STX1300 Protective Body Cover

Joined
Oct 15, 2005
Messages
86
Age
64
Location
Exeter UK
Help

which cover is the one to buy

I have an 1300 with the standard topbox and i would like to put a cover over it whilst its in the garage but having looked on dave silvers he has 2 listed
Does anyone know which one is the best are they bike specific are they any good? or shall i buy a different one

the 2 references I came up with are
08P34 MZ0 000 and 08P34 MCH 000

Keep on the black stuff
 
Peter

I use one of the Oxford Covers, the blue and grey ones.

Goes over the machine, complete with top box, and fits nice and snug.

If you have the RDS radio fitted, the antenna does cause a bit of a problem, but if you are careful, it will go over that as well.

Mick
 
Tour King Cover

I ordered the Tour King cover for the ST. There are two models one for an ST w/Top box and one without top box. I got the one with top box.
Fits great.

Go to the tour king web site. Then call Terry the Tour King company owner, he will have it to you in about 3-4 days max. $40.00 He is a really nice guy, I met him for the second time at the Honda Hoot.

I use a tour king for the Wing also. I use this cover even when on trips. Best cover I have ever owned. Takes up very little space. Good luck!

Dave:03biker:
 
Peter said:
Help

which cover is the one to buy

I have an 1300 with the standard topbox and i would like to put a cover over it whilst its in the garage but having looked on dave silvers he has 2 listed
Does anyone know which one is the best are they bike specific are they any good? or shall i buy a different one

the 2 references I came up with are
08P34 MZ0 000 and 08P34 MCH 000

Keep on the black stuff

What does whilst mean?
 
pmorritt said:
What does whilst mean?


[Q] From Gary Wade: ?As an American who has spent some bit of time with British English, I have always wondered about the difference between while and whilst. Is there a relationship to formal and informal tenses left over from Old English? I also think of amid and amidst.?
[A] You?re close to the target with your second example. Another pair of a similar kind is among and amongst (a third pair, again and against, has a similar origin but the sense of the words has since diverged).
In both cases, the form ending in -st actually contains the -s of the genitive ending (which we still have today, though usually written as ?s, of course). In Middle English, this was often added to words used as adverbs (as while became whiles, which often turned up in the compound adverbs somewhiles and otherwhiles). What seems to have happened is that a -t was later added in the south of England through confusion with the superlative ending -st (as in gentlest).
Both while and whilst are ancient, though while is older. There?s no difference in meaning between them. For reasons that aren?t clear, whilst has survived in British English but has died out in the US. However, in Britain it is considered to be a more formal and literary word than its counterpart. I have a small weakness for it, for which I?ve been gently teased in the past.

The US of A and GREAT Britain seperated only by a Common Language

Peter
 
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