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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

Joined: 21 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| Livefast123 |
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 Livefast123 Nearly there...
Joined: 14 Mar 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 14:39 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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When 600cc became middle weight i think  ____________________ Current ride - Yamaha MT-07 |
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| pinkyfloyd |
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 pinkyfloyd Super Spammer

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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

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| JonnyFoxtrot |
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 JonnyFoxtrot Trackday Trickster

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| DrDonnyBrago |
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 DrDonnyBrago World Chat Champion

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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

Joined: 21 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

Joined: 21 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| nowhere.elysium |
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 nowhere.elysium The Pork Lord

Joined: 02 Mar 2009 Karma :    
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 Posted: 15:23 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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| chris-red wrote: | | DonnyBrago wrote: |
Thats what I want, modern 600's sports bikes are stupidly fast, a peaky, less powerful 400 that revved up to 20k+ would be awesome. |
You would be in the minority if you where going to buy a new bike and you could get a more powerful, more reliable (would have to be if the 4 reved to 20k) bike for the same money.
The only reason they where built was because in Japan there was a restriction on motorcycle engine size. |
I'd like a revvy 400, too, in truth. Just wish they still made them. The Hornet 250 at the BBQ was utter awesomeness incarnate: sounds like a banshee, just keeps on revving, and goes fairy well. ____________________ '10 SV650SF, '83 GS650GT (it lives!), Questionable DIY dash project, 3D Printer project, Lasercutter project |
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| whitedevil |
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 whitedevil World Chat Champion

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| nowhere.elysium |
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 nowhere.elysium The Pork Lord

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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

Joined: 21 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:21 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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Everybody knows 400's are for girls,
 ____________________ Well, you know what they say. If you want to save the world, you have to push a few old ladies down the stairs.
Skudd:- Perhaps she just thinks you are a window licker and is being nice just in case she becomes another Jill Dando.
WANTED:- Fujinon (Fuji) M42 (Screw on) lenses, let me know if you have anything. |
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 16:42 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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Hey! Girls and short-arses.
Personally I'd love to see some new lightweight fuel efficient 350-500s commuters being produced, but it's not going to happen.
All the margins are on big bikes, emissions regs make it prohibitively expensive to develop a full range of engines, the 3rd Driving License Directive is about to make anything under 500cc worthless, and as you point out, small bikes are perceived to be for girls (short arses, arse bandits, ...)
That said, maybe the Chinese will pick up the ball if the Japs and Europeans drop it. They're already doing a few in the 230-400cc range. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| MarkJ |
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 MarkJ World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Apr 2006 Karma :   
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| ms51ves3 |
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 ms51ves3 Super Spammer

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| Ingah |
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 Ingah World Chat Champion
Joined: 10 Apr 2009 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:34 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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| Rogerborg wrote: | Hey! Girls and short-arses.
Personally I'd love to see some new lightweight fuel efficient 350-500s commuters being produced, but it's not going to happen.
All the margins are on big bikes, emissions regs make it prohibitively expensive to develop a full range of engines, the 3rd Driving License Directive is about to make anything under 500cc worthless, and as you point out, small bikes are perceived to be for girls (short arses, arse bandits, ...)
That said, maybe the Chinese will pick up the ball if the Japs and Europeans drop it. They're already doing a few in the 230-400cc range. |
+1. ____________________ -- Ingah |
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| Moo. |
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 Moo. World Chat Champion
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| salty21 |
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 salty21 World Chat Champion

Joined: 07 Jun 2006 Karma :  
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 Posted: 18:18 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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unless you have a small penis or like bragging down the pub then a 400 is perfect for road riding. I suppose the only downside to them is motorways but you could easily play with gearing for that.
personally i've never seen the need for 1000cc superbikes for the road apart from bragging rights and a general ego boost.
each to their own i suppose. ____________________ 04 NSR 125(sold) ---- 03 CBR 600rr(sold) ----90 pan euro ST1100 ' ' ----02 CG 125
94 CB400 Super Four ---- 2000 VTR SP1 (sold) ---- 08 ninja p8f(sold, meh) ----05 CBR600rr  |
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| Benson_JV |
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 Benson_JV World Chat Champion
Joined: 04 May 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 18:26 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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| MarkJ wrote: | | Rogerborg wrote: | the 3rd Driving License Directive is about to make anything under 500cc worthless |
How come? |
Taken from www.bikerforum.co.uk
| Quote: | The likely scenario for the UK will be :
* Age 16 CBT Provisional Moped, Theory and hazard perception test, Off road manouvres test, on road test. Full P licence.
* Age 17 CBT Provisional A1 motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 125cc bike. Full A1 licence. Restricted to 125cc 14 BHP for 2 years.
* Age 19 CBT Provisional A2 motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 33 BHP bike greater than 500cc. Full A2 licence. Restricted to 47 BHP for 2 years.
* Age 21 CBT Provisional A motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 47 BHP bike greater than 600cc. Full A licence.
* Unrestricted Direct Access will remain but at age 24 years.
It sounds complicated.... It is complicated.... Look, suppose you are 17 years old and you want a bike licence.
* There's 3 steps, at 17, 19, 21 years old.
* Each step involves theory, off-road, and on-road tests.
* Each step must be taken on a bigger bike than you are currently allowed to ride, and practiced for under Instructor supervision.
A wicked but subtle change (buried in the small print) is the proposed minimum test vehicles. 500cc bikes don't exist (they're 496 or 498). We suspect simple ignorance is the reason why every "learner bike" in existence will be useless from 2011 at huge expense to the public / training industry. |
____________________ Willson - "If you go out on that CBR600 in the winter, you're going to do more miles on your side than on your wheels."
Riding: CBR600FW Driving: Audi A6
Previous Bikes: '96 Bandit 600, '96 GPz305 |
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 19:40 - 26 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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That's actually out of date. Wonder of wonders, the EU actually listened, and reduced the requirement for A2 to 400cc+. In practice that means a "500" like the GS500 / GPZ500 / CB500 / ER-5.
But note that training schools will need 600cc+ bikes - so actually "650" as the "600" bikes are slightly under 600cc - for A1 tests. So training schools will need to upgrade their fleets to SV650s or similar (I've seen a local school switching to Hyosung GT650s). Depending on the exact interpretation (still to be seen) they may end up using those 650s to do both A2 and A1 tests rather than running a fleet of both 650s and 500s, so new riders are likely to be training on 650s even for A2.
Now... A2 lets you ride any engine size, generating up to 35kW. Yay, but the GPZ 500, CB500 and ER-5 all generate more than that! The only "500cc" road bike that's slightly under 35kW is the GS500, at 34.3 kW.
Anyway, long story short, if you get an new A2 license, then chances are that you'll be used to a 650 - possibly a full power one - and you'll have to restrict any 500cc+ bike (except the GS500). So after you pass, are you really going to want to get a smaller bike than the one you trained and passed on, and are already used to, and still have to pay to restrict it? I'm not seeing it.
This is just speculation until we see the actual legislation - due any day now - and how training schools react, but however it plays out, the result is going to be to push new riders onto bigger bikes, rather than encourage them to ride smaller ones. Exactly the opposite of what was intended, but that's Brussels for you. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| chris-red |
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 chris-red Have you considered a TDM?

