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Weight & 125cc's

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Manchop
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PostPosted: 04:40 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Weight & 125cc's Reply with quote

Hey again people;

I'm gonna get this out in the open for a friend that is wanting to do his CBT with me, but is worried about his weight and if a 125 (Cruiser/Chopper) will be able to pull his weight, and if the bike will produce at least 50+ mph

He is 20st, and believes he cannot go on the roads as a 125cc bike will not be able to reach 30 mph while he is on it, though we plan to buy cruiser/chopper type bikes.

What do you guys think? Should he continue is basically what he asks.


Thanks in advance for any responses, hopefully nice ones as he reads replies with me :-p haha
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 05:17 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

It's more about drag than weight - i.e. size. I'm not exactly svelte, and my kids're a good five stone each. With me and one of them on we're well over fifteen stone, well over. And the both the 125s of mine will do 50, on the straight and level. Dips below on hills and against the wind, for sure. But anyway - it's not about weight so much as drag.
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wr6133
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PostPosted: 07:58 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'm 16 stone and the only 125 I have not been able to get to 60 or more is one of those semi auto/clutchless Honda step through things. My old Jinlun would manage 60 with the wife on the back and that was a combined weight of just under 23 stone, just took longer to get there. So he should be fine though his body would probably thank him if he lost some weight.
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andyscooter
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PostPosted: 08:21 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

wouldnt reccomend chinese criusers though as they tend to get stuck at 50mph and are underpowered
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wr6133
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PostPosted: 08:54 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

andyscooter wrote:
wouldnt reccomend chinese criusers though as they tend to get stuck at 50mph and are underpowered


Owned many?
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The Shaggy D.A.
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PostPosted: 09:27 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Re: Weight & 125cc's Reply with quote

Manchop wrote:
He is 20st, and believes he cannot go on the roads as a 125cc bike will not be able to reach 30 mph while he is on it, though we plan to buy cruiser/chopper type bikes.


My mate's 1976 CB125 coped with me on it when I was 19.5st*. It's more the acceleration that suffers, rather than top speed.



* Inb4 "less eating, more walking", I'm 17st and still dropping Smile
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bamt
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PostPosted: 09:58 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Definitely go for the CBT. It's an experience if nothing else, and it should set his mind to rest about a 125.

But being on the well-built side and wanting to ride a cruiser, well that just means that he should be aiming for DAS at some point then he'll fit in nicely with the Harley crowd without even needing to go on a body building course Wink
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 10:03 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

https://i178.photobucket.com/albums/w269/teflons-torque/Little%20Dreams/100_0067.jpg
This Chinese Cruiserette, would lumber up to 55mph... max.

Didn't really matter if it was ridden solo or if Snowie & I were 2-Up on it. A combined passenger weight well in excess of 20 stone. And the bike itself wasn't exactly anorexic; think the damn thing was about as heavy as her Moto-Guzzi 750!

But I have to say I do not really recommend a Chinese Cruiserette ... I don't really recommend any 125 Cruiserette ... and I struggle to find much to recommend any Chinese bike... for any-one... let alone as a learner-bike, but that's another matter.

Point is your mates 'worry' is unfounded; any 125, even a crappy Chinky Cruiserette should be able to lug his lard to more than 50.. As Trevor said, speed is a function of aerodynamics not weight, really.

The pertinent equation is Power = Drag x Speed, so how fast you go is set by how much power you have, and how much wind resistance there is. Mass only really comes into the equation, Force = Mass x Acceleration, so heavier the 'vehicle', slower it will accelerate, to whatever top speed its power will allow, but it should still get there.

Where bikes are 'slower' with a larger rider on them, it IS mainly because the rider is physically larger, not because they are heavier.

Drag is pretty much proportional to the 'frontal area' presented to wind resistance; and your heavier rider will tend to be taller and wider than a lighter one; so present more of a 'barn door' to the wind, like an air-brake.

