Proudly introducing the BrakeAway Products
Cruise Control Review! This is a premium
model cruise control for your Road Star and?is certainly a sharp looking piece
of equipment! Unbelievably easy to use with no levers or thumbscrews for
operation, the BrakeAway Cruise Control will also disengage itself if you grab
hold of the front brake, so your safety while using this unit is increased
dramatically.


- Ease of Installation: Normally
7/10
- Installation Time: Normally 30
minutes
- Mechanical Aptitude Required: Beginner
- Tools Required: 5/16" Open End Wrench & 10mm
Wrench - Allen Keys required are included in the kit
- Quality of Instructions: Excellent
- Quality of Product: Excellent
- Supplied by:
BrakeAway Products
- Reviewed by: RoadStarMagazine.com
(this review is subject to the following disclaimer)

For most of
us extended hours out on the road can lead to a pretty sore throttle hand, arm
and shoulder as there is rare opportunity to give yourself a rest unless you
take regular stops. There is also people like myself who suffer from shoulder
problems and an enjoyable day on the road is often tempered by a very sore back
at the end of a run. One of the answers to these problems is to invest in a
throttle lock for your Road Star, as a throttle lock can hold your throttle in
place on the road while you give your arm a rest. The downsides to throttle
locks is they can be a little cumbersome and awkward to use, plus they can
be dangerous, especially if you need to come off the throttle and onto the front
brake in a hurry. Well now you have an answer to those problems, introducing
the BrakeAway Cruise Control which is so simple to use with push button
control (no levers!) AND automatic disengagement when using the front
brake!
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Being 100% CNC machined out of billet aluminium you can't beat
the quality of the BrakeAway Cruise Control as this is one precision made piece
of hardware. Although pricey, once you see a BrakeAway unit in the flesh you
can see where your money has gone with the intricate design and functionality of
this component. When the BrakeAway is installed correctly the throttle will
still snap back the same as it should when you let go of the grip during normal
riding, and when the BrakeAway is engaged you only require finger tip control to
finely adjust the speed of your bike.
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This is such a good looking piece of hardware that you could
easily be fooled into thinking it came mounted on the bike straight from the
factory. The brushed aluminium blends very well into the ignition housing so
the BrakeAway doesn't stand out like a sore thumb as most throttle locks can
tend to do. It even follows the lines of the Road Star's ignition housing to an
extent so it is all very easy on the eye. On my setup there is a bit of a gap
between the BrakeAway and my ignition housing, but this is due to the Yamaha
Chrome and Rubber grips that I have installed because the BrakeAway will not go
all the way over the grip as it should. People with stock grips and various
other aftermarket grips should see less of a gap.

Where the
BrakeAway Cruise Control differs from the competition is not only its ease of
engaging and disengaging with its simple push button control, but there is also
the fact that if you grab hold of the front brake lever the BrakeAway will
automatically disengage the throttle. Most throttle locks have a lever type
operation and to disengage them in a hurry generally tends to be awkward and you
have to manually roll off the throttle to take the power from the bike,
providing you haven't set your clamp too tightly! The effortlessness of which
you can use the BrakeAway is amazing: when your throttle hand needs a bit of a
break just push the lower button to set the lock in place, if you find your
speed isn't quite right you can adjust the throttle with fingertip control, and
the unit is so easy to disengage by either pressing the upper lever or just by
pulling slightly on the front brake. The best example I could point you to of
all of that in motion is a downloadable video that is on the start page
of the BrakeAway Products Website, you will find it listed
at the top of the page.
The most enjoyable part for me is that I can now give
my shoulder regular breaks on longer rides. The Road Star will do an easy two
to three hours worth of riding between fuel stops and unfortunately not every
road has good reason to stop once in a while, such as for photo opportunities.
Plus if you are out on a day trip you may be on a long stretch of road at a
fixed speed for quite a while, and it is that type of riding condition that will
make my shoulder flare right up. All I have to do now is set the BrakeAway
every fifteen minutes or so, give my shoulder a good rotation and stretch, push
the lever to disengage the BrakeAway and I am good to go. And I can do
all this without having to stop or lose speed, fantastic!

I do have to say the install process did not go easy for me,
but this was only because of two mitigating factors - One was the Pro-One
4" risers that I have that caused me to move the brake housing down the
handlebar an inch due to my front brake line being a little bit stretched. The
other was my Yamaha chrome and rubber grips which have a flared grip on the
thumb side of your hand that the BrakeAway barely fits over. If I
only had one or the other of these two things, I think my
install would have been easily completed in the estimated thirty minutes it
should take, but for me it took closer to an hour and a half and the frustration
was getting pretty extreme.
The BrakeAway Cruise Control is designed to work on a number
of different bikes - so not just the Road Star - and to that end it is very
adjustable in its install process. My issue was because my brake housing was
down the handlebar an inch or so due to the 4" risers I have, and the BrakeAway
would only fit flush with the inside end of my grip, it meant that the BrakeAway
was at the maximum length of all its adjustable tolerances. Every time I
thought I had it setup properly, I would then tighten up all the bolts which
would raise everything fractionally, which then prevented the BrakeAway from
being able to engage because it was pushing up against the brake lever. Part of
this problem is due to the BrakeAway being such a precisely machined product
because it doesn't allow for the very small vertical movement that you will find
in your front brake lever. I finally got it all working in harmony by moving my
brake housing up the handlebar enough whilst also tilting it forward to keep
some slack in the brake line, but boy did that take some time. At the end of
the day all of my frustration was worth it as the BrakeAway is now installed
properly and performs exactly as it should and I won't have to concern myself
with it again.
I won't go into the rest of the details of
the install process as BrakeAway Products have an excellent instruction sheet
that you can download off their website at this link so you can see for yourself how it is done. There
is a lot of adjustment during the install but once you have it all in front of
you, you can see how it all ties together and you will agree it is time well
spent.

At
$199US the BrakeAway Cruise Control is certainly at the premium
end of the market, no doubt about that, but you will be hard pressed to find a
better looking, better functioning or safer unit. Anything that will hold the
throttle of a motorbike in a fixed position is a danger to one extent or
another, but the ability to have the BrakeAway disengage itself when you pull on
the front brake lever puts it miles ahead of the competition. In addition to
that the simplistic ease of which you can engage and disengage the BrakeAway
with the click of a button by your thumb really does make it so effortless to
use. I would honestly say that if you do a lot of touring on your Road Star, or
you like the idea of a throttle lock but want some added safety, then the
BrakeAway Cruise Control is for you. You can contact BrakeAway Products
at this email
address, or visit their
website for further details.
RoadStarMagazine.com
December
2002

