If you plan on doing lots of motorway I would take the 500 purely on the basis of it being a twin with a relaxed engine. In every other way, especially learner-relevant ways, the 300 is better.
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# ? Oct 15, 2020 04:56 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:12 |
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I used to take a 250 Ninja up to highway speed all the time, but really it makes way more sense to go to the 500. Blah blah new rider blah blah but if you're going to be on the highway HP/Torque should be at a decent enough level that you aren't struggling to pass cars. A 1 second pass is infinitely safer than a 3 second pass.
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# ? Oct 16, 2020 03:39 |
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If that 500 has the same motor as the CB500x, it's incredibly tame for a new rider. I was able to do about 110 mph on the autobahn with it, too, for long stretches.
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# ? Oct 16, 2020 04:55 |
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Slavvy posted:If you plan on doing lots of motorway I would take the 500 purely on the basis of it being a twin with a relaxed engine. This is really good advice. I hate riding my 250 on the freeway. It gets up to around 75 and at that speed it's maxed out. I would hate to have to try and pass someone on the bike. And riding the single stroke is tiring, especially as I work on my grip. I love riding the 250 otherwise. It's nimble, it's cheap to own and operate. When I do dumb noob stuff, it is forgiving. It is LIGHT. It sips gas. For me, it's perfect as an occasional/weekend rider.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 06:20 |
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250 parallel twins are fun as hell. It's like being with a really short girl, yeah you look a little awkward in public, ignorant people might make a comment now and then, but when you're riding her it's the best feeling. (USER WAS PUT ON PROBATION FOR THIS POST)
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 15:16 |
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Hey buddy the ADVRider.txt thread is that way ===>
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 15:27 |
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Oceanlife posted:250 parallel twins are fun as hell. It's like being with a really short girl, yeah you look a little awkward in public, ignorant people might make a comment now and then, but when you're riding her it's the best feeling. 250cc bikes are great, however you need to use a different simile, one that isn't misogynistic.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 16:07 |
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Oceanlife posted:250 parallel twins are fun as hell. It's like being with a really short girl, yeah you look a little awkward in public, ignorant people might make a comment now and then, but when you're riding her it's the best feeling.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 16:24 |
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Oceanlife posted:You first bike it like your first gently caress, there is basically no bike that a new rider won't fall in love with. It's amazing, it feels good. Then after you get experience you figure out what your fetishes are. Oceanlife posted:250 parallel twins are fun as hell. It's like being with a really short girl, yeah you look a little awkward in public, ignorant people might make a comment now and then, but when you're riding her it's the best feeling. This is still not ADVRider.txt
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 17:13 |
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Let's get this thread back on track!!! I am very bad about using my rear brake. While just commuting or whatever then I use it, but doing "spirited" riding I hardly ever do. I notice sometimes when I downshift while braking, I will feel it through my front end. I am shifting as smoothly as I can, and also avoiding putting weight into the bars. Sometimes it feels like front skipping, and yesterday it actually wriggled around a bit. Is this because as my engine braking increases from being in a lower gear/higher RPM, my weight shifts back slightly reducing my front end grip? Would using my rear brake help alleviate this? I am going to try to use my rear more anyway, but I wonder if there is something else that could be causing this.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 17:47 |
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I’m also fairly bad at rear brake. I do use it in slow turns and emergency or sudden stops but when I’m just tooling down the road or I see a red light ahead I mainly use front. I’m also pretty bad at riding so take that as you will. E: Front skipping? Do you have ABS? The only time my front ever felt like it was skipping was when I didn’t emerg-brake with both front and rear and the ABS kicked in.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 17:49 |
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I use it every time I come up to a stop sign, or sometimes a stoplight. I just stand on it and skid like a BMX kid in a school parking lot. It's always fun.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 18:30 |
Toe Rag posted:Let's get this thread back on track!!! No, you're very confused here. Basically any deceleration = more weight on the front wheel, you can't unload the front wheel using the brakes or engine braking. Beyond that there isn't really enough to go on here, either get a GoPro or try to understand what's happening in a more specific way. By that I mean isolate exactly what you're doing and what the bike and road circumstances are when it happens, then try to make it happen on purpose; only once you've identified the problem is it remotely possible to go about fixing it, if it's even something that needs fixing at all. My totally baseless speculation from the tiny bit of information there is: you are unintentionally pulsing the front brake while manipulating the throttle to rev match and it's upsetting the bike. Using the rear brake more is just good advice in general. It has little actual stopping value on most non-cruisers, it's most useful for the settling effect it has on swingarm geometry - it effectively makes the bike longer and lower and that improves stability. Again, the way to test stuff like this is to do the same corner in the same way repeatedly and seeing what difference using the rear brake has. Also it doesn't matter too much in this case but in future it's worth mentioning what kind of bike you have as they aren't all the same and the answers can vary wildly!
