© Provided by Bonnier Corporation 2019 Harley-Davidson Sport Glide with stock shield with a taller unit. By Andrew Cherney , Motorcycle Cr...
© Provided by Bonnier Corporation 2019 Harley-Davidson Sport Glide with stock shield with a taller unit. |
By Andrew Cherney, Motorcycle Cruiser
Outfitting our long-termer with a taller shield was first on the list.
Now that I’ve spent some time with the Sport Glide, I’ve gotten to know its charms as well as its shortcomings. It’s been cruising around Oregon for a couple of weeks now, and I’m making slow but steady progress with getting it set up to my liking. Actually, it was the initial extended trip on the thing—a 1,000-plus-mile maiden voyage up to Portland from Southern Cal—that gave me a painfully clear understanding of the first thing it’d need to get more long-haul happy. The main issue that hit us on freeway sections of the ride—literally—was the wind, and how little protection against it the minuscule screen offered. As I mentioned in the last go-round, the fairing may look cool, but it does little to deflect any kinds of gusts, wind or otherwise. It does its best work as a good-looking bug collector, so I knew a replacement was in the cards; I had an order placed for H-D’s Sport Glide 5.5-inch shield from the P&A catalog before I even rolled across the Oregon border.
© Provided by Bonnier Corporation 2019 Harley-Davidson Sport Glide with stock “wind deflector.” |
At $154.95, the 5.5-inch replacement shield for the Sport Glide ain’t cheap, considering it’s only, uh, 5.5 inches tall. That’s usually considered a “mini” shield by most companies, and it certainly doesn’t qualify for full touring shield status, even by Harley’s own standards (most touring units start at around 12 inches and go up from there, though naturally whatever you end up choosing depends on your own height and riding position in the saddle). But it’s literally more than three times taller than the 1.5-inch stocker (which Harley calls a “wind deflector”), so I figured something’s better than nothing, especially since there’s not much else out there for this model. Harley’s own product copy states that it “moves more air up and over the rider to reduce helmet buffeting and wind fatigue,” and hopeless optimist that I am, it was enough to get me to bite.Swapping in the new shield requires taking the fairing off the bike and removing the outer portion from this inner unfinished side (pictured). You can see how low the stock shield sits on top. The clamps below it fasten the fairing to the fork legs. | Andrew Cherney
On the positive side, installing the 5.5-inch shield is a straightforward process. You simply pop the detachable fairing off the bike, flip it over (onto a carpet or towel or something soft to minimize scratching up the paint job), and unscrew the black, unpainted inner fairing from the finished outer fairing. Then you simply loosen the two screws holding the deflector to the fairing and just slide it up and out. Slide the new shield into the same slot, tighten those same two mounting screws, reattach the outer fairing to the inner one, and clamp the whole shebang back onto the fork. The whole thing takes less than 20 minutes.
Remove those two mounting screws from the inner fairing and slide the stock shield up and out. | Andrew Cherney
On the positive side, installing the 5.5-inch shield is a straightforward process. You simply pop the detachable fairing off the bike, flip it over (onto a carpet or towel or something soft to minimize scratching up the paint job), and unscrew the black, unpainted inner fairing from the finished outer fairing. Then you simply loosen the two screws holding the deflector to the fairing and just slide it up and out. Slide the new shield into the same slot, tighten those same two mounting screws, reattach the outer fairing to the inner one, and clamp the whole shebang back onto the fork. The whole thing takes less than 20 minutes.
Remove those two mounting screws from the inner fairing and slide the stock shield up and out. | Andrew Cherney
The Sport Glide’s nifty fairing design is likely to blame for the small pool of options; because it has relatively short height and width dimensions, there are only so many shield sizes it can support. We’re happy to see that the new taller shield doesn’t muck up the sleek lines of the Sport Glide too much, but then it also doesn’t completely solve the wind blast problem either. It’s a slight improvement, but at speeds more than 55 mph, the wind still came pouring over the shield; it’s just that this time, it hit me higher in the chest (keep in mind I’m only 5-foot-7). I got better results by scooching forward on the saddle and tucking in slightly to get a much cleaner pocket of air, but it’s not that comfortable to maintain that position for long. Harley’s website also tells me the replacement shield is a “light smoke” on the website, but from where I’m sitting it looks perfectly clear. Not a deal breaker mind you, just saying.
If you really want to embrace the Sport Glide’s stated mission, which is light touring, the 5.5-inch shield might do the trick for you. But if you’re looking for true wind protection on longer trips (or you’re taller than 5-foot-9, it ain’t gonna cut it. I’m thinking about trying out a Klock Werks unit next, since it makes a Flare unit for the Sport Glide. It’s about 8 inches tall and shaped differently, so I’m hoping it’ll do the trick. Gustafsson Plastics also makes a replacement unit for the Sport Glide, but its version is a true touring unit and looks a great deal taller.
COMMENTS