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| EViS |
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 EViS L Plate Warrior
Joined: 28 Dec 2016 Karma :  
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 Posted: 18:24 - 05 Feb 2017 Post subject: Too Short To Ride - Advice? |
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Me and the girlfriend have got through the CBT and have our Theory booked for next weekend, then onto the DAS. However, during the CBT we discovered that she's not the tall legged blonde we always thought she was . At 5ft height and a petite frame, she's having to keep the bike upright on her tiptoes. At the end of the road ride, she stopped at a junction with a severe camber, lost her footing/didn't have enough strength to keep the bike upright, and dropped it. No harm done to her or the bike. However, this 'incident' does bring up questions as to how she will fair with a bigger bike when it comes to the DAS.
Back at the school, our instructor got her on a big bike and popped a piece of 4x2 timber under her feet to show how much more the suspension can be dropped (circa 45mm). This helped, but again, she's tip toeing, only this time with a much heavier machine.
Are there any solutions and/or tips for those vertically challenged riders? Do (big) bikes exist which can be lowered sufficiently? Or is this one of those moments in life when you simply have to suck it up and admit defeat before you even start'? |
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| arry |
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 arry Super Spammer
Joined: 03 Jan 2009 Karma :    
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| secretagentmo... |
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 secretagentmo... Scooby Slapper
Joined: 25 Aug 2016 Karma :     
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 Posted: 18:35 - 05 Feb 2017 Post subject: Re: Too Short To Ride - Advice? |
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| EViS wrote: | Me and the girlfriend have got through the CBT and have our Theory booked for next weekend, then onto the DAS. However, during the CBT we discovered that she's not the tall legged blonde we always thought she was  . At 5ft height and a petite frame, she's having to keep the bike upright on her tiptoes. At the end of the road ride, she stopped at a junction with a severe camber, lost her footing/didn't have enough strength to keep the bike upright, and dropped it. No harm done to her or the bike. However, this 'incident' does bring up questions as to how she will fair with a bigger bike when it comes to the DAS.
Back at the school, our instructor got her on a big bike and popped a piece of 4x2 timber under her feet to show how much more the suspension can be dropped (circa 45mm). This helped, but again, she's tip toeing, only this time with a much heavier machine.
Are there any solutions and/or tips for those vertically challenged riders? Do (big) bikes exist which can be lowered sufficiently? Or is this one of those moments in life when you simply have to suck it up and admit defeat before you even start'? |
She sounds like Mitzi!
https://i1276.photobucket.com/albums/y470/dobba99/Mitzi_zpsfb9o1nup.jpg
Problem is once she has passed her test finding something she can ride, SR500s are pretty rare these days! |
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| kgm |
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 kgm World Chat Champion
Joined: 04 Jun 2015 Karma :   
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| WD Forte |
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 WD Forte World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Jun 2010 Karma :   
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| Snowdonia Rider |
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 Snowdonia Rider World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Oct 2014 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:11 - 05 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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My wife is 5'2" and can do my SV fine. She can get a foot down on my EXC too but it's quite a stretch, but doable. You could look into a Harley Superlow or if that's too cruisery (sp) a Harley Street 750 which is more like a traditional naked. ____________________ I want your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle.
Suzuki GP125 Suzuki GSX600F Suzuki SV650S KTM EXC250F SkyTeam Bongo 125
My YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/SnowdoniaRider |
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| pinkyfloyd |
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 pinkyfloyd Super Spammer

