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| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
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 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 19:16 - 15 Dec 2012 Post subject: stuff that's not on the CBT that you wish had've been |
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One thing I kept muffing after the CBT was hill starts (the stalling thread reminded me of this). Round here it's so flat - but there's this one junction that's on a gradient, and it's a quiet lane pulling into a comparatively busy A road. I spied my chance, after an eternity of waiting - and....blup. Nothing. What made it dire was that there were two cars behind me. Inside my lid I was all , crimson pulsation unto death.
To make it worse when the next gap finally came I totally over-compensated and gave it a fair fistful of beans, de-clutched and flew out of the junction, and because my positioning hadn't been very good (I like to slant right slightly for a right turn), I arrowed out and nearly ran it up the opposite curb. Ugh. Rubbish.
Course, over the next few days I sorted it all out by doing loads of practising. Luckily for me there was a little hump back bridge along this tiny dead end lane, and I took full advantage.
So yeah - hill starts. If there're no junctions on gradients near you, and you've never really had to get to grips with 'em, they can easily catch you out in those first few days and weeks. What's more, I think a muffed hill start *could* (theoretically) land you in a dangerous situation. Needless to say it's something I wish had been on the CBT. ____________________ "Life is a sexually transmitted disease and the mortality rate is one hundred percent."
Mobylette Type 50 ---> Raleigh Grifter ---> Neval Minsk 125 |
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| Ja7 |
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 Ja7 Crazy Courier

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| U_W v2.0 |
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 U_W v2.0 World Chat Champion

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| andy_uk |
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 andy_uk World Chat Champion

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| J.M. |
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 J.M. World Chat Champion

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| Themightyimp |
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 Themightyimp Crazy Courier
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| Ollie1995 |
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 Ollie1995 Banned

Joined: 25 Oct 2011 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:47 - 15 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Hi, I passed my CBT on the 8th and the only things I struggled with was a hill start, I forgot I needed my brakes for this and rolled backwards down the hill and getting it on the stand. It was only a CG125 but whenever i almost got it on it's stand the bike rotated almost 90 degrees and left me looking a reet tit  ____________________ XR 125, DT125 LC, Greeves Scottish, RS200, XS400, GPX600r
Theory Passed - 18/7/13 MOD1 Booked - 24/9/13 |
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| Ja7 |
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 Ja7 Crazy Courier

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| Dave70 |
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 Dave70 World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Jan 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:38 - 16 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Yeah...I too found the hill start to be a bitch to get the hang of.
Used to either stall it, roll backwards or (and probably the most scary) pull a wheelie. Usually a combination of all three would happen until I cracked it.
In fact, on the way home from the supermarket, I used to take a 10 minute detour to avoid a particularly steep hill start from a stop junction. It turned a 10 min ride home into a 20 min one
Every now and then, if the roads were quiet, I'd give it a go until I mastered it.
Don't have any issue with them now, to the point that I don't even think aboutwhat I'm doing. It soon becomes second nature. |
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| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
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 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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| Matt B |
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 Matt B World Chat Champion

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| ScaredyCat |
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 ScaredyCat World Chat Champion

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| Pigeon |
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 Pigeon World Chat Champion

Joined: 27 Sep 2012 Karma :    
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 Posted: 17:26 - 16 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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| Matt B wrote: |
If I had my way nobody would be able to ride on L plates without being accompanied by an instructor. You pass a full test then you ride. They don't give you a few hours in a car then send you off on your own on L plates for 2 years so why on a bike?
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I may be a bit biased. But I've been wobbling around on CBT's for 7 years. It's cheap transport that also makes me happy.
Just an example, due to icy conditions, I caught bus the other day. My 12min round trip that costs £10/month was £7 for a day and took 3 hours.
I've passed my car test (with theory) and am fairly happy to say that a 4ft wide, 6ft long 80bhp fiesta that will do 100mph and weighs 1000kg is a different kettle of fish compared to a 10bhp, 110kg bike that will barely crack 60mph.
In the time that the CBT has been in operation, I believe there has been a significant drop in new biker deaths. This may be coupled with better bike awareness, car crumple zones, road improvements etc etc
But clearly the CBT has worked in some way.
Should the theory test be done before, interesting, maybe. Same for cars too (including being in with your mum/dad).
| Quote: |
This is the way the DSA wil go in the future, there will be no CBT and riding solo on L plates just a test.
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Your probably right, but I hope not. There has to be a middle ground between safety and practicality. If the barriers to entry are too high, or the risk/reward disparity between bikes and cars narrows too much, people wont bother. If you don't get new people into biking, it will just fade away. The support industries will vanish, insurance, spares, prices etc all rise as people can't make a living selling one item / policy / support service per month.
In terms of anything that I wish was on the CBT. Perhaps something on technique in rain. Also how the brakes effect the bike. I find I use the rear alot more than the front. A little more on using the scenery around you to get better at reading the road.
Also, maybe what to do when you fall off. Such as switching engine off and how to pick the bike up.......maybe this would put people off
But actually, there is a lot of info to absorb in 1 day on the CBT anyway, without adding even more. |
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| socringe |
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 socringe Derestricted Danger
Joined: 04 Dec 2012 Karma :   
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| Pigeon |
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 Pigeon World Chat Champion

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| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
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 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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| U_W v2.0 |
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 U_W v2.0 World Chat Champion

