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11-01-2004, 06:14 PM
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#1 (permalink)
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SBN Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Maryland
Posts: 18
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: N/A
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Narrowed Down my choices....
Well visited the local Suzuki dealer the other day and saw the new 2005 GSXR 600 in red/black and i was pretty much set right after that...lol...the colors are so nice looking and the bike is what i want, even though some people disagree because of the young age and first sportbike. I wont be getting it till probably March 05, but just wanted to let you all know that the color is real sharp looking and you should take a peek at it when your local dealer gets some in.
Kyle
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11-01-2004, 10:35 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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old member
SBN Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 10,706
Casino Cash: $68071
Sportbike: '05 sv1000s
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Sounds like you think you might be making a mistake (?). Just hope you're doing everything else you can to maximize your probability of survival (MSF etc).
Having said all that, I can't wait to see the 2005 SV1000S in red with the new black frame. The bike show starts here on Friday. 
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11-02-2004, 04:25 AM
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#3 (permalink)
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World 500 GP Champion
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: san antonio texas
Age: 9
Posts: 10,767
Casino Cash: $6307
Sportbike: 06 R6 blue the faster color
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you might want to check the insurance rates on a gsxr600 before you decide to get it you might be surprised.
__________________
2006 R6 blue-the faster color; akra. exhaust, fender elim. tinted screen, pc, and other cosmetic goodies etc.etc. 
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11-02-2004, 04:29 AM
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#4 (permalink)
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Combat Marshmellow
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: L-Town
Posts: 13,109
Casino Cash: $55382
Sportbike: Retired
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 good choice....
__________________
ASMA AM #75
GF&T Racing - Ultimate Imports, ECS Dyno, Stalemate27 Custom Paint, ASMA Trackside Support
badgixxer(3), Philbie(4), TSAVO5150(4), ur2ez(1), Faster Sissy(2), Sometime Racer(12), kz2zx(3), MO(1), FWrider(6), pbandj19(5), gixerking(1), SilentR1(3), Jordan121787(4) toyotapower(9 and counting  ), GoSlow&Crash(1), Zach (1)
Arroyo Seco, Firebird, HPT, MAM, JenningsGP, MMP, Hallett, Putnam Park.....
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11-02-2004, 07:21 AM
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#5 (permalink)
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what R you lookin' at?
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: houston, tx
Age: 42
Posts: 4,618
Casino Cash: $252
Sportbike: '00 VFR & '01 SV
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bad choice........
before anything get training www.msf-usa.org
and as somebody else mentioned, get an ins. quote before you buy the bike.............the ins. co. also agrees w/ us that young people don't need such hi-po. bikes.........and they tell you w/ the rates........... 
__________________
MSF wanna learn to ride? www.msf-usa.org<-------clicky
'00 VFR
'01 SV650
Last edited by RACER X : 11-02-2004 at 07:25 AM.
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11-02-2004, 11:11 AM
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#6 (permalink)
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SBN Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Maryland
Posts: 18
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: N/A
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Hey guys,
Appreciate the responses.....I know in a way it sounds like a bad idea especially since im so young, but its not like i have no experience on motorcycles. I have drove a few just not as powerful and have driven atv's and dirtbikes my whole life. Also to make it sound a little better, 1) I have to take the MSF course because I am under 18, 2) I will have some training on the bike i buy with a private instructor, 3) I can only ride with my dad for a long time.....Also about the insurance i have had quotes and my dad is putting his name as primary like they do for the car so that will help a lot..
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11-02-2004, 11:25 AM
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#7 (permalink)
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what R you lookin' at?
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: houston, tx
Age: 42
Posts: 4,618
Casino Cash: $252
Sportbike: '00 VFR & '01 SV
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so lets break this down.
your young w/ very little car traffic experience, let alone bike experience......
you have really no motorcycle exp. riding your friend bike really doesn't amount to a hill of beans......
odds are against you, and the ins. co.s know it, so your going to commit ins. fruad, since your the primary rider........
your picking a bad choice for first bike........
sounds like a great plan.
__________________
MSF wanna learn to ride? www.msf-usa.org<-------clicky
'00 VFR
'01 SV650
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11-02-2004, 11:36 AM
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#8 (permalink)
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what R you lookin' at?
