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Z3n posted:Oh god, what the gently caress. As with anything else on the internet it's blown up quite a bit. Myspace http://www.myspace.com/joeyhernandez Some choice quotes there. quote:like to kick with my homies gett hyphy i love riding my street bike nothing is better then riding wheelies into the the sun i like to chill it with my friends and party...some people say im the funniest kid they know, some of the stuff i do is straight R-E-D-I-C-U-L-O-U-S, and i would like to put that to good use someday................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... i have a huge passion for Sports Cars, absolutely love street bikes but my momma says not till im 18, i think im am going to get one really soon and keep it at a buddies house, i think that be quote:violence, fighting, money, electronics,ebay,cars, ladies,football,baseball,madden, ****en helll of **** GSXR and 22's It's a joke profile, right? And some people go a bit too far http://www.ringburn.net/yutughhh/
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# ? Feb 15, 2009 16:58 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:28 |
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bung posted:So, I bought my Triumph Sprint ST in February of 2007 and to date I have accrued 4,356 miles. I traded my Speed Triple for the Sprint because I had the idea that I wanted the fully faired bike with hard bags for multi-day trips. Two years and no trips later I've decided that I prefer naked bikes. I am going to the dealer tomorrow to get the details on consignment sales. I'm also going to check out the 2009 WRX so getting rid of the Sprint will free up a few hundred dollars every month so I can upgrade from the Fit. My plan at this point is to pick up a gently used Speed Triple, Street Triple or supermoto of some sort later in the year. So, Jeff, what happened with this? Do you still have a scoot, or do you need to borrow one of mine to come ride withus again. You know that you are more than welcome to any of the stable, bro.
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# ? Feb 15, 2009 20:28 |
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You guys looking to buy a new bike? http://www.motorcycle-usa.com/2/2543/Motorcycle-Article/Motorcycles-in-Economic-Stimulus-Package.aspx quote:Language that provides a tax credit for the purchase of a motorcycle has been added to the current economic stimulus bill, the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) reports. The AMA, working in conjunction with other stakeholders, worked diligently to secure the motorcycle provision within the measure. President Obama is expected to sign the bill into law shortly.
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 12:02 |
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Wow, I never thought I'd say this, but thank you Harley.
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 16:21 |
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Phat_Albert posted:Wow, I never thought I'd say this, but thank you Harley. Well to be fair, judging by the absolute glut of used Harleys floating around right now I'd say their sales are hurting pretty bad. I would argue that Harleys are probably the most likely to be bought as a luxury item or recreational bike so a downturn like this would hurt them pretty bad. 8ender fucked around with this message at 16:59 on Feb 17, 2009 |
# ? Feb 17, 2009 16:48 |
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The quote says "new" motorcycle. Does that mean brand new or new to the purchaser? I have a chuckle at all the freaking Harleys for sale here in Phoenix. I think the outlying suburbs are the model for people living beyond their means, so many toy sales and lots of foreclosures. On one hand I feel bad but on the other don't buy stuff if you don't have the cash. Its a bummer that there aren't more sport bikes.
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 16:56 |
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All new motorcycles are luxury items. I showed this article to my girlfriend this morning, and she nixed it right away. No new bike for me this year .
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 16:58 |
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last time i was at a local bike shop for tires, they were unloading a semi packed full of used bikes they had just bought at an auction somewhere. i mean a lot of drat bikes. talking to the service manager he was saying they were expecting good sales come spring, because people will buy a bike with the intent of saving money on gas and poo poo. i'm skeptical, we'll see. i hope they're right cause i like them and that could be a really big bad investment for a small local shop.
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 21:36 |
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I know my dealership has been doing fairly well. They met their quota for sales in January, with a total somewhere in the twenties. Sales always tend to pick up around spring time, and used bikes have been pretty popular recently. And if they can't sell them locally, then they'll probably end up on ebay.
