This is the 2017 bobber I had when we lived in Switzerland. And my wife’s 50th anniversary Vespa.

When we bought these nobody told me I couldn’t bring them home to Canada. So when we came home we had to sell them both. I miss that bike every day. But recently got a new-to-me 2018 that I will mod until it looks just like that one.

  • nkiru@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Hi. I used to have a dirt bike and crotch rocket when I was young and stupid. But never a “hard-core know what I’m talking about” biker. I haven’t had a bike going on 30 years now.

    I just happened to see your post, and I live your bike. You called it a bobber. What’s a bobber? Is that a type of bike? If so, what brand name and model was your 2017 bobber?

    Just looking at that thing is giving me the “I want a bike again” bug.

    • JustAManOnAToilet@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      That’s a Triumph Bonneville Bobber. Closest thing that I can relate it to is like a convertible, you have a car make x, then they also make the x convertible, well there’s a Bonneville and a Bonneville Bobber, and some other brands make bobbers of their bikes too. It’s basically a stripped down version that’s lighter and only sits one person on it.

    • Bo7aOP
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      11 months ago

      A bobber is an older term for bikes that have been stripped of all things which are not mechanically necessary.

      Kind of like a chopper but without the flamboyance.

      I have two bobbers. One is a 1973 triumph Daytona 500 that was customized into a bobber over the years. And the other is a 2018 triumph that actually came out of the factory ‘bobbed’.

      Most owners of the factory bobbers do a lot of modification to personalize them. Things like taller bars, shorter, mufflers, smaller or completely non-existent, fenders, etc…

      I don’t blame you for wanting a bike when you look at the bobber. I pinched every penny I could to make sure I could pick another one up when I lost the first one. Every single time I open the garage door the first thought that goes through my head is ‘holy hell. Is that a lovely motorcycle’

    • Bo7aOP
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      1 year ago

      Canada and Switzerland do not have a mutual vehicle exchange program for anything that isn’t at least 15 years old. I would have had to ship the bike in parts, rebuild it in Canada, and register it as home-built, which is not a ton of fun for insurance and registration.

      • Rexelpitlum@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        TIL: Vehicle exchange programs are a thing.

        Never heard of them before. Maybe because Germany seems to be really relaxed in this regard. You may have to pay some taxes (e.g. VAT if new) when importing, that’s it. No country restrictions that I know of.

        • Bo7aOP
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          1 year ago

          If I had bought it 15km away in Germany I would have been fine :( Anything in the EU would be fine, but working with switz is (as usual) a bureaucratic mess.

  • BenHM3@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Darn it, too bad you couldn’t ship them home as parts. (Radar, MASH) It would be funny to look up the rules, it’s possible removing the wheels or handlebars or something simple renders the entire thing as “parts.” (Still, I feel your pain.)

    • Bo7aOP
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      1 year ago

      Either way it would have to be registered as self-built. And the insurance/reg hits are significant. At least I could replace mine after a couple of years looking. My wife’s vespa is not available over here at all with the package she had.