The guy who invented the first wheel was an idiot -
the guy who invented the second one... he was the genius!
http://theringfinders.com/blog/Larry.Royal/
A couple of weeks ago I was getting new tires put on the "B" and the owner of the dealership asked if I was getting bored waiting. I told him it was about time for lunch, so he wheeled a new Vaquero out of the showroom and told me to go ahead and take a ride and look for lunch.
Actually, I liked the Vaquero. It's the same engine as my Son's Voyager so it has decent power. A lot of folks think these are under powered, but if you shift to keep it in the max torque RPM instead of banging it off the rev limiter, it will go down the road quite nicely. I even felt as if I could get by with the short wind screen. Must be a different angle and/or distance from the rider than the one on the "B". All in all, I wouldn't say I would never have a Vaquero.
I drove a Voyager once and felt there was a lot of vibration in the handle bars. One reason I turned to an F6. Good quality through.
I agree that there were some vibes while accelerating through the gears, but it smoothed out nicely when at cruising highway speeds. After having 2 BSA Lightnings back in the 60's, I'm sensitive to handlebar and foot peg vibrations and I thought I could get along with it. Your mileage may vary.
I had a Vaquero before I bought the F6B.
Not a bad bike...I never got "in tune" with it like I did on the Vstar1300 or the F6B.
Sold it to a friend of mine, he really enjoys it.
2015 Honda F6B Deluxe (Current)
Traxxion Suspension
Ultimate Seat
Rockford Audio 8BB & PMX1R
Cerwin Vega B54 Amplifier
Avon Cobra Tires
JBL 6.5" speakers
Klockwerks Windshield
2011 Kawasaki Vaquero (SOLD)
If you want a helluva deal on a Voyager or Vaquero, you can find new old stock at dealers for $5000+ off MSRP. I have only seen one on the road, ever. The Vaquero in particular is easy to spot with its fairing air intakes where it looks like running lights should be.
Comments on the Kawis here match what online reviews say. They are fine bikes, but do not stand out in any way, shape, form (except for maybe those aforementioned fairing air scoops).
A Voyager is just about the cheapest way one can get in a decked out cruiser/touring model with cruise control, ABS, stereo and storage.
Former Ride:
2013 F6B Standard, black; sold 7/2019
Latest Addition:
2016 Gold Wing Level 3, red; SCT transmission stuck in manual mode
2019 Miles:
7,900 as of 10/6