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| Matt B |
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 Matt B World Chat Champion

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| yaigi |
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 yaigi World Chat Champion

Joined: 28 Jul 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:07 - 17 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Putting bike on centre stand was on my CBT, I couldn't get it right first couple of goes but then the instructor said it was all about technique and placement rather than strength and the third time I got it. After that with my own YBR it was easy peasy... but then I got a Fazer last week and now it feels like I'm back to square one - there's definitely some strength involved now! My boyfriend stood and laughed as I tried with all my might, determined little face, he told me to just stick it on the side stand and I was all like "Oooooohhh no, you'd love that wouldn't you....." and then I did it He sure knows how to push my buttons!
Hill starts were on my CBT too, maybe because you'd be hard pushed to find a route that didn't involve one round here, but yeah, it probably varies by school.
The guy who did my CBT said there was no such thing in his day - just decided he wanted a bike, so he bought one, 20 miles away from his house. Having never ridden a bike before in his life, he got the bus there, paid his money, got on the bike, realised he didn't know what to do, knocked on the guys door, got a quick lesson in how to change gear, and attempted the 20 mile death ride home. He did it. And he's never in 30 years had a crash  ____________________ What would you do in life, if you knew you could not fail?
Currently own - Fazer 600, 2000, Red. (But no riding as baby on board atm) |
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| Ribenapigeon |
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 Ribenapigeon Super Spammer

Joined: 20 Feb 2012 Karma :   
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| kernow24 |
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 kernow24 Crazy Courier
Joined: 15 Jun 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 10:57 - 17 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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I don't think there's anything they could realistically teach you on the CBT that would
massively benefit you in real life.
There's no substitute for learning on the roads, and the CBT gives you to basic tools
to do so fairly safely.
You will lean more pottering around for a day than you would learn with extra training
on a CBT / test.
There's only so much an instructor can do to ensure you are fairly safe out on the roads
people have to take some personal responsibility, if they don't feel safe or need extra help
with something, then a couple of hours extra training won't cost much.
I'm sure that most who gain a CBT spend the next how ever long just riding around
aimlessly either to have 'fun' without necessarily realising they are picking up more and
more, or purposefully building on their 'skills'
There's only so much 'theory' you can do before you have to just get out and do it.
An instructor can say to do xxx in any given situation, but as we all know, what is taught and
what you actually do in day to day riding is completely different, and for that reason I
think the CBT is sufficient to give people a set of basic skills to go out in to the wild and
to build on.
Let's face it, you can't really compare the training for a car to a bike, a car has the potential
to do some serious damage to others and the possible 5 people in it. A bike on the other
hand has very little scope to do a similar amount of damage, and the training and the
level / amount of training to achieve this is greater.
Saying that I think a CBT should be spread over 2 days, the first day for the 'theory' and off
road stuff, then a whole day on the road, I'm sure many more would benefit from an extended
road ride.
I'd also like to see the CBT to cover filtering etc, although I'm sure a lot of the decent
schools touch on that and a lot of extras that don't have to be taught. ____________________ ......................................................................... |
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| Ohmz27 |
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 Ohmz27 Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 17 Dec 2012 Karma :    
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 Posted: 13:40 - 19 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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I was amazed when I learned you could ride a machine capable of doing ~65mph, everywhere apart from motorways, with nothing more than a CBT course completion certificate.
A theory test pass cert should be mandatory for people who ride with nothing but a CBT. Not saying schools should decline CBT bookings without a theory cert, but the CBT certificate should be invalid if you dont pass a theory test within 4 or 5 months after passing the CBT, unless you already have a theory pass of course.
But then again, if you reach a safe standard in riding a bike, & know/follow the highway code well enough, there's not much value in a theory test other than meeting the requirements for the full licence. And everything regarding staying safe and obeying road laws should be covered in the CBT. I'd imagine not a lot of people come out of a CBT with a broad knowledge of riding safely, but the potential is there, and the instructors have the power to not hand out CBT certificates to unsafe riders.
The only meaningful things that I learnt whilst practising for my theory test, were things that my instructor went through anyway. ____________________ Full UK Driving Test Pass - 6 / 12 / 2012
Car Insurance Quote Search - 7 / 12 / 2012
Completed CBT - 8 / 12 / 2012, Picking CBF 125 up on 22nd Dec =D |
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| Ribenapigeon |
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 Ribenapigeon Super Spammer

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| Lord Percy |
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 Lord Percy World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Aug 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 14:33 - 19 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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For me I'd say the CBT needs more of the safety drilling into you, instead of just how to ride the bike. I had already learned to ride in India where it's generally a free-for-all and you learn by jumping in at the deep end. So for my CBT I could control the bike already. The safety part was just, "wear gloves, wear helmet, be safe, y'know, bla bla, let's go".
Hill starts didn't even enter my head until I had to do one for the first time on my mod2. Revved a fair bit more than normal, all was fine.
Hill start advice from me would be for you to get used to having your foot pressed on the back brake at EVERY stop out of habit, as it's safer anyway, so then the hill start is just like any other start, to some extent. Also, maybe consider that the hill start is kind of in the same category as slow control, just with so much pressure on the back brake that the bike isn't moving.  |
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| Ohmz27 |
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 Ohmz27 Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 17 Dec 2012 Karma :    
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 16 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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