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| Arfdog |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

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| Gazdaman |
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 Gazdaman I did a trackday!!!

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| Marci |
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 Marci Brolly Dolly

Joined: 01 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:45 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Buy one advertised as restricted that comes with a restriction certificate...
Other than Dyno, that's the only way - or go by seat of the pants. Test drive shouldn't see it go any faster than about 110mph depending on it's weight.
Price of test should be exactly the same between 33bhp test and DAS tho in terms of actual test fees. Only difference is in training costs, but even then they tend to be more or less identical... main reason I did DAS was that it didn't cost any extra over going for 33bhp or any of the other tests once I factored everything else in.
If it's down to bike rental - borrow. Find a mate with a 500cc+ bike, get him to add you as named driver on his insurance temporarily, take you to test with you on back, do test on his bike (with L-Plates attached) then get him to run you home again. ____________________ FAB-Racing MiniMotoSidecars - Back with a vengeance - F1 Class 2011...
CBR170 engine, custom chassis - www.minimotoscene.co.uk |
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| Blau Zedong |
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 Blau Zedong Banned

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| Bishbash |
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 Bishbash World Chat Champion

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| Arfdog |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

Joined: 17 Aug 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 12:59 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Ok, i'll do the DAS straight off then...
I only have 2 mates who have bikes I could borrow for DAS. One bike is a 1.2litre chopper, the other is a R1. So I'll be way too scared to borrow either of them!
All my recent (within last 10 years) riding experience has been in the last 6 months on the RXS100, so it's quite a leap to a R1
Was only really considering doing the 33bhp if the bikes I listed were definitely under 33bhp - i have no interest in going over 100mph, I prefer slow and comfy - but since they aren't, DAS is only way forward. ____________________ I'm a lover, not a fighter. |
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| edd |
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 edd Nearly there...

Joined: 06 Jul 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 13:13 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Any bike can be restricted, you could just do what 90% of 19 year olds do and ride about unrestricted. If you do this don't bother getting a certificate, since they have no legal value at all (you may as well make one at home, since it would have equal legal status)
Though if I were in your position I would go and take a couple of lessons on a 500 then you will be able to borrow the riding school's bike for the test. Riding a 500 is actually easier than a 125 IMO, the frames are usually bigger so they are more comfy and suited to my size, and you have more power so you can be more lazy with your gearing. ____________________ Bluespark Automotive - Diesel Tuning for Performance and Economy |
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| Arfdog |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

Joined: 17 Aug 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 13:33 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| Quote: | Any bike can be restricted, you could just do what 90% of 19 year olds do and ride about unrestricted. If you do this don't bother getting a certificate, since they have no legal value at all (you may as well make one at home, since it would have equal legal status)
Though if I were in your position I would go and take a couple of lessons on a 500 then you will be able to borrow the riding school's bike for the test. Riding a 500 is actually easier than a 125 IMO, the frames are usually bigger so they are more comfy and suited to my size, and you have more power so you can be more lazy with your gearing. |
Thanks Edd,
Actually i'm 30 this year, and got wife and kids and the whole catastrophe, and my even mild dishonesty have slipped me by.. So cheating is not an option.
I'm 5'11 tall and weigh 11 stone, so I assumed the bigger bike would be a lot harder for me to control than the RXS100, which I can actually pick up and put in the back of my van without help!
I guesss then the money for DAS lessons would be well spent, getting used to actually riding the bigger bikes anyway... ____________________ I'm a lover, not a fighter. |
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| Marci |
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 Marci Brolly Dolly

Joined: 01 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| Marci |
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 Marci Brolly Dolly

Joined: 01 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 13:37 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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And I'm same height & weight (and more or less age and family circumstance) as yourself, and found a CB500 infinitely easier to control than my Mito125... same goes for a Maxim750 (which tops out at just above 80mph fer reference, despite being over 33bhp, and is VERY comfy) ____________________ FAB-Racing MiniMotoSidecars - Back with a vengeance - F1 Class 2011...
CBR170 engine, custom chassis - www.minimotoscene.co.uk |
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| Trixie |
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 Trixie World Chat Champion

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| Arfdog |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

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| Trixie |
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 Trixie World Chat Champion

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| Nath |
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 Nath World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Jul 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 18:12 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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You want an 80s bike that's not to physically small but still under 33bhp? The Honda Bros400 is the most common answer to this problem.
I bought one after passing my test at 18, and two years later it's still going strong. I use it everyday to commute to work at the moment, and it never fails to put a smile on my face. Did a 5k mile tour of France and Spain on it and it didn't let me down once.
I got my 550/4 supersport on the road with about 6months of my restriction period left, but rode it unrestricted. Though in reality it's probably not pushing much more than 33bhp. This bike has also provided me with fantastic reliable service, both when commuting daily and also on long distance european touring. Mine looks a little bit less than standard now though
https://homepage.ntlworld.com/steven.coy/images/cb550_story/story-26.jpg ____________________ Hard livin', hard luck. |
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| beatnck |
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 beatnck Could Be A Chat Bot

Joined: 29 May 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 20:03 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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arfdog, im in pretty much the same situation as you - 27, kids, skint! im sure we'll get there in the end though mate
oh, and 550/4 is lovely and i want it  |
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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 22:36 - 10 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Arfdog you could borrow my bike to take your test on if you're stuck - but not your lessons coz I use it for work
Actually, you're gonna be gutted coz I just sold this to my sister in Strood for £100: ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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| stevo as b4 |
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 stevo as b4 World Chat Champion
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| Blau Zedong |
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 Blau Zedong Banned

