General Motorcycle Discussion Have some questions or information about riding that is not tech? Here you go!
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Beginner Bikes

Old Aug 26, 2008 | 02:10 PM
  #111  
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Keep in mind I am talking about street riding ability. If you want to talk about racing caliber of riding skill then thats a whole other animal, but it still does not come with a milage requirement. It is measured in HOURS of track time and lap times.
 
Old Aug 26, 2008 | 02:48 PM
  #112  
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ide better get sum popcorn: LOL
 
Old Aug 26, 2008 | 02:53 PM
  #113  
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Originally Posted by Kohburn
milage is not an indicator of skill - cruising down the highway for thousands of miles will not gain you much of any skill whatsoever, but advanced riders courses and time on a race track will gain you a lot of skill in very little time.

using time and milage to assume skill level is just as dumb as saying that a 40 year old is a better rider than a 30 year old. it doesn't mean anything because every person uses their riding time differently and rides under different conditions along with having differentl levels of natural ability and different rates of learning.
Mileage is a measure of experience. You need experience and skill. I set my requirements high to allow for the people who ride a lot of highway miles. Without skill all the experience in the world counts for nothing. Without experience skill is likely to make you over confident and lead you into stupid errors, especially in traffic.

Track time counts for very little on the road. Advanced courses can cut the experience requirement by half - but just attending them means nothing if you don't work to riding to the standard you've been shown. Most graduates of advanced courses still wouldn't pass an IAM test because they don't practise what they've been taught.

A lot of younger riders are probably better than me now in some respects - I've broken too many bones and can't move around the way I used to - but not many are safer, and not many will actually turn in shorter journey times.

I think the level of defensiveness in your posts shows that you don't really believe them yourself.

Rob
 
Old Aug 26, 2008 | 04:41 PM
  #114  
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no defensiveness at all - I just get tired of stuck up ****** who talk big (ok maybe a little defensive of my peers, don't take kindly to people joining up and insulting fellow riders without having any true idea of their skill set or riding habits)

by your own admission rider ability veries drasticly and has just as much bearing on skill as experience. Thats the point I've been trying to get you to admit - that broad blanket statements of 4 years 40,000 miles really are meaningless by themselves. you can easily have someone complete your requirements and still be a complete ham as far as riding goes because they simple don't care to improve.

there are a lot of riders that have been riding for 20+ years and then take an advanced riders course and learn something new. Just the same there are riders that have only been riding for 2 years and have been through all the riders courses and ride conservatively. (and of course there is the minority of riders known as squids who skill or no skill ride with total disregard and make everyone look bad)

If you have as much experience as you claim then you of all people know this is true and shouldn't be making statements like that.


edit - I just ealized why you have such high milage expectations of people, 400-500 miles a day is not common for much of any bike around here.
Originally Posted by williamr
I ride an 07 ER-6f. I've had to raise the seat an inch to make it more comfortable on long trips, but power wise it's fine. I got fed up of overpowered and overpriced ***** extensions that I couldn't use hard in normal everyday riding. The ER-6 is the smallest bike I could find that does the job. Otherwise I'd have a 250, but that struggles a bit on regular 400 - 500 miles a day highway trips.
 

Last edited by Kohburn; Aug 27, 2008 at 07:51 PM. Reason: clarification
Old Aug 26, 2008 | 05:06 PM
  #115  
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just wanted to specify also that being a "SAFE" rider is primarily a combination of situational awareness and good judgement.

There are many who I would call "escape artists" . not a safe rider, but they have had enough skill to stay upgright in the situations they've gotten themselves into.

There are also many (see it a lot in the Harley crowd) who are not really "safe" riders either. They are just relaxed/conservative riders who don't get themselves into trouble, but are most likely not aware enough to avoid a situation that another driver/pedestrian/animal might put them into.
 
Old Aug 27, 2008 | 12:14 PM
  #116  
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Originally Posted by Kohburn
lmao - lamest argument ever

when you know your wrong nothing like using broad generalization to attemp to win.
uh win what?
 
Old Aug 27, 2008 | 12:31 PM
  #117  
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[/threadjack]

what the heck was this thead about? oh yes good beginner bikes. which of course the "best" beginner bike will depend on the rider. any bike with less than ~60 hp has the potential to be a good beginner bike, rider with good throttle control and self restraint/maturity can get away with starting with more.
 

Last edited by Kohburn; Sep 4, 2008 at 12:18 PM.
Old Aug 29, 2008 | 01:49 AM
  #118  
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i just started riding this summer. I started on a ninja 500. i would recommend it for sure.
but i think an R6 would be good to. way more expensive though.
 
Old Aug 29, 2008 | 04:02 AM
  #119  
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Everyone should get a busa...and don't wear any gear. It will make you a better rider in the long run.
 
Old Aug 29, 2008 | 02:49 PM
  #120  
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yup and just ride with a thong on at w.o.t
Originally Posted by zzrick
Everyone should get a busa...and don't wear any gear. It will make you a better rider in the long run.
 

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