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: houston, tx
Age: 42
Posts: 4,618
Casino Cash: $252
Sportbike: '00 VFR & '01 SV
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good reads.
http://www.beginnerbikes.com/editori...lsfunction.htm
http://www.beginnerbikes.com/editori...sfunction2.htm
Quote:
Decision Justification Arguments
I'll take it easy and grow into the bike.
I'm a careful driver so I'll be a careful rider and not get into trouble.
I drive a fast car so I'll be able to handle a fast bike.
Other people have started on a 600cc sportbike and didn't get hurt. So why can't I?
These arguments are the most common ones put forth and the ones that are hardest to deal with. These are the arguments that start flame wars. Because it is on these arguments that you have to convince someone the idea of what a beginner bike is over their preconceived notions.
The arguments also often surface in what I call the "decision justification arguments". Many new riders have their heart set on a specific bike and often come to BB to ask about it not to get real advice but to get confirmation that their decision is right. In cruisers, standards, scooters and dual-sports, more often than not these "pre-decisions" are generally good ones. In sportbikes, more than 3/4 of the posters are trying to get the community to approve their choice of a 600cc machine as a first ride. Their shock is quite real when they are barraged with answers that don't meet their expectations and that is when a flurry of oft-repeated discussion ensues.
Let's take each argument in turn since these are the ones that turn up with regularity.
I'll take it easy and grow into the bike.
The purpose of a first bike is to allow you to master basic riding skills, build confidence and develop street survival strategies. You don't grow into a bike. You develop your skills on it. As your skills develop, so does your confidence and with it, your willingness to explore what the bike is capable of.
But you are also entering in a contract with the bike. It is two-way. You are going to expect the bike to act on your inputs and the bike in turn is going to respond. The problem is, your skills are still developing but the bike doesn't know that. It does what it is told. You want a partner in a contract to treat you fairly. On a bike, you don't want it fighting you every step of the way. And like most contracts, the problems don't start until there is a breakdown in communication or a misunderstanding.
In sportbikes, the disparity between a new rider's fledgling skills and the responsiveness of the machine are very far apart. That is a wide gulf to bridge when you are still trying to figure out what the best inputs and actions on the bike should be. Ideally, you want your bike to do what you tell it and do it nicely. You never want the bike to argue with you. Modern sportbikes, despite their exquisite handling will often argue violently right at the moment a new rider doesn't need them to.
Remember, riding is a LEARNED skill. It does not come naturally to the majority of us (save those like the Hayden brothers who were raised on dirt bikes from the moment they could walk). It must be practiced and refined. Riding is counter-intuitive to most new riders. It doesn't happen the way you expect. For example, at speeds over 25mph, to get a bike to go right, you actually turn the bars to the left. It's called counter-steering and it eventually comes naturally as breathing once you've been in the saddle for a while. But for new riders, this kind of thing is utterly baffling.
You want your skills to grow in a measurable and predictable fashion. You have enough to be fearful of riding in traffic. The last thing you need is to be fearful of what your bike might do when you aren't ready for it. It's never a good situation.
It is interesting to point out that only one manufacturer, Suzuki, explicitly states in their promotional material that their GSX-R family of sportbikes are intended for experienced riders. This also applies to several of their larger, more powerful machines (such as a GSX-1300R Hayabusa). If Suzuki issues such a warning for its top-flight sport machines, it is reasonable to say that the same warning would apply equally to similar machines from other manufacturers.
I'm a careful driver so I'll be a careful rider and not get into trouble.
This is what I call the "I'm responsible and mature" argument. This one is a general excuse and does not apply to sportbikes in particular.
Recent studies have shown that 90% of all drivers feel that they have average to above-driving abilities compared to other drivers on the road. These drivers also said that they think 60% of those on the road are less skilled than they are. It's an interesting perception as it indicates a mentality that everyone else is sub-par, not you. Obviously someone has to be wrong because the percentages just don't add up.
A proper attitude towards driving as well as riding is essential. But these same drivers who see themselves as superior also engage in dangerous driving habits (aggressive weaving, illegal passing, bad merges, following too close, lack of attention to traffic/road conditions, etc). Very few drivers are truly honest with themselves and their ability to handle a vehicle.
The problem is, on a bike, the perception that you are responsible is not enough. On a bike, you must be. You either learn to be or you are going to be in trouble really quick. In talking with other riders I have found that they tend to be much more defensive and thoughtful drivers behind the wheel because riding raises their perception of their surroundings.
