Bikes are engineered that way. The engines are small and openly exposed to air, so they get rid of heat a lot easier than a car does that has the engine in a completely enclosed area.
What's more, bikes are minimal on their charging systems. Again, by design. They're NOT cars and don't need it...until somebody goes and starts adding a bunch of load to them they were never intended to carry, that is.
Here's the post I made before on typical Vmax behavior, and it's not just the Vmax. Just about every water cooled bike ever made is the same way:
It's actually perfectly normal for a Vmax to run just below the red line. The fan shouldn't kick on until it actually gets to the red line mark. In stop and go traffic on a really hot day it can move up into the red area and the fan should be running non stop at that point. If it wasn't, you have an issue. If it was, you do not.
Normal operating range is anywhere in that area. The fan WILL NOT be running.
Below the lowest red mark I made is on the cool side. The white break in the lines is hot but not deadly hot. Typically that's right about where the fan turns on. It may creep just to the skinny red line before it turns on. That is perfectly normal.
Anywhere in the thin red line is hot, but not deadly hot. You're perfectly OK there but you need to get it cooled down at that point. If it hits that thick red section at the very end just shut the bike off and wait for it to cool down if you can't get out in free traffic.
Most people completely over react to the temperature gauge on the Vmax and do things they really shouldn't be doing and have no need to do.
It's almost always a waste of money and turns out making the bike run way cooler than it should. In many cases it can actually hurt the performance and efficiency of the bike.
Running the fan full time is a no-no. The Vmax charging system is notoriously weak. It is not made to run the fan full time. At all.