But, wind resistance increases exponentially with speed; for an average sized rider, you only need about 3bhp to go 30mph; to go 60mph, you need about 9bhp, so three times the power to get twice the speed; but then it starts ramping much more steeply; 20bhp will get you to around 80, but you need about 30bhp to nudge 100. 60bhp will just about get you to 120.

But, point is that on a power limited 'learner-legal', you dont have the power to go much over 60 anyway, and under 60mph you are on a very shallow portion of the speed/power curve, where it wont really make massive difference... well, in real world mph.

Should your mate carry on? Well, who are we to tell him what to do?

Does he WANT to ride a motorbike, or is he making excuses not to?

Does he want to ride a lightweight or is he making excuses, because they dont fit his aspirations of the kind of bike he would like?

And why is this YOUR problem?

Are you trying to encourage him so you have a riding buddy? Or because HE actually wants to be on a bike?

That line of enquiry needs bottoming out here first; Does he REALLY want to ride a motorbike, what bike, and WHY?

You have to be an enthusiast to ride a bike; its too compromised, uncomfortable, and generally scary other wise, and if some-one HAS the enthusiasm to ride a bike.... they tend not to need much encouragement from other people, they'll do it for themselves... so if he's NOT done it for himself? Well, probably doesn't have the enthusiasm for it, and you are on a road to no-where trying to encourage him.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 10:21 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Ah, good old Teffers, putting people off biking since 1867.

Tell your mate to get a Honda Superdream. All the pushing will see those pounds just melt away.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 11:32 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

Weight has remarkably little effect on top speed (ie, to do 60mph needs very roughly 40 lbs of thrust, and it takes as a rule of thumb 1% of the weight in pounds of the bike / rider to overcome, so 20 stone in total only requires 2.8lbs of thrust to move). But heavy tends to mean big, and that affects aerodynamics.

But plenty of cheap 4 stroke 125s struggle to do a decent speed whoever is riding them.

All the best

Keith
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hedgehugger
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PostPosted: 12:01 - 17 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

I had a Yamaha SR125. Not the fastest bike to start with. When I pillioned my daughter there was a combined weight of around 20 stone. It would get up to it's usual speeds eventually, and had no probs up hills, hitting 55 quickly, could maintain that easily.
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Manchop
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PostPosted: 00:10 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the replies guys, it's given him a bit of optimism and he is now committed! (Else he owes me £300 ;D)

- We also mentioned Trikes? (2 wheels at the back) .. what is required to ride a trike that's 125cc? I've looked at the DVLA licence tables and to be honest it's still not crystal clear, and I have also read mixed information on the internet.

Is a 125cc Trike possible on a CBT Provisional License? Curiosity killed the cat :-p
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talkToTheHat
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PostPosted: 01:49 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Look as the max payload for these bikes, some chinese bikes will struggle, japanese workhorses should be ok. I'm 15 stone and used to tour on a GZ125, not to mention doing my shopping and the like, so I'm sure I had the other side of 20 stone on it a few times. It's well within the stamped payload for such a bike.

Worry not, ride more.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 02:25 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

talkToTheHat wrote:
some chinese bikes will struggle, japanese workhorses should be ok.

Pretty racist dude.

https://i61.tinypic.com/21lqq6a.jpg

Prettttty racist.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 08:55 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

What can I say. Sometimes truth does not obey the boundaries of creed, culture or consanguinity.
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sidewinder
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PostPosted: 11:37 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Does it have to be cruiser type.maybe a varadero may suit him better. Thumbs Up
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 13:15 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Manchop wrote:

- We also mentioned Trikes? (2 wheels at the back) .. what is required to ride a trike that's 125cc? I've looked at the DVLA licence tables and to be honest it's still not crystal clear, and I have also read mixed information on the internet.

Is a 125cc Trike possible on a CBT Provisional License? Curiosity killed the cat :-p


This is a very big mine field these day. A trike is like a sub-attomic particle... it can be a a wave or a particle or in two places at once, or none at all, depending on how you look at it!

And first view-point is the Construction & Use regulations that define what's a 'car' and what's a 'motorbike' and makes some stab at defining what falls in between! Next point of view is the Driver's Licencing Regulations.

