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| Doomsnite |
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 Doomsnite Traffic Copper

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

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| yen_powell |
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 yen_powell World Chat Champion

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| Doomsnite |
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 Doomsnite Traffic Copper

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| TheCatSatOnTh... |
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 TheCatSatOnTh... Scooby Slapper
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| J.M. |
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 J.M. World Chat Champion

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| arry |
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 arry Super Spammer
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| chickenstrip |
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 chickenstrip Super Spammer

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 Posted: 09:09 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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The situation was made worse in the last ten years or so as many second hand bikes were shipped off to the continent. I've seen guys come over from Europe in an artic, go in a showroom - yep, we'll have that one, that one, that one.....and those bikes disappear from the UK for ever. Why? Partly it has to do with the cost of new bikes in Europe compared to the UK. At one time not long ago, a new R1 in Denmark cost something like twice the price of one in the UK (can't remember exact difference, but you get the picture), so demand for good second hand bikes there was high.
So we lost a lot of our good second hand stock when not many were buying new bikes (in 2010 for instance, at High Beach, a popular bike meet, I think I saw about 2 2010 plates in the whole year). This will take a while to turn around, but bike sales are up by a nice amount this year, so the situation should improve in the next couple of years - fingers crossed. |
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| slowlydoesit |
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 slowlydoesit Could Be A Chat Bot
Joined: 14 Oct 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 09:12 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: Re: Why arent old bikes like old cars |
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| Doomsnite wrote: | Brand new bikes are cheaper than brand new cars but their prices hold so well. Are they just usually in a better condition as not used as often or what? |
Two reasons.
1. Older car = bodywork problems
Bikes age better because they don't have the bodywork that a car requires for a passenger cabin. In a car, the bodywork is an intrinsic and vital part of the structure. If there's a visible crack or a hole in the bodywork of a car it's a serious issue. As the car grows old, all that metal has to be kept in one piece and as rust-free as possible. You don't want rain coming through the roof, broken windows, spray coming through holes in the floor or anything like that.
Compare that to a bike, something like the KMX I'm working on. The bodywork consists of the tank, two small side plastic side panels, the radiator shroud and the cowl around the headlamp. Of those, only the tank is structurally important. Provided that the engine and the other mechanical bits have held up okay, a 25-year old bike like this will be fine to use and will need far less ongoing maintenance than a car of an equivalent age. And even on a faired bike, a cracked panel isn't usually a major issue. The bike will still run and it won't have much of an impact on the rider, who is after all exposed to the elements whatever the state of the bodywork. That's one reason bikes keep their value pretty well relative to cars.
2. Older car = significantly less safe
Another major issue is the rate of technology change in cars, particularly in terms of safety. Things have moved on dramatically over the past quarter-century or even the past decade. Have a major smash in a car of the mid-1980s and most will implode like an egg. Have a major smash in a car from 2010 and you'll be far better protected.
On a bike, well, it's not like modern bikes have huge crumple zones and airbags is it? The only major change in bike safety I can see over the past 20 years is ABS and that has only been genuinely accepted as useful over the past 5 years. So the difference in value between, say, a bike from 2007 and a bike from 1987 is smaller. Ergo, bikes hold their value better. ____________________ Kawasaki KMX200 with broken fixed powervalves and a stutter |
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| G |
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 G The Voice of Reason
Joined: 02 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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| Teflon-Mike |
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 Teflon-Mike tl;dr

Joined: 01 Jun 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 09:18 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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Here in the UK we are obsessed with how old cars are; which was why when they changed the registration coding, they retained the 'year' identifier, and even refined it! In other bits of Europe, they don't identify age on registration and folk buy and sell cars on their condition.
Bikes ENT cars. Share a few common features; they are both means of transport; they both have an engine... but after that, they are as different as Birds and Bees.
Cars are domestic appliances; almost every-one has one; there's 60 million people in the UK, and approximately 30 million cars; with an average 'service life' of about 10 years, 3 million new ones sold every year, changing hands about once every two and a half years; about 10 million cars are sold each year.
There's a lot about, and there's a lot changing hands; the market is pretty much 'saturated'; whilst they all get used pretty similarly, like a washing machine or dish-washer... some might get used a bit harder than others, but within usual limits, 'wear and tear' is pretty much proportional to age.
Bikes? ENT cars. They are more like leisure equipment or sporting goods; a multi-gym or golf clubs, or fishing rods.
So first of all, take away that cultural prejudice associated with CARS, in the UK. It's not particularly helpful to valuing cars, let alone anything else!
Now; as a bit of sporting equipment, would you be worried how old a Multi-Gym was, as long as it had the features you wanted, did the job and was in good condition? Or a set of golf-Clubs, or a Fishing Rod?
As Sporting goods, a bit of hobby Equipment; might have been bought in a pique of enthusiasm, used three times and stuck in a cupboard when novelty wore off. Alternatively, could have been bought by some-one who's enthusiasm grew rather than dwindled, and has been very very hard used.
Use bikes get varies hugely; you get bikes that don't do very many miles; some of them low miles bike might have been ridden very gingerly by less confident rider; other's might have been thrashed mercilessly by one determined to get their thrills on the one Sunny Day off work they have had this month. Some bikes might have cranked significantly high miles; again; some by riders who treat them gently, perhaps touring maybe every week-end; or thrashed, every day, taking the long way to and from work!
CONDITION IS ALL.
While, there is aproximately only one bike on UK roads for every 30 cars... 30 million cars? Less than a million bikes.... That means that there's fewer bikes in the UK in total, than there are cars on sale each year in the UK!
And unlike cars; 'trade' in bikes isn't the same. Cars are big lumps of metal; they tend to get sold or scrapped when people don't need them any-more, as they take up too much space, and aren't much use for anything, and can be a bludy liability with the SORN laws!
Bikes? Old Bikes dont Die... they become 'Projects'! They dont take up much space; they get stuck in the back of sheds, or pulled top bits in garages with ideas of making a cafe-racer or chopper or something. Meanwhile, there are riders who will buy a new bike every year, but there are just as many, who will hang onto bikes for many many years; they dont have such predictable, 3-year ownership periods.
So, answer is, that bikes ENT cars! There's fewer about. Fewer changing hands; and not being such 'disposable' consumer goods, they don't start disappearing after thirteen years!
Disengage 'CAR' thinking, and look at the BIKE not the number-plate. ____________________ 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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| Doomsnite |
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 Doomsnite Traffic Copper

