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| binfieldx |
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 binfieldx Borekit Bruiser

Joined: 28 Mar 2013 Karma :    
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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| binfieldx |
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 binfieldx Borekit Bruiser

Joined: 28 Mar 2013 Karma :    
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| Joeval |
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 Joeval Borekit Bruiser
Joined: 13 Mar 2013 Karma :   
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| binfieldx |
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 binfieldx Borekit Bruiser

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| Matt B |
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 Matt B World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 May 2012 Karma :     
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| blurredman |
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 blurredman World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Sep 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:21 - 29 Apr 2013 Post subject: |
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I did mine on a moped..
I then learned gears in my own time on a CG that I had bought..
But then again, I did already have a car licence, so I knew how it all worked, but getting used to it on a bike can take time, Half a day isn't always long enough! ____________________ CBT: 12/06/10, Theory: 22/09/10, Module 1: 09/11/10, Module 2: 19/01/11
Past: 1991 Honda CG125BR-J, 1992 (1980) Honda XL125S, 1996 Kawasaki GPZ500S, 1979 MZ TS150.
Current: 1973 MZ ES250/2 - 18k, 1979 Suzuki TS185ER - 10k, 1981 Honda CX500B - 91k, 1987 MZ ETZ250 (295cc) - 40k, 1989 MZ ETZ251 - 52k. |
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| cromwell |
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 cromwell Traffic Copper

Joined: 07 May 2011 Karma :  
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| thepuma |
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 thepuma World Chat Champion

Joined: 16 Jul 2012 Karma :   
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| Polarbear |
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 Polarbear Super Spammer

Joined: 24 Feb 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:16 - 30 Apr 2013 Post subject: |
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Industrial estates on a Sunday, and supermarket car parks after they close are wonderful places to practice. As said, get your CBT then get a bike and practice. It will come  ____________________ Triumph Trophy Launch Edition |
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| Teflon-Mike |
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 Teflon-Mike tl;dr

Joined: 01 Jun 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 10:03 - 30 Apr 2013 Post subject: |
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Think hard.
You have a 'problem'... or two; you have identified that much.
1/ Manual handling - you cant get even a tiddler on it's centre stand..... yet.
2/ Co-Ordinating gears & Clutch
3/ Slow Speed Control & significantly footing at a stop.
You say you are little, and your instructor suggests you may always struggle with Manual Handling and possibly slow-speed control and footing.....
I'm sanguine on that notion. Bottom line, you shouldn't. Some can master such things with technique. Few shorties on here will tell you they can ride bigger bikes.... but you are struggling with a little 125.
I have a little lillipution freind who cant be six stone wringing wet, and I don't think she has ever had to pay VAT on her cloths, becouse she's never grown out of childs sizes!
She used to ride an old Meriden Triumph Bonaville; Hefty kickstart beast of old, as an every day rider Used to put the boys to shame, the apparent ease she put that on its stand or hefted the kick-start! It CAN be done.....
But the question is can YOU do it?
And, probably as important.... do you WANT to do it?
Yeah... you have a plan. Side-step the frustration of failure by doing CBT on a twist and go, to get your DL196.... then get your own bike and practice, practice practice.
Could work..... and good on you for wanting to try and not being put off.
BUT... saying you dont want to be a danger to any-one; you aren't really, are you.
CBT compulsary basic training isn't a test, its a lesson. You are in a controlled enviroment, with a qualified instructor on hand to offer help and advice and assistance if needed.
You go practice solo, even in a car-park, you wont have that back-up; you'll be on your own.
And I do wonder, whether if you make mistakes, with no one to tell you whether you are doing good or bad, or to offer advice, you may simply carry on, muffing stuff, getting more and more frustrated, until bike gets put away, possibly with a broken brake lever or something, and you just loose heart, and that enthusiasm you have at the minute to master it.
In that potentiality; £80 CBT courses, are could be less wasted money than the £100's spent on a bike, insurance and gear, to get you no further forwards. And with the proffessional advice and assistance, may be more likely to get you where you want to go.
I can see the frustration and worry, about the money; but its about recognising the 'value' in what you buy.
Bike is just a bike. Metal and Plastic. Little more. A bike cant 'teach' you how to ride, no more than owning a piston ring compressor can teach you to rebuild an engine. Its just a tool, some-how you still need to aquire the know-how to use it.
Lessons... no, you dont get much if anything you can see, or hold, or touch, or show any-one. BUT, you get know-how. Goes in your head, and once there, is there a life time. Never wears out; costs nothing to run, and works on ANY bike you will ever own.
And I like to offer the suggestion to value it by; How much is a crash hat worth? £50? £100? £150? Yeah you can see a crash-hat, you can touch a crash-hat, but whats it WORTH?
Value comes from doing its job. Saving your head if you fall off.
Which means it only has value IF you fall off, AND if you bump your head. And one bump? Well, its spent. Used up. Chuck it in the bin. Good value if its done its job.
BUT, training. Harder to 'see' the value; but how much is it worth to NOT fall off and to NOT need that crash hat?
Very hard to count the number of times you DONT fall off.....
But THAT is the value in training.
And I have to say, an £80 CBT course, the stuff you are tought in that, that SO OFTEN will save you falling off, and give the same value and more, than a £80 crash helmet, time over time over time over time....... HAS to be good value for money.
So... how do those thoughts effect your thinking on your plan?
Getting a CBT cert is only part of the problem here; the bigger one is, here and now, you cant ride a motorbike. Sorry to put it brutally, but face facts. You just cant do it.
So whats the 'best' way to get that know how, and gain that skill so you CAN ride a motorbike?
Going it alone, trial end error.... its called the school of hard knocks.... and with good reason. Do you have enough enthusiasm to ride through them knocks and keep trying and trying and trying again, until you get it right... on your own?
THAT I think is the big question.
Your plan, I think, is probably fairly sound. End of the day in days of yore, it's how we learned when there was no such thing as CBT. But... bit of training could still go a long way to help. ____________________ My Webby'Tef's-tQ, loads of stuff about my bikes, my Land-Rovers, and the stuff I do with them!
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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| Ayrton |
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 Ayrton World Chat Champion

Joined: 02 Sep 2010 Karma :  
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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 11:20 - 30 Apr 2013 Post subject: |
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I was going to suggest looking at a YBR125 custom, for the confidence inspiring low height. I believe that doesn't even come with a centre stand. "Problem" solved. ____________________ 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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| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
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 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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| Imperial_Maniac |
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 Imperial_Maniac Renault 5 Driver
Joined: 09 Nov 2012 Karma :    
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| Rogue_Shadow |
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 Rogue_Shadow World Chat Champion
Joined: 10 May 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:58 - 02 May 2013 Post subject: Re: Failed CBT..Retake on auto? |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 61 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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