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# ? Feb 17, 2009 23:01 |
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http://www.motorcycledaily.com/17february09_bmw_sbkracing.htm Not bad.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 04:41 |
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Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:last time i was at a local bike shop for tires, they were unloading a semi packed full of used bikes they had just bought at an auction somewhere. i mean a lot of drat bikes. talking to the service manager he was saying they were expecting good sales come spring, because people will buy a bike with the intent of saving money on gas and poo poo. They probably will. That's one of the reasons I bought a bike. Even at two bucks a gallon I'm going to be saving a fair chunk of change for how much I drive. Also, and I may be completely wrong about this, there seem to be a lot more motorcycles on the road then there were a few years ago.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 06:24 |
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It seems it always comes up but with another thing to maintain, registration, insurance, gear, etc etc. I suppose you might be breaking a little more than even. Although obviously none of us here are riding purely for the economical benefit. Aside from loving to ride my bike. Lane splitting makes it even more worth it. Especially when going to class and being able to cut through the mid afternoon traffic and park in the front. Not to mention everywhere else. Does anyone think they're really saving "a lot" of money by riding a bike? It'd imagine it being pretty tough if it was your only transport.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 06:37 |
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we had a whole faq on "saving money riding a bike" that i wrote up, but the wiki host went down so it's all gone. the tl;dr is that unless you cut a lot of corners, you're not going to save money.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 06:41 |
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Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:we had a whole faq on "saving money riding a bike" that i wrote up, but the wiki host went down so it's all gone. the tl;dr is that unless you cut a lot of corners, you're not going to save money. This is true unless you commute to a city like Seattle, where parking costs $16 a day. I park for free with the bike.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 08:46 |
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Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:we had a whole faq on "saving money riding a bike" that i wrote up, but the wiki host went down so it's all gone. the tl;dr is that unless you cut a lot of corners, you're not going to save money. I drive 500-600 miles a week. My car gets about 20 miles to the gallon. 25-30 gallons a week, for four weeks is 100-120 gallons a month (and this is my regular driving load, it goes up if I'm really busy). Right now at 2.20 for premium I'm spending between $220 and $264 dollars a month on fuel. That's around $55-$66 a week. My bike gets about 50 miles a gallon. That means to move me the same 500-600 miles is only costing me $20-$24 bucks a week. That's a $140 to $168 a month savings. Even after maintenance and insurance I'm saving some cash. And when fuel goes back up to $4 and some change a gallon, and it will, my weekly commute will be a lovely $100-$120 bucks for the cage and $40-$48 for the bike. Sorry to sperg out with the numbers, but your right and wrong. For people who drive an average amount then yeah, a bike won't save them enough at the pump to offset the price of insurance and maintenance. For those of us who spend a sizable chuck of time on the road, the numbers work out differently. Gr3y fucked around with this message at 15:02 on Feb 18, 2009 |
# ? Feb 18, 2009 14:59 |
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At 500 miles a week, you should factor in new tires twice a year. That will add $600-800/year by itself. I assume you are insuring the bike, which can run between $50-100/month(on the cheap end). It ends up being pretty close to a wash. Keep in mind with that kind of mileage, you'll be wearing the bike out pretty quickly. A lot of bikes don't make it past 40k miles before the cost of needed repairs becomes higher than the value of the machine. Unless it's a BMW, you'll have to replace the bike every few years. If you had an efficient car, the comparison would not even be close. The car comes out much farther ahead.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 15:13 |
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MrKatharsis posted:At 500 miles a week, you should factor in new tires twice a year. That will add $600-800/year by itself. I assume you are insuring the bike, which can run between $50-100/month(on the cheap end). It ends up being pretty close to a wash. Well, that depends too. I pay $78 a year for my insurance, and that's what, 6 bucks a month? And some of us assholes still put Chen Shins on our bikes
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 15:56 |
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100 Years in Iraq posted:Well, that depends too. I pay $78 a year for my insurance, and that's what, 6 bucks a month? And some of us assholes still put Chen Shins on our bikes Yeah I would only have to pay about 120 a year if I didn't have insane amounts of medical insurance on my bikes insurance as well. Even with that it works itself out to being much less then car insurance. For me, the motorcycle does save money, but not much, and this is because it is my only form of transportation with a motor, no car for me. Even then, my bike seems to break a whole bunch, so that figure is evening itself out as well.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 16:23 |
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MrKatharsis posted:At 500 miles a week, you should factor in new tires twice a year. That will add $600-800/year by itself. I assume you are insuring the bike, which can run between $50-100/month(on the cheap end). It ends up being pretty close to a wash. But he doesn't have an efficient car, he has a middling efficiency car. Replacing that with an efficient car also has a cost, and so you can't say that the bike vs. car cost breakdown is invalid. Which is a big gripe of mine in the motorcycle economy discussions, which have a tendency toward optimizing the car scenario while picking a very suboptimal (in regards to cost/mile) bike scenario. I think motorcycling to save money is probably a wash but if you factor your costs realistically with the motorcycle compared to the costs of a car it can come out being a really cheap way to have more fun.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 16:44 |
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I dont know why people need to justify bikes with mileage and cost savings and all that. Ride because you like it.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 16:56 |
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Phat_Albert posted:I dont know why people need to justify bikes with mileage and cost savings and all that. Ride because you like it. Yeah when did "saving money" stop being the excuse that gets you the greenlight from your wife, and become some pseudo-valid wallet reasoning?
