“Loud what saves lives? What? I can’t hear you. I’ve got 10 speakers blasting 200 watts of sound at me from each end the
Victory Magnum X-1 sound machine. I’m the meat center in a music sandwich. Huh?” We tested the Magnum X-1 during Daytona Bike Week, which isn’t a quiet place to begin with. We made it less quiet. “What? Yes, it is Spirit in the Sky, but as performed by The Upsidedown.” The Magnum X-1 is a showroom-available modified Magnum, beefed up with custom black billet wheels, featuring a 21-incher up front, black bodywork with detailed red pin-striping, an LED headlight claimed to be 74 percent brighter than the one on the Cross Country, and a music-maker, boom-box of serious note. The speakers also look great, matched in style and color to the bike; three in each side location up front, and two atop each bag.
The 21-inch front wheel doesn’t much hinder steering, and the front suspension provided a surprisingly nice ride, with the rear as good as usual for Victory, which is pretty good for a bike this this profile. Parking-lot crawls required a bit more steering management than typical, but that’s likely due to inner-ear issues of the rider. Possible also the wrong song blasting. After plugging in your personal music source inside the right-hand bag, operation of the Magnum X-1’s music system is pretty straightforward, and similar to many systems on other baggers, with the controls hanging off the left handlebar for thumbing. Selecting modes, then tunes, is nearly intuitive, if you arrive with some motorcycle-music history, but when starting at the beginning of your playlist you can only scroll alphabetically from “A,” which might not impress Zappa fans. Or Zevon fans. Or Yes...
That aside, finding and selecting a playlist, and then a particular song, is easier than with some other systems. Plus, the up and down volume buttons are nicely responsive, without lag. Of course, the system also features an auto-volume that’s synchronized to the speed of the Magnum X-1. We’re not sure if its presets can be altered or not, which would be a good feature because it increases in volume a bit too much too quickly, or it ends up being too soft at a stop. We couldn’t find a desired compromise. Maybe we needed to ride faster? These days, booming bagger competition is a new outdoor sport, particularly at bike rallies. The traffic-light cacophony at times at Daytona was intense, between ratcheted up rock and roll and opened up exhaust systems. Cranking on 200 watts is a good way to win the battle, but a solution without permanent hearing damage is a lonesome highway.
Possibly the best thing about the Magnum X-1’s serious stereo system is the ability to use it with the bike parked, sans the sounds of wind, pipes, road-noise, and so forth. When parked, the sound of this boom-box on wheels is clear, with hi-fidelity for P-Funkadelic, psychedelic, or whatever -delic you select to serenade your beach-blanket bingo party. Just please don’t play the same song by Steppenwolf all day long. Rock on.
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