Ultimately, responsible and mature does not equate to riding skill. It has nothing to do with it except how you will approach riding in general. You want to know the sign of a responsible rider? Look at their gear. Are they in full safety gear? Watch them ride. If you are seeing them turn their heads to clear their blind spots, making careful and smooth maneuvers, leaving a nice, safe amount space around them and working to maximize your chance of seeing and knowing what they are doing, then you are looking at a responsible rider.
Now do the same exercise and watch the drivers around you. How many turn their heads to check their blind spots, signal lane changes, leaving several car lengths of space in front of them, weave in and out of traffic or dash to the end of a ramp and then attempt to force themselves onto the highway rather than yield like they are supposed to? I'm willing to bet it's not going to be a pretty significant percentage. Now imagine these same individuals on a bike. I'm sure you'll be able to spot more than a few of these types on bikes to (just look for the T-shirts and flip-flops as they blast by you at 100mph on the Interstate on the right).
How you approach the task of driving is how you will approach riding. Attention to the task of riding is the number one way you avoid trouble by not getting into it in the first place. Study your own driving habits. Good habits will definitely keep your chances of getting into trouble but they have little to do with controlling a motorcycle. Any motorcycle. Many lax drivers often become much better drivers as the result of riding a motorcycle. It is far less common for it to go in the other direction.
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and in conclusion
Quote:
The Final Equation
We've covered the reasons why people justify or want to get a 600cc sportbike. But we have one more thing to answer and it is simple: What makes these bad bikes to start on?
Sportbikes are built as racing machines, pure and simple. They are built in response to guidelines laid down by racing bodies for a particular class and made to win races in that class. Ducati, for example, spends most of their existence building bikes to win races. Since 1950, Ducati was always a racing bike manufacturer first and their products reflected that philosophy. A by-product of winning races is the fact that people see those winning machines and want to ride them (if you're going to ride, you might as well ride the best as it goes). It didn't take the motorcycle manufacturers long to figure out that there was a market demand for these machines and reacted accordingly.
Sportbikes represent a technological arms race. This has really become apparent in the past 5-10 years where new models eclipse last years models with better performance and capability with each passing year. To compare a 1989 Honda CBR600F Hurricane (the original CBR) to a 2003 CBR600RR is pointless. There is no comparison except in the model designation showing a distant family relation. The new CBR is lighter by at least 50 pounds and packs 30 percent more power, handling and braking ability that makes the original CBR look like a ponderous dinosaur. But just because that original CBR dinosaur has been eclipsed doesn't make it any more tamable. If anything, older sportbikes are far more temperamental than the descendants.
Consider the fact that this year a privateer (independent racer) bought a Yamaha YZF-R1 off the showroom floor, took off the lights and mirrors, added a race belly pan, exhaust and tires and placed in the top ten at the AMA Superbike race at Daytona. The bike was two weeks off the floor and basically stock (the modifications with the exception of the pipe are required). Since factory sponsored teams tend to take the top slots, any privateer that can break in the top ten is doing well by anyone's definition.
Because sportbikes (and especially 600s since they compete in the most populous racing class out there) are designed first as racing machines, they are built with handling, acceleration and speed in mind. Not just one quality at the expense of others but all of them in abundance! Centralizing the mass of the bike at the center of gravity (CoG) gives the bike neutral stability. The high riding position and the perching of the rider over the CoG gives the bike the ability to flick over rapidly.
The steering geometry and short wheelbase of these bikes is designed to provide short and rapid directional changes. Combined with the higher CoG and mass centralization, the steering setup is what gives sportbikes their amazing turning ability.
Engine designs vary but have settled on V-twins and inline fours as the preferred choices. The sportbike V-twins are liquid-cooled, high-rpm engines designed to generate massive torque (hence acceleration) and power in the mid-range of their design limits. Witness the success of Nicky Hayden and Miquel Duhamel on the Honda RC51 in AMA Superbike as testament to the massive grunt these engines put out. So potent in fact that the AMA changed the rules for the following season to even the odds between the V-twins and inline fours. The inline four equipped bikes simply couldn't outpower the twins on curvy portions of the race circuit.