And 3-wheelers, used to be an area of confusion and loop-holes learners could exploit to ride a 'bike' on a car licence or drive a 'car' on a bike licence, or either without ANY!

But, they have hammered down the hatches under 3rd Dir licence changes, and as far as I am aware, the UK Trike Builder's club, BASICALLY say.... if you want a trike... get full car licence, AND full bike licence to make sure you have the licence entitlement to ride one.

But, from Gov't licenece advisory notes
(https://www.gov.uk/ride-motorcycle-moped/overview)
Quote:
Motor tricycles
Provisional category B car licences and provisional category A licences now only cover you to ride motor tricycles if you have a physical disability. Driving tests for 3-wheeled vehicles are only available for physically disabled drivers.


So, if you are able-bodied; default is NO you cant ride a trike (unsupervised) on L-Plates. (any more)
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MCW
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PostPosted: 14:50 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tell him to get a varadero 125. Not only will it cope with his weight, he won't look like a bear on a tricycle on it. And they're luvverly. I cried when the chap who bought mine rode off on it.
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Yaka
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PostPosted: 21:32 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

MCW wrote:
Tell him to get a varadero 125. Not only will it cope with his weight, he won't look like a bear on a tricycle on it. And they're luvverly. I cried when the chap who bought mine rode off on it.


this as a fatteh bloke ( im 22 stones) currently enjoying the weather on my varadero. ive no problems getting up to speeds and it handles very steep hills much better than the 125 i did my cbt ride on.
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merquis00
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PostPosted: 21:46 - 18 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

^ my neighbour had a varadero and he was a fellow fatty, he looked normal/non circus-like on it and used it for work everyday without trouble. Thumbs Up

WRX (or another of the same style) is also a good option, I'm 17 stone and "short" but my weight pushes the bike down a bit and i can touch the floor, it also reaches and stays at 60+ without much effort.
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talkToTheHat
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PostPosted: 00:37 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

the varadero is an ace bike, at the top end of the 15 horse limit, really big so even a giant of a man can't make it look like a mini-moto. Favoured weapon of some of the local 125 warriors. I considered getting one once, but was put off by the high seat as I have really short legs.
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Manchop
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PostPosted: 01:19 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the replies and the giggles (Japanese vs China thing haha) Yeah that Varadero he dislikes, does't like the style of it at all unfortunately.

What do you guys believe is the top end of the speed section in regards to cruisers/choppers? I know they're not built for speed etc, just curious.

I also noticed something, which is again confusing me to high-hell.

My provisional driving license states;
Quote:
- A // from 2011
- B // From 2011

They both just say A & B, no A1 or anything like that...

so....

According to .GOV

Quote:
Category A

You can drive:

motorbikes with a power output more than 35kW or a power to weight ratio more than 0.2kW/kg
motor tricycles with a power output more than 15kW


~ I haven't got much of a clue about licensing and such, and it's really confusing, but isn't 35kW roughly 250-400cc ?

Or am I just getting way too hopeful to make it easier on myself haha :p
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 07:08 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

"Provisional". There are a list of conditions to which you need to adhere in order to use that provisional entitlement.

Arrow Have completed (or presumably be on, although I've actually never seen that explicitly spelled out) a CBT course.
Arrow Be displaying L plates front and rear.
Arrow Be an AM category moped.
Arrow Be at least 17 and on an A1 category (<=125cc <=11kW <= 0.1 kW/kg) bike.
Arrow Be at least 19 and on a bike making up to 35kW and not derived from a bike making twice its power and not making more than 0.2 kW/kg, and wearing fluorescent (or at night, retro-reflective) clothing and be in radio contact with a certified DAS instructor in possession of his certificate with no more than one other A2 or A provisional Learner in contact.
Arrow Be at least 24, or 2 years after passing A2, on any bike, wearing fluorescent (or at night, retro-reflective) clothing and be in radio contact with a certified DAS instructor in possession of his certificate with no more than 1 other A2 or A provisional Learner in contact.