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 18:35 |
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You should always be using both brakes simultaneously. The front brake only theoretically provides "all" of the stopping power; on the street you aren't going to be pulling maximum-effort stoppies, so your rear tire will still have significant traction and the rear brake will help slow you down without risking a front-wheel lockup. And while you should not get in the habit of using it exclusively, it is safer to apply the rear one first in the rain, on sandy roads, etc.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 20:08 |
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You mentioned spirited riding, are you shifting while in a turn? If so that could be it, you don’t want to upset the bike so much while leaned over, try to get matched into the right gear for the turn ahead of time. I’ve definitely had the squiggles from getting this wrong on my first bike.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 21:14 |
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I hardly use the rear brake. It's super weak on my bikes. I mostly use it as a hill hold at stops and to settle the suspension braking into corners.
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# ? Oct 19, 2020 23:07 |
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So if I want to get into riding would a bmw 310r be a good bike? Something that won’t get me in over my head but also something I won’t outgrow immediately
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 00:30 |
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Yep, that would be a totally appropriate first bike. One of my students bought one as his first and he's having a blast. I need to convince him to quit wearing loving loafers though
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 00:37 |
Koirhor posted:So if I want to get into riding would a bmw 310r be a good bike? Something that won’t get me in over my head but also something I won’t outgrow immediately Would a 300 of some kind be a good bike? gently caress yeah go get an r3 or Ninja 300 or cbr300. A g310 is very much not a good bike though, they are sub-390 levels of shittiness in both design and execution, and surprisingly miserable to ride too! Made in India out of scrap metal and recycled McDonald's trays, no reason whatsoever to buy one besides the badge.
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 00:41 |
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Slavvy posted:Would a 300 of some kind be a good bike? gently caress yeah go get an r3 or Ninja 300 or cbr300. Harsh but fair
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 00:57 |
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Oceanlife posted:250 parallel twins are fun as hell. It's like being with a really short girl, yeah you look a little awkward in public, ignorant people might make a comment now and then, but when you're riding her it's the best feeling. Yikes
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:26 |
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Serious question, what's the bike on the cover of Horny Man Travis's greatest work?
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:29 |
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Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:Serious question, what's the bike on the cover of Horny Man Travis's greatest work? 1996 to 1999 or 2000 GSX-R no idea which displacement gixxer but that's definitely the right generation
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:57 |
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Rev. Dr. Moses P. Lester posted:Serious question, what's the bike on the cover of Horny Man Travis's greatest work? I can't quite tell but it looks like an S-RAD
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:59 |
It is clearly an srad by shape, 750 by the forks as the 600 never got USD.
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:00 |
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SRAD, the gixxer with the most holes. *cough*
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:02 |
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I want a sequel where he upgrades to a TL1000R
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:09 |
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Yeah srad gixxer with race plastics I think maybe my favorite horny man Travis factoid is that he was so horny he only made it 26 minutes after registering before he posted his magnum opus
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:10 |
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I'm playing with the idea of actually attempting a full version of sex motorcycle for nanowrimo but it's EXTREMELY unlikely I'll actually do it
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:11 |
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Horny man Travis is an idealist who imagines a world where guys who ride “hogs” and call bikes “hogs” are in the same gang with people who ride GSXRs and the main fear involved in all of that is they might all want to gently caress and cum in the same motorcycle seat
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:13 |
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gently caress I own the bike from the cover and I still can't identify it beyond "pixelated and distorted bike"
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:49 |
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I use the rear brake for slowing down, front brake for stopping. Ie, if I have time to just slow down for a light or need to maintain distance more than just rolling off the throttle will give me, I'll use the rear brake. Anything requiring any significant stopping power will be front brake (or both).
