride it and only look at it.. buy a lamp. If you only going to look at it then why have it? Like having a beautiful woman and never going to bed with her. That just me, it’s a free country do what your pursuit of happiness wants.
Oh boy, I enjoyed that. Lol….after a recent motorcycle accident (apparently the guy in the Ford 150 didn’t think stop signs pertained to him) I sold my DR650, as I only ride it off road…and with a fractured hip, it’s going to be a while before I can ride off road again. And truth be told it will give me the opportunity to buy a Husky 701 that I have been secretly jealous of my friends owning. Janis Joplin’s “Oh lord won’t you buy me….” always came to mind when I rode with them.
So that leaves me with 6….I have indeed found “the bike that I had in my youth”…I have a BMW that I’m just finding out here nobody likes. 🙂 4 classic Suzukis (if there is such a thing) and a new GSX-S1000F that I just bought to take some miles off the BMW….yes I could sell the BMW…but what would my cousin from Ontario ride when he comes to visit?
Thanks again for your article…I have just discovered your blog and will now read further.
Cheers from Victoria BC
Trevor
I’ve got 6. I have the Enduro, and it’s vintage to boot so got that covered. I have the street bike, but it’s not currently titled. I have the loaner, it’s a Yamaha CH180 scooter, and literally, I do loan it out when we have someone missing a bike, for whatever reason. I have the “restoration bike” that’s on hold due to COVID (you know, job losses in the family, high rent). I have the bike I rode when I was 11, my brother’s YZ400, but, it just sits and looks nice. Then I have the pit bike, for like you said, running around the property. Looks like I need 4 more, right? For adequate loaner availability, and some more of those vintage enduros.
Joe, whats the other bikes you have?
Sign the tanks,
take then to Mecan’s Auction,
park them next to one of Sir Stevie McQueen’s bikes,
Buy lots of rounds of beverages for the Oriental collecter buying crowd and
Bob’s your Uncle
I have been on the down slope of bike ownership for a few years now. As I get older (74 now) I’m looking for lighter bikes. That makes it easy to sell my 1200cc heart throbs, even though they have carried me many miles and are the basis of lots of memories. I just don’t think that I’ll be doing a coast to coast to coast blast in the future. Besides that, if the big lump takes a dirt nap I’m risking physical damage to pick it up. Thus I’m in the 450 lb or less club. That makes the RX4 perfect, a lighter road going Adv bike. For a nostalgia hit I have a Honda CT125 so I can run errands and be an old fart hooligan. Thus 2 bikes are my limit. When I had 5-6 on hand I was always behind on maintenance, battery charging, state inspections, and such. Oh, and taxes are a bitch here in Virginia…even if the bike is not on the road.
Well I currently have 10, these I’m keeping: ZRX1100, Z900rs, 14-CB1100, 16-BMW R1200R, Road King, Ducati S2R1000, and my street legal KTM 300 MXC…..selling my ATK605ES, RZ350, and my other ZRX1100…..