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| Mattastic |
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 Mattastic Trackday Trickster
Joined: 03 Aug 2003 Karma :    
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 Posted: 00:22 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: Bike for a total beginner |
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What do you guys / gals suggest.
I've never ridden a motorbike before, and have only been on one once (Father in Law's VFR800) as a pillion. Both the missus and I want to ride but want to know the best, and hopefully cheapest, way into riding.
We were going to get a sit and screw (probably 50 - 100cc scooter) for a couple of months, then take some lessons on a 125, test on 125, buy a 125, test on 500cc after 6-12 months, buy a 400 6 - 12 months experience then maybe a 600 or larger depending how we feels.
The main thing is going to be insurance as we are both only 22 so we will get stung regardless. Just wonderd if this seems like an ok route to follow and if you could suggest some learner friendly bikes or anything you can think of to help us start riding.
ps Don't know if it is relevant but I've been driving 2 years the gf 4 and we are aware of the dangers us car drivers cause you lot!!! ____________________ Too skint to buy a bike  |
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| G |
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 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| kev |
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 kev I Hump Things

Joined: 07 Oct 2002 Karma :  
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| Dr Nick |
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 Dr Nick World Chat Champion

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| Robby |
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 Robby Dirty Old Man

Joined: 16 May 2002 Karma :   
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| McJamweasel |
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 McJamweasel BCF Junkie

Joined: 22 Mar 2002 Karma :     
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| paulcdb |
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 paulcdb Scooby Slapper

Joined: 29 Jul 2003 Karma :    
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| Scooby |
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 Scooby Scrappy Doo

Joined: 26 Mar 2002 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:14 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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If you've never ridden a bike before, then getting a scooter won't really help you at all. It will only help you gain a bit of road experience and there's no reason why you can't do that on a 4 stroke 125cc machine. Gears used to seem a bit daunting, but once you try it, it's a piece of piss trust me. I reckon you should go for something like Kev suggests, a CG125 or SR125, these have zimmaproof engines and are very forgiving. They have a top speed of around 65-70mph which means they are slow enough to learn on, but fast enough so you can keep up with the flow of traffic on any road, without being on a scooter struggling to keep up, and getting intimidated which might put you off biking, as cars WILL try to shove you off the road. Get a bike, not a rev 'n' rip  ____________________ A big enough hammer fixes anything! |
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| Dr Nick |
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 Dr Nick World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jun 2003 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:21 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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| scoobysnacks wrote: | If you've never ridden a bike before, then getting a scooter won't really help you at all. It will only help you gain a bit of road experience and there's no reason why you can't do that on a 4 stroke 125cc machine. Gears used to seem a bit daunting, but once you try it, it's a piece of piss trust me. I reckon you should go for something like Kev suggests, a CG125 or SR125, these have zimmaproof engines and are very forgiving. They have a top speed of around 65-70mph which means they are slow enough to learn on, but fast enough so you can keep up with the flow of traffic on any road, without being on a scooter struggling to keep up, and getting intimidated which might put you off biking, as cars WILL try to shove you off the road. Get a bike, not a rev 'n' rip  |
Twist and Blow. ____________________ is that it |
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| Dr Nick |
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 Dr Nick World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jun 2003 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:22 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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| wr400f wrote: | | scoobysnacks wrote: | If you've never ridden a bike before, then getting a scooter won't really help you at all. It will only help you gain a bit of road experience and there's no reason why you can't do that on a 4 stroke 125cc machine. Gears used to seem a bit daunting, but once you try it, it's a piece of piss trust me. I reckon you should go for something like Kev suggests, a CG125 or SR125, these have zimmaproof engines and are very forgiving. They have a top speed of around 65-70mph which means they are slow enough to learn on, but fast enough so you can keep up with the flow of traffic on any road, without being on a scooter struggling to keep up, and getting intimidated which might put you off biking, as cars WILL try to shove you off the road. Get a bike, not a rev 'n' rip  |
Twist and Blow. |
Pedal and Pop . ____________________ is that it |
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| kev |
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 kev I Hump Things

Joined: 07 Oct 2002 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:23 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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| wr400f wrote: | | wr400f wrote: | | scoobysnacks wrote: | If you've never ridden a bike before, then getting a scooter won't really help you at all. It will only help you gain a bit of road experience and there's no reason why you can't do that on a 4 stroke 125cc machine. Gears used to seem a bit daunting, but once you try it, it's a piece of piss trust me. I reckon you should go for something like Kev suggests, a CG125 or SR125, these have zimmaproof engines and are very forgiving. They have a top speed of around 65-70mph which means they are slow enough to learn on, but fast enough so you can keep up with the flow of traffic on any road, without being on a scooter struggling to keep up, and getting intimidated which might put you off biking, as cars WILL try to shove you off the road. Get a bike, not a rev 'n' rip  |
Twist and Blow. |
Pedal and Pop . | i thought they stopped making them years ago. ____________________ 20:02:36 Jammy-R6: any holes a goal
20:02:48 kev: even if its a hairy mans arse
20:02:56 Jammy-R6: hell yes |
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| Dr Nick |
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 Dr Nick World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jun 2003 Karma :  
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| Dr Nick |
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 Dr Nick World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jun 2003 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:28 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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| kev wrote: | | wr400f wrote: | | wr400f wrote: | | scoobysnacks wrote: | If you've never ridden a bike before, then getting a scooter won't really help you at all. It will only help you gain a bit of road experience and there's no reason why you can't do that on a 4 stroke 125cc machine. Gears used to seem a bit daunting, but once you try it, it's a piece of piss trust me. I reckon you should go for something like Kev suggests, a CG125 or SR125, these have zimmaproof engines and are very forgiving. They have a top speed of around 65-70mph which means they are slow enough to learn on, but fast enough so you can keep up with the flow of traffic on any road, without being on a scooter struggling to keep up, and getting intimidated which might put you off biking, as cars WILL try to shove you off the road. Get a bike, not a rev 'n' rip  |
Twist and Blow. |
Pedal and Pop . | i thought they stopped making them years ago. |
Nah i've seen an 02 reg Puch like thing at college, we occasionally move it round the car park to piss off the owner. ____________________ is that it |
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| Crazy Manx Man |
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 Crazy Manx Man The Fly Swatter
Joined: 26 Oct 2002 Karma :     
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| paulcdb |
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 paulcdb Scooby Slapper