Can you see why they don't print all that on the license? Wink
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Last edited by Rogerborg on 11:59 - 19 May 2014; edited 1 time in total
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 10:51 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Manchop wrote:
What do you guys believe is the top end of the speed section in regards to cruisers/choppers? I know they're not built for speed etc, just curious.

Well, in 1983 Honda decided that what the American market really needed was a Techno-Cruiser; something to show just how behind the times an Over-Head-Valve Harley really was; and so built the VF1100 Magna Super-Cruiser.
https://globalcarbrands.com/i/honda/honda-vf-1100-c-magna/honda-vf-1100-c-magna-10.jpg
Water-Cooled V-Four engine with 16 valves & Double-Overhead cams; quad-carbs and a digital dash-board... it was VERY 80's Kitch; But it had almost 120bhp and could go almost 130mph, and was almost as fast, at least in a straight line, as the contemprary liter 'sports bikes'.
And it prompted Yamaha to make the Max:-
https://images.motorcycle-usa.com/PhotoGallerys/Yamaha-vmax.jpg
1200cc, Quad-Cam, 16v V-Four, in 1985 and for a few years beyond , the 'Max claimed to be the worlds most powerful standard production motorcycle, with I think 145bhp, and a top speed of over 140mph.
Both of these bikes, out the crate, could drop the standing quarter in the middle 10's, the sort of time that's still pretty respectable for a pro-street muscle car burning pump petrol; and you could take one to a Run-What-You-Brung tomorrow, and set a time that would be in the same bracket as blokes on much more modern machines like Busas and Blades; there wouldn't be a lot that didn't have stretched swing arms that would be much quicker, if you launched it well.

SO... with those 'old dinosaurs' created at the very inception of the term 'cruiser', setting the bench-mark for how 'fast' one might go....

What REALLY is the question? Its about as 'open' as asking if motorbikes are faster than cars.

What, top speed? 0-60? Quarter-Mile? Point-To-Point? Round a Track? What, Where, How?

And what IS a 'cruiser'? I derided the 125 'cruiser-style' 125's as cruiserettes, because, to me, they aren't really cruisers; 'idea' of a cruiser is a bike that's laid-back, easy riding 'Cruising', something to chugg along at the double-nickel highway limit, taking in the scenery.

Bikes get thier stability from speed; and you dont want it to go too quick; so you want weight to make it planted and stable on the road, and raked forks and long wheel-base to make it 'lazy' steering, and not wandering about on the road or nervouse and needing to be corrected all the while; and you want a BIG engine, that's again, 'lazy'. Doesn't have to be hugely powerful to make the thing go silly-speed, but, you want low down grunt, so that you can let it chugg in a high gear and not have to work the gearbox to make it change speed.

Little 125 with barely 10bhp? Doesn't really tick the boxes, does it?

Yamaha's little 535 Virago, has for a very long time been the default 'My First Cruiser';
https://www.motorcyclespecs.co.za/Gallery%20%20A/Yamaha%20XV535SE%2094.jpg
40bhp V-Twin, it can just about break into tripple figure speeds; its a very 'sweet' little motorcycle, and just about sets the base-line for a Cruiser that can tick the boxes.

Harley 883 'Piglet'. H-D's entry level cruiser, almost 900cc's of Evo Engine; aprox 50bhp and a top speed of just over 100mph; it's the 'baby' of the Harley Range, again, setting base line for a smaller cruiser.

Going up from there, you have huge range of more or less cruiserified bikes; and while engine size might go up, top speeds dont go up much; its not what they are about; the extra displacement and extra power is about making the motor's lazier, so they dont have to be worked so hard.

And with good reason; they are 'naked' motorcycles. Anything over about 90mph is a little bit breezy, and wind pressure is like having a small woman sitting on you're chest, and it gets tiring after a while; (Well, riding a naked motorcycle over 90mph... I think I can tolerate a small woman, better still a naked small woman sat on me for rather longer Wink) 100-110 you start getting buffeted by turbulance, which is uncomfortable; and much over that, you are hanging on, trying not to be a parachute.