The inline four is by far the most common engine layout in sportbikes including all 600cc sport designs (the Ducati 620SS has a V-twin but is air-cooled and the bike is not a racing machine). All of the sportbikes that new riders lust after are equipped with this engine design. High-rpm capability (redlines vary between 11K and 16K rpm), liquid cooled and designed to produce peak power at very high rpms. The inline four delivers smooth and increasing power as the throttle is opened. Power tends to build to the peak point, at which power the engine will tend to surge to peak power and fall off as the peak point is crossed. Although nowhere near as bad as a race-tuned two-stroke (which literally double their horsepower as the engine transitions to peak power), the engine displays its roots as a racing thoroughbred.
A 1mm or 1/16 of an inch twist of the throttle can easily result in a 2000-4000rpm jump. You can be cruising along at a sedate 4000rpm, hit a pothole and suddenly find the bike surging forward with the front end getting light at 7000rpm. Definitely unnerving the first time you experience it.
And then there are the brakes. Braking technology has gotten progressively more potent over the past ten years. Even older sportbikes sport twin disc setups with two or four piston calipers designed to get these bikes down from 150mph to 60mph as quickly as possible. Current generation bikes are unreal. These brakes have grown to six piston calipers with massive discs whose sole job is to slow a 180mph missile down to corner speed in the shortest distance possible. If you ever watch racers, notice that they tend to only use two fingers to brake. They don't need anymore than that. The brakes are almost too powerful. And accidents happen on the track a lot due to bad or late braking.
All of these qualities produce an exquisite riding machine. The problem is, all of these qualities are designed to operate at extremes since it is under extreme conditions that these bikes are intended to operate. For the street, these capabilities are overkill. A hard squeeze of the front brake on the street can easily get a sportbike to lock its front wheel. Same applies to an over-aggressive stomp on the rear brake. No matter which way you slice it, highsides hurt.
The powerful engine can literally get you from 0 to 45mph in the blink of an eye in first gear. Come up one gear and you can be at 70mph with the slightest drop of your wrist. Add in one bump at speed without knowing what the throttle is going to do and suddenly you aren't at 70mph anymore. You're at 90+ mph and the bike is tickling its "sweet spot". At this speed, you better not panic. If you botch the slowdown from this error (either by a rapid rolloff or a shift), you can find yourself in serious trouble.
The handling capabilities of sportbikes actually make them wonderful machines to ride once you are used to thinking where you want to go. This actually gives them great beginner qualities (if on the extreme end). The downside is this perfect handling is slaved to amazing power on tap and the brakes that can back it off just as quickly.
In the final equation, a 600cc sportbike is little more than a racing machine with street parts bolted on. They aren't designed for street use; they are adapted to it. But no compromises are made in that transition. The same R6, GSX-R600, ZX-6RR or CBR600RR you can buy off the showroom floor can be converted in an afternoon, be at the track the next day and wind up winning races. And the sportbikes from 10 years ago were the R6s, Gixxers, Ninjas and CBRs of their day. They possessed the same qualities that their modern descendants do just not with the same maximums. Even today on the street, a 15 year old sportbike is little different than its 2003 cousin. The 2003 might accelerate quicker, stop shorter and lean farther but at the speeds us mortals ride at, there will be little difference.
Sportbike technology has gone an amazing distance in twenty years. Performance and ability has almost doubled in that time. But rider ability has not and a new rider from 20 years ago would still have the same challenges then as a new rider would today on an R6.
Sportbike form evolved to meets its function: to win races. Always has, always will. And riders will lust after these technological marvels for that reason. Can you start out on one? Yes. But you can also pretend to be a GP racer on a smaller sportbike that gives up nothing to its bigger brothers where most of us spend our riding days. It is always more satisfying to smoke a 600cc or 1000cc sportbike in the twisties on a Ninja 250 or GS500 than a bigger bike.
But when you are ready to answer the call of the Supersport, they will be waiting for you and you'll be better off having honed your skills on the smaller sportbike. Supersports are not beginner bikes. But they make great second and third bikes.
The choice is yours.
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enough from me. good luck, don't die.
__________________
MSF wanna learn to ride? www.msf-usa.org<-------clicky
'00 VFR
'01 SV650
Last edited by RACER X : 11-02-2004 at 11:40 AM.
