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CG 125 as a second bike

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dynax
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PostPosted: 14:14 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: CG 125 as a second bike Reply with quote

Just bought it as a winter hack Laughing

https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/QKcAAOSwN4BdsMVz/s-l1600.jpg
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ThatDippyTwat
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PostPosted: 16:55 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

It'll be fine if you don't need to ride any NSL roads. Or motorways. Or Dual carriageways. Until very recently I had a 125 as a work hack - didn't want, or need, anything bigger. It was fine, did the job.

However, I don't for a second regret replacing it with a 250 that popped up cheap though. Just that bit more oomph, and it'll sit at 70 on a dual carriageway if needs be.
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dynax
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PostPosted: 17:20 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

I start my DAS next week and just wanted a winter hack, then i can trade it in for a big bike next spring Laughing Thumbs Up
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Bhud
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PostPosted: 17:37 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

It will be a memorable winter, commuting on that.

Is that one of the Turkish-made ones? With both kick and electric start, made in between 2000 and 2002? Nice example. Very high quality bike.
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dynax
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PostPosted: 17:46 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bhud wrote:
It will be a memorable winter, commuting on that.

Is that one of the Turkish-made ones? With both kick and electric start, made in between 2000 and 2002? Nice example. Very high quality bike.


It certainly is, and only 2 previous keepers Thumbs Up

It gets delivered on monday so i can have a proper look at it,
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The Shaggy D.A.
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PostPosted: 17:48 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd give it garage space Thumbs Up
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Nobby the Bastard
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PostPosted: 18:19 - 26 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

I'd rather cut my testicles off with a blunt spoon than ride one.
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pepperami
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PostPosted: 10:25 - 27 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

Not the most exciting bike in the world, however it’s your winter hack, it’ll do what you bought it for Thumbs Up
Looks like a tidy example Thumbs Up

I’d rather ride that than my bigger bike when there’s ice and snow about.
Parts and maintenance are not going to be a major issue with a nice simple bike like that.


I’d give it garage space, but then I have a strange taste in bikes? Laughing
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 12:33 - 27 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

Step 2, homemade plywood leg shields and milk bottle handlebar muffs.

Check the date code on those tyres, they have a slightly irridescent sheen to them that I associate with elderly tyres that are going hard and losing their grip. If that's the case, they'll repeatedly land you on your arse on wet corners.

There will be an oval made into the sidewall of each tyre with a 4-digit code in it. The first two are the week of the year it was manufactured, the second two are the year. so 3405 would be the 34th week of 2005.
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dynax
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PostPosted: 12:47 - 27 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:
Step 2, homemade plywood leg shields and milk bottle handlebar muffs.

Check the date code on those tyres, they have a slightly irridescent sheen to them that I associate with elderly tyres that are going hard and losing their grip. If that's the case, they'll repeatedly land you on your arse on wet corners.

There will be an oval made into the sidewall of each tyre with a 4-digit code in it. The first two are the week of the year it was manufactured, the second two are the year. so 3405 would be the 34th week of 2005.



One of the first jobs i will do is get some new rubber Thumbs Up
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ThatDippyTwat
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PostPosted: 17:06 - 27 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:
There will be an oval made into the sidewall of each tyre with a 4-digit code in it.

Or a 3 digit code if they're properly old. I removed a front dated 537 (Week 53, 1997) from the front of a running, MOT'd, 2002 bike I'd just bought in early December 2017 - A week or two shy of 20 years old.
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Bhud
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PostPosted: 22:52 - 27 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

If you're buying tyres don't get cheap Chinese ones, whatever you do. They're hard and slippery. It could make for a more exciting winter than you'd have preferred.
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MCN
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PostPosted: 03:16 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

ThatDippyTwat wrote:
It'll be fine if you don't need to ride any NSL roads. Or motorways. Or Dual carriageways. Until very recently I had a 125 as a work hack - didn't want, or need, anything bigger. It was fine, did the job.

However, I don't for a second regret replacing it with a 250 that popped up cheap though. Just that bit more oomph, and it'll sit at 70 on a dual carriageway if needs be.


CG 125 is more than able to operate on NSL roads, Dual Cabbageways and M/ways.

I never had any concern riding the beast.

They're used three-up as taxis in many turd-wurld countries.

I do not understand your wurry. 🤔
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dynax
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PostPosted: 08:24 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bhud wrote:
If you're buying tyres don't get cheap Chinese ones, whatever you do. They're hard and slippery. It could make for a more exciting winter than you'd have preferred.



I will get some decent boots for her just can't decide on full winter tyres or a good all rounder Thumbs Up
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ThunderGuts
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PostPosted: 12:04 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

MCN wrote:

CG 125 is more than able to operate on NSL roads, Dual Cabbageways and M/ways.

I never had any concern riding the beast.

They're used three-up as taxis in many turd-wurld countries.

I do not understand your wurry. 🤔


Around here at least, the chances of getting anywhere close to the speed limit on the faster roads is virtually nil when commuting anyway.

It looks a lovely bike though Thumbs Up
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 16:45 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

MCN wrote:


CG 125 is more than able to operate on NSL roads, Dual Cabbageways and M/ways.

I never had any concern riding the beast.

They're used three-up as taxis in many turd-wurld countries.

I do not understand your wurry. 🤔


Indeed. I've ridden my 350 bullet all over the country and a CG125 is quicker.

The only problem with motorways on a CG125 is boredom.
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ThatDippyTwat
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PostPosted: 17:10 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

MCN wrote:
CG 125 is more than able to operate on NSL roads, Dual Cabbageways and M/ways.