Joined: 26 Jun 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 00:05 - 11 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Even my 1972 YR5 is 36 bhp . Older bikes are all well and good, but you ideally need some mechanical skills to run one and control costs. Bits arn't always a problem, plenty of people around doing NOS (new old stock) stuff, and ebay etc. Come to think of it, buy a YR5 - bit like a big RXS100 but with a HUGE front drum brake . ____________________ 18:54:48 Rob Fzs: jews don't give away stuff for free
18:54:59 Rob Fzs: unless its their clothes/ hair/ golden teeth |
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| Arfdog |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

Joined: 17 Aug 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:39 - 11 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| Geri wrote: | Arfdog you could borrow my bike to take your test on if you're stuck - but not your lessons coz I use it for work
Actually, you're gonna be gutted coz I just sold this to my sister in Strood for £100: |
GUTTED!!!!!!!!
Four miles to the east and it could have been in my drive! Oh cruel fate...
Thanks for the kind offer Geri, you live in Dartford don't you?
I think I will do DAS for sure, but I'm goint to wait a few months first, and do it when I can afford to both do the course, and afford another bike - Having one but not the other will only amount in my daily amount of daydreaming increasing to the point of rendering me useless at work!
| stevo as b4 wrote: |
If you can do the work yourself then fine, but otherwise you could end up with an old but expensive bike that costs you a lot to keep on the road and maintain, compared to a modern bike like a CB/ER5 etc.
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I really enjoy working on bikes and cars, and I am pretty capable despite 'request for help' threads of mine you may have seen! So thats not a worry, I learn quickly. The only thing that is a worry (same with any old vehicle) is the possibility of getting one that has been extensively worked on by someone who has stripped every thread on the bike, and araldite'ed the bolts back in place. Or stripped the sparkplug thread, and welded the plug in place. Or repaired a hole in the exhaust with a heinz bean can, hoseclamps, and copious amounts of epoxy. All of which I have found myself staring at one old vehicles in the past...
The main thing is availability of spares I reckon, and for that sortof age of bike I would expect there should be pretty easy to get hold of a donor bike too.. ____________________ I'm a lover, not a fighter. |
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| Pete. |
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 Pete. Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Aug 2006 Karma :     
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 Posted: 18:17 - 11 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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Plentiful spares for the 650 but my 1100 which I did 7000 miles on last year had to be sold as spares/repair when the TCI (ignition box) crapped-out. Rocking-horse crap don't even come close....
Now that WAS a nice bike to ride, air-filled shocks, comfy seat, great engine. Let-down badly by the utterly rubbish brakes. It was like stopping the Exxon Valdez. ____________________ a.k.a 'Geri'
132.9mph off and walked away. Gear is good, gear is good, gear is very very good  |
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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

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 Arfdog Crazy Courier

Joined: 17 Aug 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:19 - 12 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| Nath wrote: | I got my 550/4 supersport on the road with about 6months of my restriction period left, but rode it unrestricted. Though in reality it's probably not pushing much more than 33bhp. This bike has also provided me with fantastic reliable service, both when commuting daily and also on long distance european touring. Mine looks a little bit less than standard now though
https://homepage.ntlworld.com/steven.coy/images/cb550_story/story-26.jpg |
Nath, I love what you've done with the seat, the bike looks great, real tough actually. All you need now is a sawn-off shotgun to bolt to the side of it, and possibly a heifer skull to bolt on the front
I took the liberty of looking through the pics of your europe trip too, fecking awesome - how long did that journey take you, did you have any troubles with the bike along the way? And how did you deal with the cold? I've been to slovakia, and it was fecking freezing.. ____________________ I'm a lover, not a fighter.
Last edited by Arfdog on 13:18 - 12 Jan 2007; edited 1 time in total |
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| satans_BIG_helper |
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 satans_BIG_helper Nearly there...
Joined: 28 Dec 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:36 - 12 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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In reply to your comment thinking that a bigger bike would be harder to handle, i find the bigger bikes better for me much more stable far less twicthy only thing i do miss bout my mito 125 is the way you could just throw it into corners no matter what speed you were doing
the yamaha SR500 is a nice bike from the kinda era you like and it is only 33bhp
anything can be restricted to 33bhp you just need the right size washers to put in the carb inlet and a dyno to test it
Good luck with the test tho |
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| Nath |
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 Nath World Chat Champion
Joined: 28 Jul 2004 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:01 - 12 Jan 2007 Post subject: |
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| Arfdog wrote: | I took the liberty of looking through the pics of your europe trip too, fecking awesome - how long did that journey take you, did you have any troubles with the bike along the way? And how did you deal with the cold? I've been to slovakia, and it was fecking freezing.. |
Bike was basically trouble-free for the full 3months and 18,500miles. Had a snapped throttle cable, a broken contact breaker which did leave me puzzled for a while, and also my headlamp fell off due to all the crazily large potholes in Bulgaria The bike showed a slight tendancy to drop onto 3cylinders in the rain, but only left me stranded once during a major storm in the Pyrenees (black clouds as far as the eye could see, non stop thunder and lightening for over an hour, and terrential rain - Genuinely frightening when your bike's stopped working "in the middle of nowhere").
Cold wasn't a problem, I was going to sleep shivering in Norway but for the rest of the trip I enjoyed a Europe-wide heatwave. Picked up a nice tan in Slovakia and got severely sun-burnt in the Czech republic (all the skin on my chest blistered up and I was ill for over a week).
Doubt I'll ever enjoy another summer as much as that one. ____________________ Hard livin', hard luck. |
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| norton |
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 norton Derestricted Danger
Joined: 21 Nov 2006 Karma :    
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 18 years, 341 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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