I had such a blast riding around New York City, I had trouble wiping the smile off my face. I made up errands to run just so I could take it out, and when I returned home, I almost invariably “missed” the turn for my street just so I could savor one more quick lap.
That being said, a line in my original piece about this bike proved rather prophetic: “If you’re a regular highway cruiser who craves amenities like cruise control and heated handgrips, look elsewhere.” You’d think that having written such a sentence, I wouldn’t pick up the bike and almost immediately embark on a nearly 100-mile road trip to the outskirts of Philadelphia. You’d be wrong.
The journey was actually pretty smooth — the bike is heavy and low enough to feel quite stable on fast, busy roads — but it wasn’t exactly a pleasure cruise. A little breeze in your face when you don’t have a windshield is lovely on a sunny two-lane road…but it was overcast, the wind was whipping and I was hitting 90 on I-95, so I was grateful for my full-face helmet.
I was also cursing the forward-positioned pegs and lack of a backseat upon which to tie things down, as I had to strain a bit while lugging a pack full of camp gear the whole way. Pro tip: In such situations, loosen the backpack straps and just kinda let the bag sit on the fender to lighten your load.
Anything else stand out?
As a true bobber, the Sixty comes with just one seat, though a color-matched pillion and set of passenger pegs are just two of more than 140 branded accessories with which you can upgrade. Pro tip 2: In a pinch, a $16 suction cup seat from Amazon will do — just make sure your passenger is relatively small and affable, and you’re not going too far, as they’ll have to be creative with where they rest their feet.
In fairness, the highway is not really where Indian intends for you to spend most of your time on this bike. All the marketing materials and website images position it as an overqualified urban motorcycle, perfect for coffee runs and leaf peeping and short joy rides and such.