Joined: 20 Jul 2010 Karma :   
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 21:56 - 05 Feb 2017 Post subject: Re: Too Short To Ride - Advice? |
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Means very little.
Inside leg is?
I'm 28" (leg, not height ) on a good day, and have to be somewhat careful about bike choice. Forget trail bikes, but commuters and sports-commuters are generally OK.
Have a look at https://cycle-ergo.com/, but it's not gospel. Seat width and suspension sag can make a lot of difference to the notional seat height. I had no problems with a soft-shocked 30.7" GPZ500, but had a bad moment u-turning (someone else's ) 31" CBR600F on a bad camber.
Lowering options are available, and you might be surprised about how "tall" a bike you can get away with. My F650GS is 33.1" as stock, but mine is factory lowered and I can not only flat foot it both sides, I can actually stand up and be clear of the seat. With all the weight down low, it feels surprisingly light too, and is very stable and confidence inspiring.
Mrs EViS will find something to suit, if she wants to. ____________________ 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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| andy-b2 |
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 andy-b2 Two Stroke Sniffer

Joined: 09 Jan 2014 Karma :   
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 Posted: 04:07 - 06 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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| TUG |
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 TUG World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 04:57 - 06 Feb 2017 Post subject: Re: Too Short To Ride - Advice? |
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| EViS wrote: | Me and the girlfriend have got through the CBT and have our Theory booked for next weekend, then onto the DAS. However, during the CBT we discovered that she's not the tall legged blonde we always thought she was  . At 5ft height and a petite frame, she's having to keep the bike upright on her tiptoes. At the end of the road ride, she stopped at a junction with a severe camber, lost her footing/didn't have enough strength to keep the bike upright, and dropped it. No harm done to her or the bike. However, this 'incident' does bring up questions as to how she will fair with a bigger bike when it comes to the DAS.
Back at the school, our instructor got her on a big bike and popped a piece of 4x2 timber under her feet to show how much more the suspension can be dropped (circa 45mm). This helped, but again, she's tip toeing, only this time with a much heavier machine.
Are there any solutions and/or tips for those vertically challenged riders? Do (big) bikes exist which can be lowered sufficiently? Or is this one of those moments in life when you simply have to suck it up and admit defeat before you even start'? |
EDIT: Forgot this was a school's bike, consider choosing the bike upfront and using that for the training, then:-
Drop the front end by about 10mm by lowering the clamps on the fork legs, see if there is a lowering kit or lower/shorter suspension parts to lower the back end, cut some of the seat padding out to lower the seat height slightly. ____________________ Haz ER-5, innit! |
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| BumpingUglys |
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 BumpingUglys Trackday Trickster

Joined: 12 Oct 2010 Karma :     
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| kev2b4 |
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 kev2b4 Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 14 May 2016 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:54 - 06 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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I'm 5ft 3", i/s leg 29", 55 kg, tried lowering back of my bike by 25mm-- couldn't do it - as has already been lowered- so put up with toes only on the floor, don't really want to lower it any more as not sure what that would do to the handling, but with a pillion is easier as back goes down a little ____________________ previous C50,CD175,GT500,GSX250,CB750KZ,GSX750E,GSX1300R |
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| tom_e |
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 tom_e Brolly Dolly
Joined: 27 Feb 2016 Karma :  
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| andyscooter |
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 andyscooter World Chat Champion

Joined: 30 May 2009 Karma :  
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| hellkat |
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 hellkat Super Spammer

Joined: 12 Jul 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:52 - 06 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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Sportster (Harley)
Mine is quite low slung, and I'm only 5'5" with a 28" inside leg.
It's perfect.
When you ride a Harley, you take a certain amount of flak from other riders, so you have to have confidence in yourself. Harleys are not for sensitive little flowers But "the public" (as opposed to other riders) think Harleys are wonderful for some mad reason, so you get a decent amount of admiring attention.
It's a bit agricultural, but it's not heavy : I can even reverse it just by walking backwards with it (I have a famous lack of strength for holding up bikes). And it has a decent centre of gravity
Although I do/have had quite a few other bikes (Jap) which are considerably taller or heavier, I just find other ways to deal with it, there are few bikes I have been unable to get on. Once you have a confidence in your own ability to ride, you can ride just about anything. Why restrict yourself just cos you'r a short arse. I have a blokey mate who has a proper dinky little best friend blokey mate, and he's ALWAYS ridden a Harley. In London. So don't ever think "Oh I'm too short". ____________________ Not nearly as interesting in real life. |
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| Amber Phoenix |
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 Amber Phoenix Traffic Copper