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| unluckyluke |
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 unluckyluke Nova Slayer
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| Ayrton |
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 Ayrton World Chat Champion

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| stevo as b4 |
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 stevo as b4 World Chat Champion
Joined: 17 Jul 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 15:13 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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Pretty much agree with a lot that has been said here, but I wish we could trip up over mint 25year old cars everywhere in barns etc, as the old and rare cars would not be too expensive now, and there'd be parts everywhere.
I disagree in a way with what G said about new car's have come on so much in 20years though. I don't see it sorry?
I've just borrowed a 3month old Corsa 1.4SXI to go on holiday in, and despite it driving ok and doing the job ok, I could not see where it has really advanced from my 94 Rover 220 turbo?
1, Still start it with a key
2, Remote central locking hasn't changed
3, ABS and PAS havn't changed
Basically if technology has moved on that much I don't expect to be doing things like 20 years ago. Using key ignition, handbrakes, manual gearbox's etc etc. Driving still feels the same, needs the same inputs and in the example of car's I have used they both don't really work any differently, look unrecognisably different or run on different fuels etc.
Progress? Huge advances? I don't really buy all that bullshit I'm afraid. The only thing with new car's that amazes me is the improvement in fuel economy with modern engine technology. In 1994 a 2.0 petrol engine in a typical family car would get you 25mpg on average at best, and 30mpg on a steady motorway run maybe?
Now you have 2.0 TSFI engines with up to 260-270bhp doing an easy 40mpg and more in favourable conditions etc.
p.s. Off topic, but what happened exactly to make brand new £6000-8000 litre bikes in say 2001-2004 now cost £9000-10000 now? Did they get that much better?  |
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 Copycat73 World Chat Champion

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| i.p.phrealy |
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 i.p.phrealy World Chat Champion

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 c-m World Chat Champion
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 Copycat73 World Chat Champion

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 Kickstart The Oracle

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| stevo as b4 |
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 stevo as b4 World Chat Champion
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| Al |
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 Al World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:16 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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| stevo as b4 wrote: |
I've just borrowed a 3month old Corsa 1.4SXI to go on holiday in, and despite it driving ok and doing the job ok, I could not see where it has really advanced from my 94 Rover 220 turbo?
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A lot of the electronic features in a fairly high end car like your rover are now pretty standard in even base model hatchbacks though.
The mk3 Fiesta my Mum had in the early 90's had no extras what so ever, not even a tape player.
My work van now has electric windows, air con, sat nav ect as standard and its just a commercial vehicle.
High spec cars get a load of other crap now auto wipers,lights, stop start, active suspension,on board computers, fly by wire, electric handbrakes ect. Although some of that stuff is now on motorbikes as well. ____________________ Yamaha FZR400RR 3tj
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| Kickstart |
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 Kickstart The Oracle

Joined: 04 Feb 2002 Karma :     
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 Posted: 16:25 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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Hi
Possibly, but the Lancer Evo was a small production performance car running low gearing, rather than the upmarket 4wd version of a rep mobile. Not really equivalent cars.
Your Rover was a fairly pokey turbo when new, while now for most cars turbos are bolted on to give acceptable performance while being able to dribble along slowly for the emissions tests.
| Al wrote: | High spec cars get a load of other crap now auto wipers,lights, stop start, active suspension,on board computers, fly by wire, electric handbrakes ect. |
Think you have just supported his point that things haven't improved . Fair few of those things would put me off buying a car with them fitted.
All the best
Keith ____________________ Traxpics, track day and racing photographs - Bimota Forum - Bike performance / thrust graphs for choosing gearing |
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 Al World Chat Champion

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 Posted: 16:34 - 11 May 2014 Post subject: |
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Me too but other people now claim they wouldn't buy a car without certain aids. My friend loves his electronic handbrake but I've used one once and hated it. ____________________ Yamaha FZR400RR 3tj
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| clancy |
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 clancy World Chat Champion

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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 11 years, 275 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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