PRODUCT REVIEW WITH VIDEO: Get Flat Footed with Legend Air Suspensions

Shocks adjust up or down on the fly

By Genevieve Schmitt, Photos by Pam Proctor

Air ride suspension technology has been around for quite some time. Air shocks on a vehicle—be it a car, truck or motorcycle—adjust up or down with a button using compressed air. That’s the simple explanation.

Legend Air Suspensions knows women, as the shorter/smaller gender, have the toughest time getting their feet down on the ground on motorcycles, so the company wants to make sure women riders know about their product. For several years now, company representatives have been trying to get me to ride one of their motorcycles outfitted with air shocks. Last year, during the Sturgis Rally, my schedule finally allowed me the time to test ride a motorcycle outfitted with Legend Air Suspensions shocks—and the bike happened to belong to the owner of the company, Jesse Jurrens.

In the two photos below, I’m sitting on Jesse’s Harley-Davidson FLH Standard. One photo has the suspension slammed as low as it will go; the other photo has it filled with air so the bike is higher, with more ground clearance. Can you tell which one is which? It’s hard to tell by looking at my legs because, at 5-foot-7, I’m on the tall side for a woman, and so my legs are bent in both shots. But a good gauge of the difference in seat height is to see where the top of my head lands in relation to the display board behind me.

Here I decreased pressure in the suspension, so the big touring motorcycle is lower to the ground, making it easy for me to maneuver around this parking lot.

Here I pressed a button on the dash to increase pressure, raising the motorcycle about two inches and making it ready for me to crank the throttle and start riding.
Legend makes replacement shocks for Harley-Davidson models only—Sportster, Dyna, Softail, Touring, V-Rod and trikes. The company has no plans to make them for metric models at this time. Legend air shocks replace the stock shocks on a motorcycle. The range on the air shocks is about 2.25 to 3 inches lower than stock, so you can lower the bike to the point where you need to maneuver it around, and then out on the road, air it back up to a comfortable riding suspension.

Here is the Legend Air Suspension shock on the Harley touring model I test rode. The hard-sided bag has been removed so that the shocks can be seen in the photo.

A control panel with an up and down button is installed on the left handgrip, allowing the rider to increase or decrease air in the shocks.
A gauge installed on the dash indicates the PSI as the rider increases and decreases pressure.
I rode Jesse’s air ride bike around Sturgis and found the convenience of adjusting the shocks quite appealing. Out on the highway, the ride was smooth—no different than any other suspension setup. You certainly want to make sure you “air up” before taking off so that you have some suspension and dont feel like you’re riding a hard tail (a motorcycle with no rear suspension).

I met up with one of Legend Air Suspensions’ most satisfied customers, Tami Walker, who owns Diva Customs, a motorcycle accessories shop in Virginia Beach, Va.

The entire Legend Air Suspensions system sells for $1,600, so this is a bit of a commitment. But as Tami says, you could end up spending that much or more trying out different aftermarket seats or other suspension systems that don’t quite get you down low enough.

Homegrown mechanics can install the kit themselves. Legend has a five-step plug and play wiring system that makes it easy for those who know what they’re doing to install the system. Others will want to bring the kit to their dealer. I’m told installation averages two hours. For more information, visit LegendSuspensions.com.

Related Articles
Changing Your Motorcycles Shocks to Get Lower
Air Suspension Lets You Adjust Height On the Fly

6 thoughts on PRODUCT REVIEW WITH VIDEO: Get Flat Footed with Legend Air Suspensions

  1. I also am vertically challenge at 5 feet 2 inches and my husband had purchased a Street Glide for me as a surprise. I could not touch the ground at all. Not very comforting. We started out with different shocks to lower the bike and that helped a little but never felt comfortable with them.They were just not low enough. I did some research and found out about the Legend shocks and had them put on my bike along with a FBI (Fat Baggers) 3 inch lowering seat kit. My bike is perfect now. My feet are flat on the ground and my confidence in my bike is 100 percent. I have been very pleased with how the shocks work over all.

    1. Thank you for sharing that with us. Here is the link for the FBI 3 inch lowering seat kit for those who are interested. Fatbaggers.com

  2. Perfect! Lowering a bike’s suspension would normally be a last choice option, due to the resultant significant decrease in cornering clearance. H-D’s are already pretty limited in this area to begin with. With these shocks, you can still corner your motorcycle with the suspension in the stock position, then lower it for parking, which is where we shorties need the help. Too bad they’re not making it for metrics!

  3. Seems very nice. I currently have a metric so it’s of no help to me. I am glad, however, to see this kind of thoughtfulness in a product for motorcycles. I see a lot of male riders out there who could use this as well.

  4. The article is fine, and I’m happy for the 5-foot-2 woman who can now manage her bike better. I understand. I’m not short, but I have a short inseam, 29 inches. I have used these products on three of my bikes, but my story is different. These shocks are great for parking lots, like the woman said, but they do have drawbacks. The hard tail effect is one, which was mentioned. The other is that, in my opinion, you sacrifice performance of the motorcycle at high speeds, especially in curves on a highway at highway speed, and of course, you lose the advantage of stock shocks and get a harder ride. It did not matter how much adjusting I tried, I never seemed to get the ride the way it should have felt. I just finally pulled the system off, lowered my bikes as much as possible, pulled stuffing out of reach seats and replaced it with gel pads, got layers of rubber added to my boots, and now I feel safer on the bike having removed the air shocks. They were great for me for a while, until I started realizing that they were interfering with performance. I guess we just do what we have to do for our own comfort.

    1. Thank you for sharing. It’s no secret that aftermarket shocks will affect the ride. But aftermarket companies, like Legend Suspensions, go to great lengths to ensure that ride is optimal for that lowered position. But of course each person’s gauge of comfort is different.I lowered my Street Glide and yes, the ride is noticeably different, but not so much that I couldn’t handle it. I just brace myself when I go over bumps knowing the suspension is very low. I wouldn’t trade that for the security of knowing I can put both feet flat on the ground and maneuver my motorcycle now in all situations.

Scroll to Top