My front forks are still lightly oiling the tubes - wipe them down and after a ride they're oily again... so... still need to get at those one of these days. Sadly they also seem to have worn springs - they're so low I can't pull the bike onto the center stand even with it's clever lever-stand unless I have at least 8 psi in the forks... Springs likely are shot

But wanted to put down my first ride experience and the feel of the bike.
First thing I noticed was the smooth power band and the apparent heaviness of the bike... my last ride was a 2007 Heritage classic. It was heavy but felt so different... almost nimble by comparison somehow... The Voyager almost seems to have a flat spot when vertical and going straight down the road - almost like it doesn't want to go "off straight" somehow - at least that's the feeling I got initially. I can of course easily counter-steer it to lean either way no problem, but there's a noticeable center-top position with a "let's stay straight" sensation.
Cruise wouldn't power on - gotta check that out too... hope it's a quick fix.
I got home and checked the fork stem bearing adjustment - handle bars easily drop to one side when front wheel jacked up - and no play in the tripple-tree, so I guess that's fine.
This bike only has 13,000 miles on it, and I'm glad so far everything looks and feels "low miles". Rubber carb boots are even still pretty soft etc.
I wondered if the alignment might be off - which it seems is not adjustable (without a bender or something)... I checked very carefully with a string and found it appears to be about 5 mm out. Front wheel tracking slightly to the right of the rear, but both wheels are as vertical to each other as I can measure with a carpenter's level...
Went online and found this post from "motorcycleconsumernews.com" on bike alignment which shates that "
Almost 20 years ago, a Honda engineer mentioned that the wheel alignments of 600cc and smaller bikes could vary by 5mm from true, while larger models could deviate by 10mm (1 inch equals 25.4mm). While those numbers might seem large, Honda probably had the tightest tolerances in the industry at the time."
Not sure if that is gospel, but makes me feel like I don't need to be concerned at this time.
Anyway - hope to get another dry day here this week and make another few miles...