Joined: 21 Sep 2005 Karma :   
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 16:36 - 27 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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A late model CBF500 is definitely top of my wanted list when my restriction runs out next year.
It's teeth grindingly disappointing that they've dropped it from the range. The CBF600 won't leave you much change out of £6000, will be more expensive to run and insure, and masses 40kg more.
Thanks, but no thanks, Honda, that's way more bike than I need. Introducing bigger, heavier, more expensive bikes just as the economy started to circle the drain? Nice one! No wonder new bike sales have been plummeting for the past couple of years. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| ThoughtContro... |
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 ThoughtContro... World Chat Champion

Joined: 14 Aug 2008 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:11 - 27 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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| Benson_JV wrote: |
Taken from www.bikerforum.co.uk
| Quote: | The likely scenario for the UK will be :
* Age 16 CBT Provisional Moped, Theory and hazard perception test, Off road manouvres test, on road test. Full P licence.
* Age 17 CBT Provisional A1 motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 125cc bike. Full A1 licence. Restricted to 125cc 14 BHP for 2 years.
* Age 19 CBT Provisional A2 motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 33 BHP bike greater than 500cc. Full A2 licence. Restricted to 47 BHP for 2 years.
* Age 21 CBT Provisional A motorcycle, Theory & hazard test. Off road test, on road test using 47 BHP bike greater than 600cc. Full A licence.
* Unrestricted Direct Access will remain but at age 24 years.
It sounds complicated.... It is complicated.... Look, suppose you are 17 years old and you want a bike licence.
* There's 3 steps, at 17, 19, 21 years old.
* Each step involves theory, off-road, and on-road tests.
* Each step must be taken on a bigger bike than you are currently allowed to ride, and practiced for under Instructor supervision.
A wicked but subtle change (buried in the small print) is the proposed minimum test vehicles. 500cc bikes don't exist (they're 496 or 498). We suspect simple ignorance is the reason why every "learner bike" in existence will be useless from 2011 at huge expense to the public / training industry. |
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That is the most retarded scheme imaginable. Typical EU tho.
I thought they were getting rid off the off road mod 1 rubbish, as it's "too dangerous"  ____________________ Prize cunt
--
"In a world of universal deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act" - George Orwell |
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| Serendipity |
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 Serendipity World Chat Champion

Joined: 07 Jun 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:19 - 27 Jan 2011 Post subject: |
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I’ve done my current commute on a CBR600, RXS100, FireBlade and now a CB500 and the 500 is definitely the best tool for the job.
If I had to cover miles of clear twisty road I’d probably favour the sports bikes, but even then the CB500 isn’t far behind on the open road unless you’re talking nutty speeds. However with my mostly urban journey the faster bikes are wasted (still did four years on the Blade though).
The RXS isn’t a bad alternative and it was useful to have a much lighter bike in the snow and ice, but it just doesn’t have the road presence and speed to keep up with briskly accelerating cars. And I’m not talking supercars here, but getting run off the road by a hormonal Asian woman in a Micra is never good for your self esteem.
I was lucky with my CB500 finding a stupidly low mileage 1995 version. It’s still got less than 10k on the clock and feels like new. The fuel economy is good, but there’s realistic performance there when you need it. You can chuck it about in the corners and the low first gear is great for crawling through the traffic. Best of all, with the thumping twin and a fairly free breathing pipe it feels like a proper bike from a time when men were men and hedges had holes in them.
https://i221.photobucket.com/albums/dd227/serendipity_uk/CB500/IMGP7402.jpg
Ignore the garish pink graphics though...  ____________________ 2016 CBF1000F - Commuter heaven | 1994 CBR600FR - Awaiting defibrillation |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 15 years, 17 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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