Now, on my 'naked' street-bike, at speeds approaching triple figures, I'm sat in the 'hunter' riding position; like a horse rider, upright, back straight, bum over stirrups, and I can lean 'in' to the wind to take pressure off, or even adopt the 'Jockey' position, like a horse jockey, getting my head down and pushing my feet back, to make myself smaller and get out of a lot of that wind.

A 'Cruiser' tends to the 'lancer' riding position; feet-forwards, leaning back; which is comfortable... and great if you are 'tilting' and about to get hit by a lance... but... not so great at speed, as stretched to the handle-bars there's not a lot you can do to lessen the wind pressure., except slow down.

So the actual 'style' of cruisers, makes them just about 100mph motorcycles, regardless of what the specs might say.

As for 125's? Like I said, I don't class them as 'cruisers' they have the styling, but they are about as much a real 'cruiser' as a YZF-R125 is a real 'Super-Sports'. Has the 'look' but thats where the similarities stop.

Earlier I showed you a picture of my O/H's Chinese Cruiserette; a bike you actually had on your short list; the AJS Regal Raptor DD125E

If we are talking 125 Cruiserettes; well, as far as the Chinky ones go, it's by far not the worst. Build quality was pretty good for a Chink, and it's performance was not far off par. That one was a 2004 model I think, and pretty much a bolt for bolt clone of the Honda Rebel. Snowie had the original sales invoice which showed it cost nearly two grand, new, almost ten years ago; so it was far from a 'cheap' Chink, though it was about 2/3 the list price of Japanese build 125 Rebel.

The twin cylinder, single carb, over-head cam 'Benly' based motor, used in the Honda CM & CD 125's has always been criticised for being under-powered and over-complicated, against other 125's. I'm a Benly fan, and the critasism is a bit unfair, and the knockers have probably never ridden one and only looked at the specs, where, sure, compared to a CG125, numbers would make you ask 'why'. But, the little twin is a smooth motor, at low revs its not 'lumpy' like a single, and it has quite a bit more useful 'low' and 'mid-range' power.... not that any 125 is wonderfully endowed, BUT, the little twin does have the quality. And the Chinese Licence built version doesn't seem to have suffered so much in Chinese tolerence wandering or de-tuning to meet ever tighter EU emission controls as the singles.

But, like I said... real world, 55mph. That was its lot. And took a lot of cog-swapping to keep it up there.. wasn't really 'Cruising'! Put a grin on my face, I have to admit; sort of took me back to the 80's and old Jap bikes with unpredictable brakes tyres and suspension; approaching every bend with trepidation, and daring wondering how much you dare scrubb off to go round it!

The 'premier' Japanese 125 cruiserettes, no longer in any-ones catalogues as far as I know, were the Honda 125 Shaddow, that used the Veradaro's 125's V-Twin (Though actually that's probably other way about; Veradaro used Shaddow's engine) and was the most expensive 125 in Honda's range; likewise Yamaha's XV125 and Suzuki's 125 Intruder.

A freind of mine had a 125 Intruder for about three years till he paid off the finance... silly boy... larger lad, he liked it well enough and as long as he knew no better and had little else to compare it to. Real world? 'about' 60mph. Not worlds away from the Raptor.

EZ on here had the Suzuki 125 Marauder; which is the cruiserified 125 commuter single; again, not as 'refined' as the Intruder or the other twins, but very similar stats; again 'about' 55 flat out.

So, down to the generic Chinky Cruiserettes. Most are parts bin specials; confections of the various licence built Japanese bikes.

Common one, and I think Lexmoto sold a couple, used the twin-port CG copy engine in the copy Rebel frame; think it was badged 'Texan' or something like that. Gave it chunkier styling and twin exhaust pipes to look more like a twin, but wasn't. Again, top speeds claimed around 60-65, but utterly notional, real world 50-55, but the least refined engine in heaviest frame, not exactly brisk off the mark or wonderfully responsive.