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11-02-2004, 11:50 AM
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#9 (permalink)
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Ride To Work.Work To Ride
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Age: 23
Posts: 227
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: 2001 RC51, 98 zx-6r (sold)
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Like i said before will the mods plz sticky those two links so every newb like this guy reads it and maybe we wont see threads like this all the time... and i think racer x is tired of posting the links every time.. ill make the thread damnit just as long as i know it will be stickied 
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11-02-2004, 11:52 AM
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#10 (permalink)
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World Superbike Racer
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: SoCal
Age: 23
Posts: 519
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: N/A
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Please don't look at Racer X as a nazi, because he has been there.
He is just trying to help, there are soo many people out there that buy sportbikes that have more power then they can handle.
It's very easy to claim that you are able to handle them, as most people wont admit they are UNABLE to ride such bikes.
Bottom Line: It's your choice, but you should really listen to what Racer X and other people have to say about this....they're only trying to help.
PS: Statistics hurt, don't become one.
__________________
Quote:
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Originally Posted by japbike
.... We only want you for your weiner... we don't have to listen to you, pick up after you, ect ect... that's what your gf's and wives are for
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Stimy25
I used to date a mother, that had a small child. Whenever Id get hungry shed pop a titty in my mouth........... 
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11-02-2004, 11:54 AM
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#11 (permalink)
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Ride To Work.Work To Ride
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Mississauga, Ontario
Age: 23
Posts: 227
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: 2001 RC51, 98 zx-6r (sold)
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Goalieman browes around the new rider forum, theres threads like urs being posted all the time.... i think you would be flamed a little more then this but i think everyones just tired of threads like these so we live it up to those two links to do the job
And dont buy a bike just because the color is sooo nice.... look at other factors like cc's lol
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11-02-2004, 12:24 PM
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#12 (permalink)
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SBN Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Maryland
Posts: 18
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: N/A
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Appreciate the feedback and yes i will think twice about it. Kawa I realize its 600cc and I know all about the bike i just mentioned how nice it looked in that color, nothing more. Outta curiosity what do you ride kawa?? The only reason im even tryin to argue a little bit is because i see people like my friends cousin who is 19 (still young) and he started on a 600cc, but unfortunately is dumb and tries showing off and does stunts and crashed one time doing a wheelie. I have two 16 year old friends who had no riding experienceexcept dirt bikes which isnt much, both started on a 600 (r6 and zx6r), both seem to be doing fine and dont have much trouble. Is it just the luck they are having? The manager of Cycles USA where i go to check out the bikes is close friends with my family and i know him very well..He would not give me bad advice, but he says that with the experience i have because he knows me and what i have drove (motorcycle) that he thinks i would be fine on it. Dont think he is just trying to sell me a bike because people 18-20 that are older than me go in there and he wont even sell them a sportbike. I just think give such a bad reputation when doing stunts and everything, because when my parents especially my dad who has motorcycles hear the word sportbike all they think of is wheelies and high speed. There will always be the high speed factor, but cant you ride and not exceed say 100mph, if that, or just ride and not do a wheelie? I just have a problem with all these other people who yes may be older then me starting on a 600 and acting immature by speeding and doing stunts which makes the reputation worst. I appreciate all the comments and if you would like to flame go right ahead, i was just trying to put my 2 cents in. Also I dont think putting my dads name on my insurance is fraud, because we have that done on the cars and you can have more than 1 driver but primary driver pays more.
Thanks,
Kyle
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11-02-2004, 01:08 PM
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#13 (permalink)
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what R you lookin' at?
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: houston, tx
Age: 42
Posts: 4,618
Casino Cash: $252
Sportbike: '00 VFR & '01 SV
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Other people have started on a 600cc sportbike and didn't get hurt. So why can't I?
This is probably the number one reason that pops up. However, it isn't so much a reason as an observation. And it is a true one. Every year, lots of new riders go to their local dealerships or scour their local ads and bring home a brand new or used 600cc sportbike. And many of those riders do successfully manage to get through their learning process on these machines.
The purpose of a first ride more than any other is to get the risk of riding for the first year or two as low as possible. You want your margin of forgiveness in the bike to be as wide as possible. A 600cc sportbike gives you very little of that. Yes, a 600cc down low is a tame if sensitive machine. However, it takes very little twist on the throttle to induce a large jump in rpm's. A brief bump on a pothole with a death grip on the throttle can introduce a 4000rpm jump in the blink of an eye (speaking from personal experience). In an experienced rider's hands, this is alarming but recoverable. A gentle rolloff or a little clutch feathering manages the surge nicely. In the hands of a newbie trying to figure out the best reaction to such a scare, a rapid closeoff or a panic brake is often the result and can get you into trouble very, very quickly.
