</font><font color="blue" class="small">( If a 16 year old kid's Chevy Camaro sounded like the typical unmuffled Harley law enforcement officials would issue a excessive noise ticket in heartbeat. )</font>
Brings back interesting memories. I'll never forget writing a rich kid in a new car a loud muffler ticket in 1965 or '66. He came to court with his dad to plead not quilty. Of course I testified first, then the kid, then the dad who told the judge that they had taken the car to a muffler shop, asked for an exhaust that would make more noise, but still be legal. He then said, "Besides, judge, that car's not as loud as these old city busses." The judge said, "We're not comparing your car to city busses, jet airplanes, or atomic explosions; we do the best we can with what we have. That'll be $50." (It would have only been $10 if they'd just paid it to start with.) /forums/images/graemlins/laugh.gif
Personally, I like the "idea" of buying American, but I've never been able to imagine any additional reason for buying a Harley-Davidson motorcycle except for braggin' rights and noise. If you want transportation and comfort, I don't think you can beat the Gold Wing, although I've owned Zundapp, Yamaha, Hondas, and BMW, and ridden a Suzuki. The worst think I've ever been on was supposedly an extra clean Harley ElectraGlide with 11,000 miles on it that a cousin owned.
Of course I can vaguely understand the desire for the noise. I put twin glass packs on my '56 Mercury convertible when I was 18 /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif, but outgrew any desire for that racket before I was 21. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif I was never stopped by the police when I had the loud mufflers, but in just visiting with the police chief one day when I met him on the street, he told me I'd been making too much noise and needed to hold it down - and I did. /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif