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to airhead dot org..... is it worth it?


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If you are not an MOA member, why not take the time to join the club, so you can enjoy posting on the forum, the BMW Owners News magazine, and all of the benefits of membership? If you click here, you have the opportunity to take us for a test ride at our expense. Enter the code 'FORUM25' in the activation code box to try the first year of the MOA on us!
Personally, I think it's worth it. To some degree, it depends on how active the organization is in your state. It's also nice to have another group of people to call when on the road. The club offers a dAirectory of names and phones numbers. It can't hurt to enough too many friends!!
Keep in mind that Airheads Beemer Club and the Airheads email list are not the same. Many people participate in the email list and aren't a member of the ABC. The list does have some very good posters. Snowbum, Tom Cutter, Ted Porter, and Matt Parkhouse, to name a few...even Rick from Motorrad Elektrik once in a blue moon. You get Matt once a month in the MOA ON...but you can get his ideas just about everyday on the email list.
Well, as a bonafied BMW mechanic (Which you say you are.) I doubt seriously that the Airheads would be of much worth to you.
The organization is basicly a group of amature wrenchers and riders, who are in love with type 247 Airhead BMW's and who also enjoy drinking adult beverages and sometimes camping out.
But...
You have said elsewhere that youre the #1 mechanic at San Jose BMW ( http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=479844) and considering that most of the pro wrenches I know are too tired after fixing bikes all week, to show up at an Airhead tech day to do another days wrenching for free, I'd suggest that you to attend a couple of Airhead get togethers and then decide if the club is for you. It really is a kind of "Service club" wherein we all service one another!
I've been a member from the beginning... Most of the members are real iconoclastic, "leave the bullshit at the door" types, who share a real passion for Airheads and riding em.
It'll only cost you $25 to find out whether you fit in or not....
dude...what is your #$%$#@#$ing problem? I see no need to argu with you>>
"Be Careful when arguing with an idiot...folks watching may get confused as to who that is"
dude...what is your #$%$#@#$ing problem? I see no need to argu with you>>
Wow... Check that out! Did any of you guys see an argument?![]()
I was also a member, quite a while back, and really enjoy the company of the local NorCal group. I run a tech day each year at my house; a lot of maintenance and some significant projects get done, as well as a BBQ and bench racing session. (One year we had a clutch replacement, for example.) The NorCal group is quite active, with three meetings a month and several camping events during the year.
I am not a member any more because I don't want to pay to support B. Jan Hofman's Luddite Screed, which rarely seemed to have anything to do with BMWs and motorcycling.
The Airheads high command also has a fairly strident outlook about the bikes, but this is in part, I believe, because the organization was born as a reaction to the introduction of the Oilhead boxers; in fact, the name Airhead didn't exist until there was an Oilhead to compare it against.
I find it extremely ironic that they continue to take BMW to task over the availability of parts and service for these bikes, which are at a minimum 15 years old and some now about to be 40 years old. Can you walk into a dealer for any other marque and order parts for a 40 year old bike? Would they have any idea at all about a bike that was manufactured that long ago?
I find it extremely ironic that they continue to take BMW to task over the availability of parts and service for these bikes, which are at a minimum 15 years old and some now about to be 40 years old. Can you walk into a dealer for any other marque and order parts for a 40 year old bike? Would they have any idea at all about a bike that was manufactured that long ago?
I am not a member any more because I don't want to pay to support B. Jan Hofman's Luddite Screed, which rarely seemed to have anything to do with BMWs and motorcycling.