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 17:14 |
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Christoff posted:Does anyone think they're really saving "a lot" of money by riding a bike? It'd imagine it being pretty tough if it was your only transport. HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!! Saving money by riding a bike. That hilarious. Now if you'll excuse me, I think I'm gonna go buy a new exhaust for the DRZ to go with the carb I bought last week and the new jacket I bought two weeks ago. Oh god I have a problem.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 17:33 |
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So in conclusion. In the type of hands that most motorcycle riders are. (Impulse buyers, enthusiasts, etc) Definitely not.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 17:44 |
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If you want to ride and save money, buy a used Honda Elite 80 for as cheap as possible, dont wear gear, and dont insure it. There, you're saving money. You arent being smart, safe, or anything else, but you're saving money.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 17:56 |
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Phat_Albert posted:If you want to ride and save money, buy a used Honda Elite 80 for as cheap as possible, dont wear gear, and dont insure it. Seriously, a Honda Elite 80 is THE cheap way to get on two wheels. You can find them for really really cheap if you look around and everyone thinks they are 50cc. Considering picking up this one for my girlfriend to ride around town. http://sfbay.craigslist.org/eby/mcy/1037772128.html
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 18:02 |
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pr0zac posted:Seriously, a Honda Elite 80 is THE cheap way to get on two wheels. You can find them for really really cheap if you look around and everyone thinks they are 50cc. Considering picking up this one for my girlfriend to ride around town. Oh god I've seen those before and they're ugly as hell. Like something out of a cheesy futuristic film from the 60s. Lien sale on a 1985 honda scooter?
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 18:03 |
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As it was mentioned in the money saving FAQ, most who consider commuting on a bike will not actually sell their car. So all the fixed costs on the car remain. I don't have a car so I would commute on the bus. Even with last summer's eyewatering gas prices, the fuel cost to and from work was less than half of the bus ticket. The door to door time was a third. But for the price of the bike, the upkeep, the gear and the cool extras I could have ridden that bus for years. I bought the bike for the fun of riding, a cheaper commute is just a hollow rationalization that's fun to throw around. And riding to work in torrential rain and heavy traffic is more comfortable than the drat bus anyway.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 18:33 |
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I would think the purchase price would push things in favor of a bike. Compare a 5k 2006 SV650 to a 18k 2006 Civic. And that's assuming you don't want equivalent performance in the car.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 19:24 |
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MrKatharsis posted:At 500 miles a week, you should factor in new tires twice a year. That will add $600-800/year by itself. I assume you are insuring the bike, which can run between $50-100/month(on the cheap end). It ends up being pretty close to a wash. New meats for my nighthawk are pretty cheap. I can get decent tires (I'm not tracking it or thrashing it around in general) for about $140 a set. I'm planing on two to three sets a year, so it's not that bad. My insurance is about $550 a year, so again, not too bad. An '82 Nighthawk has plenty of readily available parts, so it's not too bad. Compared to the start up costs for getting a fuel efficent car that's not beat to poo poo at this point (I can buy 1.6L Civics for a couple of grand all day long out here, assuming having 250-300k isn't a turn off), my bike came out much cheaper. Plus it is fun as hell to tool around on a bike.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 19:29 |
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I was checking my bank statement recently... I spend over 65% of my total income on motorcycle related things. So...in my experience, riding a motorcycle is a lovely way to save money.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 19:36 |
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Might as well keep your money tied up in vehicle suited for quick escape from rioting masses instead of placed in the hands of unstable banks.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 19:52 |
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MrKatharsis posted:At 500 miles a week, you should factor in new tires twice a year. That will add $600-800/year by itself. I assume you are insuring the bike, which can run between $50-100/month(on the cheap end). It ends up being pretty close to a wash. quote:Keep in mind with that kind of mileage, you'll be wearing the bike out pretty quickly. A lot of bikes don't make it past 40k miles before the cost of needed repairs becomes higher than the value of the machine. Unless it's a BMW, you'll have to replace the bike every few years. quote:If you had an efficient car, the comparison would not even be close. The car comes out much farther ahead. Phat_Albert posted:If you want to ride and save money, buy a used Honda Elite 80 for as cheap as possible, dont wear gear, and dont insure it.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 20:13 |
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Z3n posted:I was checking my bank statement recently... You've just made me feel so much better about the amount I spend. pr0zac fucked around with this message at 21:25 on Feb 18, 2009 |
# ? Feb 18, 2009 21:16 |
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Nerobro posted:We've done the math before. Compare a prius to a EX250, and the prius comes out way ahead. Even comparing my focus to my GS550. I'm not saying the difference is huge. But after insurance, tires, sprockets, chains, figure a set of forkseals every 20,000 miles Do you have a link to that? Because I'm trying to figure out how my $1000 bike is going to be more expensive then an (checking craigslist for the cheapest one) $11,000 dollar hybrid. I'm not saying it can't, I've had money pit projects before, but I just don't see the how. Also how often to do sprockets and chains wear out? Is that a once a year thing, or is it every set of tires that goes on? And as far as that Elite suggestion: There is an Elite 150 over at the wrecking yard that runs... for like $200 bucks. I had to tell myself "No!" and swat my face with a rolled up newspaper to keep me from bungeeing into my trunk.