Joined: 01 Feb 2013 Karma :  
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 Posted: 13:02 - 06 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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My wife is similarly short at just 5' 1 1/2" tall. She was generally fine on smaller 125/250 bikes, due to them being pretty narrow. As for bigger bikes, we've had to be really choosy.
A local training school had a lowered CBF500, which she did a back to biking session on (after many years no riding). She handled it fine, so we've picked up her own one. Shortened rear shock, dropped forks, lowered seat and cut down side stand. She's grand on this, though still can't quite get feet flat on floor.
She did briefly try a ZZR400 (sleeved down ZZR600, so no smaller and heavier!). Not good at all, too wide, big stretch to bars, tits on tank, tippee-toes on floor and heavy clumbersome bike. And that was with seat cut down.
The key thing is to avoid stuff that is wide (pretty much any inline 4), stuff that's bit of a stretch (most sports bikes). There's a fair chance you'll need something with lowered suspension (either shock or dog bones) and a lowered seat (either oem or custom cut down). The BMW F650GS is also a good shout, as this can be had in very lowered form from factory. My sat on one from the Herts BMW training school at a bike show, and was pretty much flat footed on it.
Cruisers are also an option, so long as your arms'n'legs can reach the bars and foot rests! ____________________ Beginner Biker Adventures Blog
Yamaha FZ6 S2 2007 |
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| talkToTheHat |
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 talkToTheHat World Chat Champion

Joined: 21 Feb 2012 Karma :    
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| Billy Balthorpe |
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 Billy Balthorpe Trackday Trickster
Joined: 05 Oct 2008 Karma :  
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| petalbriefs |
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 petalbriefs Traffic Copper

Joined: 22 May 2014 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:38 - 09 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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Ahhh hello
I am just about 5"0 and I have an R6.
Its lowered to the max and I can still only get the ball of one foot down, but I manage.
Confidence is a big factor, once she gets some confidence, she wont need to get both feet down.
You just adapt!  ____________________ Proud owner of an R6 + ZXR400
Honda CBR 125 R - Stolen |
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| BTTD |
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 BTTD World Chat Champion
Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 22:22 - 09 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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FFS.
Thread needs pics.
Edit: On a more serious note, monkey bike.  |
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| Billy Balthorpe |
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 Billy Balthorpe Trackday Trickster
Joined: 05 Oct 2008 Karma :  
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| c-m |
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 c-m World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 22:52 - 09 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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My girlfriend was too short to ride the bikes at two schools. In fact one school took her to another school on the day of the CBT as the duke 125 was too tall. This despite the fact that the person how does bookings for the school sat her on the bike and told her she'd be fine for it. Needless to say, she couldn't confidently touch the floor.
Anyway here's some ladies bike gear in petite sizes
https://www.bikechatforums.com/viewtopic.php?t=318132  |
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| Recluso |
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 Recluso Brolly Dolly

Joined: 16 Mar 2011 Karma :   
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| EViS |
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 EViS L Plate Warrior
Joined: 28 Dec 2016 Karma :  
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 Posted: 17:40 - 25 Feb 2017 Post subject: |
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Thanks for all the replies, most helpful . Today we rented the bikes for the day to get more accustomed to riding on two wheels before the DAS in April. Spent the afternoon riding around towns, villages, A and B roads in the country. We both gained more confidence and specifically Mrs EViS put into practice the advice of watching out for road camber and sliding her ass onto one side of the saddle at stops which comfortably got her entire foot onto the ground :thumb:. We haven't got her any boots with platforms yet, so when we do, she reckons she'll be more than comfortable.
Onwards and upwards, literally . |
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 8 years, 343 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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