In the legal sense, sure, motorway excepted, lad's on a CBT. Would you want to? Fuck no. If a road expects anything over a sustained 50, then I don't want to be on it on a asthmatic 125 like a CG (or YBR etc). It's no fun wringing the neck of a 4T, in a sustained manner. Poor bloody things have a hard enough life as it is.
MCN wrote:
I never had any concern riding the beast.

Whatever floats your boat.
MCN wrote:
They're used three-up as taxis in many turd-wurld countries.

People work for pennies an hour in them as well - doesn't mean either is a good idea.
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 17:16 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

ThatDippyTwat wrote:

If a road expects anything over a sustained 50, then I don't want to be on it on a asthmatic 125 like a CG (or YBR etc). It's no fun wringing the neck of a 4T, in a sustained manner. Poor bloody things have a hard enough life as it is.


I think you vastly overestimate what "life in the slow lane" is like. Plenty of vehicles on the motorway which are topping out at 50mph. Many of them are cars.
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ThatDippyTwat
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PostPosted: 17:28 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

stinkwheel wrote:
ThatDippyTwat wrote:

If a road expects anything over a sustained 50, then I don't want to be on it on a asthmatic 125 like a CG (or YBR etc). It's no fun wringing the neck of a 4T, in a sustained manner. Poor bloody things have a hard enough life as it is.


I think you vastly overestimate what "life in the slow lane" is like. Plenty of vehicles on the motorway which are topping out at 50mph. Many of them are cars.

After being banned, and before I retook my test, I did life in the slow lane. By far the worst thing wasn't the pisstaking, L plates, time it took to go anywhere, or the journey planning to avoid motorways etc, it was being bullied by other vehicles and not being able to do fuck all about it. No matter road position, controlling the lane, you would end up with a car, van, wagon, whatever stuck right on your arse, zero fucks given. It doesn't matter if you're in the right when you're squashed.
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MCN
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PostPosted: 18:25 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

ThatDippyTwat wrote:
Stuff.


Have you ever considered a car as a means of transport.
It may have a calming effect for you. Rolling Eyes
Very Happy
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stevo as b4
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PostPosted: 19:13 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

It sounds like someone might be better off with a tuned 1400 and a bottle of funny gas on the back for those times you need an extra little squirt of speed just to be safe and all.

The CG I thought was a hilarious bike to ride, just not that comfortable to a tall bloke over a long distance. Also he who says its no fun or is unbearable to thrash a little 125cc four stroke for long periods on the open road, well Lol!

It's almost comforting to know your engine is a lowly tuned unburstable four stroke when your throttle to the stop on a section of quiet dark motorway late at night. There's no way on earth I'd want to be in the same position on a long journey with a 125cc two stroke.

But there's still plenty of folk out there that think your pushing a four stroke 125 too hard and pushing your luck if you ride over 50mph for a long time. Those people have obviously never owned a tuned two stroke bike, as they'd realise they have no worries in the world if they did.
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ThatDippyTwat
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PostPosted: 19:26 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

stevo as b4 wrote:
But there's still plenty of folk out there that think your pushing a four stroke 125 too hard and pushing your luck if you ride over 50mph for a long time. Those people have obviously never owned a tuned two stroke bike, as they'd realise they have no worries in the world if they did.


I grew up on 2T bikes, and I'm buying another when it's ready for sale. Wink I'm well aware of how much more reliable an air cooled 4T is in comparison.
A modern 4T 125 with liquid cooling? That'll sit at 50 all day, no issues. A 90's CG125 that has likely had dubious maintenance? Rather you than me.

While I wouldn't say no to a 1400 with some boost and gas on it, I don't need it. A 250 is fine, that why I bought one for the work run to replace the 125. It'll get local running about as well, all stuff the VFR, or any other "big" bike won't even warm up doing. It just does it with less fuss and pinning it than the 125 did.
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Last edited by ThatDippyTwat on 21:03 - 28 Oct 2019; edited 1 time in total
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Kawasaki Jimbo
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PostPosted: 19:40 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like it. I wouldn't want to lose my sportsbikes but I frequently find myself filtering on a dual carriageway for 80% of my commute, or exploring local-ish country lanes at weekends and wondering if I'm on the right bike. I'd like a dirt cheap project bike to tick all the boxes but it seems like there is no such thing in these "barn-find" times.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 19:59 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

like
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Bhud
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PostPosted: 22:03 - 28 Oct 2019    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like those CGs bike because (most importantly) they aren't junk, but are decent quality and built to last, and they have that Honda sound and feeling while still being rugged little thumpers with just enough character between 30mph and 40mph (ish) to be fun around town. Very light but solid, with narrow handlebars, allowing for easy filtering, tipping nicely into side roads, etc. It picks up well enough off the mark, too. However, when I had one, I felt that it would be so much better if that engine were 250cc. A basic pushrod single needs just a bit more capacity to make hills and straight, faster roads more comfortable. Sure, when you're being tailgated you can simply go slower and make sure you're riding safely, with good positioning, etc. and pull over to let someone pass if you feel unsafe. But yes, it may depend on where you want to ride. If you're riding around town and in the suburbs in a flat place (urban/suburban sprawl) - no problem at all. If you want to overtake someone, make detailed plans. Laughing Not that different from any other 125, but with a bit less power. A good learning tool and a fun ride in all sorts of situations, but it has its limitations.
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