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 03:16 |
Jim Silly-Balls posted:Horny man Travis is an idealist who imagines a world where guys who ride “hogs” and call bikes “hogs” are in the same gang with people who ride GSXRs and the main fear involved in all of that is they might all want to gently caress and cum in the same motorcycle seat Like a two wheeled ghandi. MomJeans420 posted:gently caress I own the bike from the cover and I still can't identify it beyond "pixelated and distorted bike" If you hosed it more often maybe you'd be able to identify your own bike
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# ? Oct 20, 2020 03:51 |
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Martytoof posted:Im also fairly bad at rear brake. I do use it in slow turns and emergency or sudden stops but when Im just tooling down the road or I see a red light ahead I mainly use front. No ABS. It's not actually skipping ... that's just the best way I can think to describe it Sagebrush posted:You should always be using both brakes simultaneously. The front brake only theoretically provides "all" of the stopping power; on the street you aren't going to be pulling maximum-effort stoppies, so your rear tire will still have significant traction and the rear brake will help slow you down without risking a front-wheel lockup. And while you should not get in the habit of using it exclusively, it is safer to apply the rear one first in the rain, on sandy roads, etc. Oh yeah I agree. I just have a bad habit I need to get myself out of. I crashed on one of my very first rides because (among other things) I locked my rear and skidded off the road. I have since deliberately locked it up several times, and it takes way more pressure than I'd ever actually use, so I just need to get over it, I guess. Ulf posted:You mentioned spirited riding, are you shifting while in a turn? If so that could be it, you don’t want to upset the bike so much while leaned over, try to get matched into the right gear for the turn ahead of time. Yeah, sort of. It was in a slight left into a shaper right, so I was turning slightly while I shifted down. In retrospect I probably didn't need to shift down at all because I was also slowing down generally, not just for the turn. I do know better than to shift while fully turning. Slavvy posted:No, you're very confused here. Basically any deceleration = more weight on the front wheel, you can't unload the front wheel using the brakes or engine braking. I feel like I can provide fairly steady pressure while blipping the throttle, but I am sure I have massive room for improvement. That seems like a fairly reasonable explanation, or I unintentionally put an input into the bars while doing it. I do have a camera, actually. Here is the clip It's like 90MB so don't open that on a phone. I'm not sure if you can really tell anything from that. It could just be a combination of things at once, braking, turning, downshifting, bumps, not smooth, etc. I need to practice more. Unfortunately since COVID the only reliably empty parking lot in town has been half closed and half full of people teaching their kids to drive. The last 4 or 5 times I've gone there, I end up leaving after 5-10 minutes because there's just no room to focus on what you're doing.
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# ? Oct 21, 2020 02:25 |
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I've watched the video and can't exactly tell what's going on. Is the bike doing a quick head shake? You're not braking particularly hard but you're not downshifting very smoothly either.
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# ? Oct 21, 2020 23:15 |
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Yeah basically. I’m on my phone but I think it’s at :30, a quick head shake. I think it’s probably from not smooth shifting and potentially also unintentional steering input.
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# ? Oct 22, 2020 01:02 |
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Slavvy posted:If you hosed it more often maybe you'd be able to identify your own bike Something something about getting a boo-ner? Got to be some kind of joke there *edit* Just looking at a pic of my garage stresses me out, to think it was cleaner than ever a few months ago. No time for anything post-baby
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# ? Oct 22, 2020 22:20 |
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Me waiting for Suzuki to update the GSXR 750
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# ? Oct 22, 2020 22:21 |
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*skeletor voice* NICE ONE, PUNCHY
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# ? Oct 23, 2020 00:27 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:12 |
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I hope you guys are right that I'm about to have so much fun... Just got the title for 2019 Honda CB300R w/ 4400 miles on the clock and a bunch of gear. I pick it up in 13 hours and 33 minutes, but who's counting.
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# ? Oct 23, 2020 00:27 |