Yes, a new rider can start on a 600cc sportbike. It is NOT RECOMMENDED! The reason this line of reasoning pops up so often is because everyone feels they are the exception rather than just another new rider. It makes sense. It's hard to think of oneself as just another face in the crowd. As a rider, I know I am just another average rider. Although I have track aspirations, I have no doubt as to where my skill level is and it is definitely not in (or ever was) in the "start on a 600cc exceptional group".
In the end, to deal with this line of reasoning is going to involve the new rider, not the one giving the advice. No one can stop that person from going out and buying a 600cc sportbike as a first ride. And maybe they will succeed and crow about all the bad advice they received on starting small. Great! They were the exception.
What you don't hear about are the non-exceptional people. Very, very few new riders who start on 600s come back to talk about their experiences if they aren't in the "I've had no problems." group. On the forums recently, there have been a couple folks who admitted they got 600cc sportbikes to start on and indicated that it had been a less-than-ideal choice. This type of honesty is refreshing and it is very, very rare. I am grateful these riders stepped up.
Most of the time, we never learn the fate of those riders who start on 600s. Some make it and simply never bother to tell their tales except to friends. Some wind up scaring themselves so badly (by getting out of control or by actually dumping the bike and injuring themselves) that they sell off and never ride again. These types can be found. Just troll the ads for new supersports with one owner and low miles. The worst of this class of riders are the ones who become "born again safety advocates". These riders who scare themselves out of riding occasionally become preachers that tell anyone who will listen that "motorcycles are dangerous and should be banned". What they don't tell those they are preaching to is how they got that way. It's bad enough having to deal with the general public (who are at least honestly unaware of what riding is about) but a lot worse to be sabotaged from within by someone who did it to themselves and got in over their head.
Then there is the last group of these "started on a 600cc sportbike" riders that never tell us their tales. They never do because they can't. Instead, they enjoying peaceful surroundings and occasional visits by bereaved family and friends. They made that one mistake, that one error that compounded into a tragedy of inexperience. They can never tell us what that error was so we can learn from it and maybe also tell us that they should have started on something smaller. They were successful right until the point their skills and luck ran out. This can happen to any of us on any bike. But, in the end, new riders on a powerful sportbike can be a recipe for disaster.
Be honest with yourself. Very honest. Take the advice and wisdom of others more experienced than you and consider what they are saying. They may have a point. But if you opt for that 600cc sportbike, be assured you will still be accepted as a rider and still encouraged to act as safely as possible at all times.
__________________
MSF wanna learn to ride? www.msf-usa.org<-------clicky
'00 VFR
'01 SV650
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11-02-2004, 01:10 PM
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#14 (permalink)
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what R you lookin' at?
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: houston, tx
Age: 42
Posts: 4,618
Casino Cash: $252
Sportbike: '00 VFR & '01 SV
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by Goalieman
Also I dont think putting my dads name on my insurance is fraud, because we have that done on the cars and you can have more than 1 driver but primary driver pays more.
Thanks,
Kyle
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are you going to be listed as primary or your dad, and who's really going to ride the bike? if it's not the same person, it can be construed as fraud.........most likely won't be.......but there always the chance......and when you wreck it, they have a leg to stand on to dispute the claim.........
__________________
MSF wanna learn to ride? www.msf-usa.org<-------clicky
'00 VFR
'01 SV650
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11-02-2004, 01:32 PM
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#15 (permalink)
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SBN Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Maryland
Posts: 18
Casino Cash: $250
Sportbike: N/A
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Hey Racer X,
Thank you for the advice, i will definitely take it into consideration and think it through before i do anything...About the insurance, im not sure because its like my car, i have my moms name as primary and mine secondary so insurance is cheap, but on the bike i think if my dad just adds his as secondary(not sure if it needs to be primary) it will also help on insurance, i could be wrong because i have really researched it. I wish my older brother whos 19 and his dumb friends would read this stuff because they are all pretty much immature. My brother is one of those kids who has a fast $40,000 car because he has too much money and his friends have fast cars too and they know pretty much nothing about motorcycles yet wont a 600 and some even 1000. These are kids with less experience than me and have never been around any motorcycles. But thatnks again for taking your time and giving great advice...
Kyle
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