Then there's the Nevada? Or similar generic Chinese Semi-Cruiserified commuters; CG copy engine, and probably CG frame with shorter shocks and longer forks to cruiserify it, like the Yamaha SR, and probably dressed out with generic tank and bodywork from SR copies. Again, less refined, and whatever the stats may say, usually around 60mph, real world 55ish.

The differences are not so much in how fast any of them MIGHT go as how comfortably they might do it, and bottom line is that ALL of them are going to be at thier performance limit trying to hold road-speed down an unrestricted 60mph road.

BUT... so would almost ANY genuinely learner-legal 125, certainly a four-stroke one.

Veradaro owners tend to be very enthusiastic about thier models performance and claim they can do and sustain 70 pretty well... I dont doubt them, though I allow a fair bit for newby nievity and speedo optimism, and owning a couple of genuine GPS checked 70mph four-stroke 125's.... well, you might hold an indicated 70 on a flat bit of by-pass reasonably well, but I'd deffer to the double-nickel and get in the truck-stack in the inside lane, to save a bit for head-winds and hills! while on an unclassified country road, with a 60 limit? I know that I'd be working the bike hard and being a bit brave come corners to keep speeds up near the blanket limit!

NO 125 is 'fast'. Even the fastest of the hot-snot 'fast' 125's the illegal on L-Plates full power two strokes, that might just about scare the 'ton'. Might be 'fast' compared to majority of L-Plate tiddlers, BUT... in wider biking world, you struggle to find much that's ACTUALLY that slow; they are about as powerful and as fast as an old Honda 250 commuter single!

So, your ambition of a 125 Cruiserette? Well, they are SLOW bikes. In a world of slow bikes.. they aren't THAT much slower than anything else. But, they don't 'cruise', and they take as much or more rider work to keep up as other styles of 125.

NOW... lot of mental machinations obviously going on, and you and your mate are obviously enjoying the imaginative adventure of exploring the possibilities... BUT

SUMMER'S BURNING BOYS

Stop Thinking - Start Riding.

You have to start some-where, and if cruisers are the 'style' of bike you like, and you want to do the 125 'thing' instead of going for an A2 and a bigger-bike.... GET THE FUCK ON WITH IT!

You'll find out what its all about quick enought once you DO IT.

And you'll probably find half your worries and ideas get blown out the window.

Off the blocks, as new riders, the bikes vital statistics ENT going to be the limiting factor, it will be your evolving skill levels; THIS is why we have 'Learner-Bikes' so you can go learn on one.

There are nicer ones and nastier ones, but for the most part, they are all adequete for the job, and only real worry is whether they are value for money doing it.

Stop deliberating; get your cash in a heap, and go see what you can ACTUALLY buy for it; cos unless you buy new, your choices will mainly be constricted by what people actually have to sell, as much as by what you might actually want.

And summer's wastin'!
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Current Bikes:'Honda VF1000F' ;'CB750F2N' ;'CB125TD ( 6 3 of em!)'; 'Montesa Cota 248'. Learner FAQ's:= 'U want to Ride a Motorbike! Where Do U start?'
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wr6133
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PostPosted: 11:58 - 19 May 2014    Post subject: Reply with quote

Mike what lexmoto sold as a Texan was a Jinlun 125-11. Its the twin engine not single only difference over the actual Jinlun badged one is they used clear indicators. It's a copy of a marauder frame (the jl125-13 is the rebel clone). They also sold the Nevada but called it the torro that has the single (name change was because another importer had rights to "Nevada"). They also sold some pile of crap called the "lowride" which by all accounts is something to avoid like the plague I've yet to hear about lowride owner who doesn't have buyers remorse.

I've ridden a few Nev/torro's and Jinluns they edge a bit over 60 though the Jinluns seem to do it easier.

Nothing wrong with 125 cruiserettes, if you are stuck on a 125 and want something relatively chilled out. I loved my 125-11 only went up to a 250 because the steep hill 1/4 mile from my house and motorways became a pain in the arse.
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