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# ? Feb 18, 2009 22:18 |
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pr0zac posted:You've just made me feel so much better about the amount I spend. Can't put a price on the things you love. There's some additional stuff in there that I haven't sorted out just yet, but...yeah. This is for the last couple of months. So I live paycheck to paycheck to fund it...who cares. Z3n fucked around with this message at 06:56 on Feb 19, 2009 |
# ? Feb 18, 2009 22:36 |
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Tires are a 2-10,000 mile thing. Chains and sprockets are a 2-30,000 mile thing. Depends on if it's a plain ,or o-ring chain and what conditions you run it in. Bikes tend to need new batteries every 2-4 years. Cars (at least mine..) go 8. The more powerful the bike, and the heavier the bike, the faster they use tires. A CB750 both has lots of torque, and is quite heavy. I think the last time I did the math, I did it "my focus" versus "my GS550ES" Both of which have had amazing reliability records. My focus won out by a decent margin. Including a $400 repair or two. When doing the math, be sure to figure in riding gear. That fits in the same category as oil changes and windshield wiper blades on a car. I believe, if you're careful. And you get good deals on your stuff. And your car is expesive to drive or park. A bike can be cheaper to commute on. Under most circumstances, it's not.
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# ? Feb 19, 2009 01:39 |
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Nerobro posted:Tires are a 2-10,000 mile thing. Chains and sprockets are a 2-30,000 mile thing. Depends on if it's a plain ,or o-ring chain and what conditions you run it in. Bikes tend to need new batteries every 2-4 years. Cars (at least mine..) go 8. Thanks for the info on the chains and sprockets. Do you have any experience with "x-link" chains? Price wise they fall between the standard and the o-ring, but have the 20,000 mile warranty that the o-ring chains come with. As far as conditions I run it in: I ride like a little old lady drives. I'm gentle on the throttle, I don't go over the speed limit, and I don't get on the gas coming from a full stop. In fact if you see me dragging a knee on this thing that means that things have gone terribly wrong and I am need of assistance (because I'm about to start dragging shoulder, face, groin, and speedometer). I'm thinking two sets of Kendas a year should do me. I get about 2 years out my car batteries, Arizona summers with outside parking are pretty brutal on them. Gear is really a non factor to me, whether or not by bike was going to be a daily driver I still needed a full set of gear. Even then everything I bought was on clearance so my gear only cost me a little over $400. In three years or so I'll look for another cheap-o Snell helmet, but unless something really bad happens I shouldn't have to replace my leathers or my textile pants for quite some time. Also the beauty of Arizona, with its 360 riding days a year, all my gear is warm weather, so I don't really need to get rain or winter gear.
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# ? Feb 19, 2009 02:46 |
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MrKatharsis posted:Keep in mind with that kind of mileage, you'll be wearing the bike out pretty quickly. A lot of bikes don't make it past 40k miles before the cost of needed repairs becomes higher than the value of the machine. Unless it's a BMW, you'll have to replace the bike every few years. What? This doesnt even make sense. Since when are BMW's the only bike that can do high mileage? Since when is 40K the end?
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# ? Feb 19, 2009 05:40 |
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Phat_Albert posted:What? This doesnt even make sense. Since when are BMW's the only bike that can do high mileage? Since when is 40K the end? Most people don't count bikes as going over 40k because honestly who's seen a sportbike over 40k. I've owned 3 (52k, 49k, 140k). Maybe more, counting the bikes where no one knew how many miles they had on them. With good care, any modern bike should do at least 200k.
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# ? Feb 19, 2009 06:58 |
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# ? May 21, 2024 16:28 |
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My 88' ex500 just turned over 40k miles in november. The odometer reads 20k, but it was replaced at roughly 20k miles on the motor from word of previous owner. Just got the compression tested at the shop (needed work done on the carbs, so they double checked compression due to its age) and it's still right around 150psi and running strong. I'm a firm believer in properly maintained engines lasting forever. My first car was a ford f150 with 500,000 miles on the motor, and not a single problem because it was maintained perfectly. The reason you don't see sport bikes with 50k+ miles on them very much is because for most people they are not commuter vehicles, just toys.
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# ? Feb 19, 2009 09:46 |