Joined: 29 Jul 2003 Karma :    
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| Crazy Manx Man |
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 Crazy Manx Man The Fly Swatter
Joined: 26 Oct 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 01:56 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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| paulcdb wrote: | | Quote: | If you have NSR money to spend, don't blow it on one of those, spend it on a Cityfly, that's what I did. |
I'm not new to bikes though so i suppose it helps, i've used to ride off-road previous with a 250 (won't mention the Honda Vision, lol) so i suppose i'm a bit more used to it  |
errr....Having a liking to sportier bikes doesn't give you a bigger penis
I chose the Fly because of my size, (no. Not that, dirty bastards. lol. On second thoughts, maybe) I would find it a bitch to find the NSR comfortable for more than 5 miles, I'm lucky to be comfortable after 75miles of riding on the fly.
And I do have my fair share of experience on a motorbike too...going back to 1999, in our fields and the like and the last year i've been on the roads...so I suppose i'm abit more use to it . |
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| Ste |
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 Ste Not Work Safe

Joined: 01 Sep 2002 Karma :    
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 Posted: 02:03 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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Looking back now (hind sight is wonderful isnt it ) I wouldn't have got an NSR, well not a new one anyway. I'd have spent about a grand on something older, possibly an older NSR or similar. Then sold it and lost a lot less money than is lost on a new nsr  |
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| G |
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 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| Milo |
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 Milo World Chat Champion

Joined: 08 Feb 2002 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:48 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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yeah, don't get a new NSR for £3200, only to sell it 6 months later for £1800 to get a 550...like i did
get a 125 bike, but avoid the 250 commuter bikes(CB250), they're really not any quicker than modern 125's.
the route you suggested is far too slow and you'd end up loosing loadsa money and it'd be far too much hassle.
125>500>whatever bike you want to end up on is a good route.
Welcome to the forum!
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| Hex |
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 Hex Party Boy

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:26 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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Ok, I'm 25 and my route went something like this:
Did my CBT and rode around on a 125 for a year. I got a old NS125R for £600 and then sold it for the same price again a year later.
After riding round on L plates for a year (CBT) I did my DAS (over 21 so not a problem) did it over 4 days (though to be honest didn't need that many days) and then after passing my DAS I bought myself a CBR 600.
Since you have road awareness from driving, you will literally just be learning how to use a bike and getting use to the fact that people are out to get you.
So my sugegstion would be, do your CBT and get a cheep 125. Ride around for a year getting some experience and confidence.
After a year do your DAS and then get whatever your heart desires. The years NCB will come in handy too.  ____________________ The BCF's very own Party boy! Though he's getting old and feeling it!
Monkey hanger, Born and bred
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| Robby |
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 Robby Dirty Old Man

Joined: 16 May 2002 Karma :   
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| TiN |
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 TiN Pocket Tin

Joined: 14 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 11:49 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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As Robby says, it's probably best to actually ride a bike first before deciding on what you want. Book yourselves in for a CBT and see how it goes. If it's still for you, book a 4/5/6 day Direct Access (DAS) course and have a go on a big bike.
Once you've passed your test, the options are open to you. You can then get an old 125, 500 or whatever, and bimble about on it to get confident.
Look in the back of BiKE magazine (or MCN Bikemart?) for listings of bikes and insurance groups. ____________________ TiN
dotgems.net |
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| Bendy |
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 Bendy Mrs Sensible

Joined: 10 Jun 2002 Karma :   
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| Rob |
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 Rob World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Mar 2002 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:05 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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The Direct access option is a good one, then buy a CB500 or summat - But if you do an intensive course (usually 3-4 days) BE VERY CAREFUL if you pass. The instructors teach you what you need to know to pass the test but that won't make you a safe experienced rider, mistakes will happen, but if, like bendy, you are very careful (unlike the rest of us) you hopefully won't crash!
Enjoy it, have fun, thats what its all about.  ____________________ Love is 1050cc  |
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| stevo as b4 |
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 stevo as b4 World Chat Champion
Joined: 17 Jul 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 23:32 - 04 Aug 2003 Post subject: |
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Hey everyone is right that if you want to learn to ride, and get confidence on the road, then get a bike not a bloody T&G. Bikes are eaiser to ride in terms of stability, and handling is always better, even really basic bikes like a CG will handle far better than a scooter any day! G is right about you dont want to pick up bad habbits from riding a scoot, and then getting onto a real bike. gears are easy, and give you far more control and your far more likely to ride sensibly on a bike than you would on a twist an go. Ive got an SF100, thats tuned to shit, and ive blown it up twice, and nearly dropped it about 4 times, just from bein a twat on it basically. Its impossible to ride a scoot safely and sensibly, or at least i think so anyway. mine handles like its got a hinge in the middle, and throws you out of the seat over even small bumps and pot holes. All im saying is get a bike, any bike! but dont buy a scoot whatever you do, if you want to be a good rider. |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 22 years, 250 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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