hey koba good right up mate. thats really good im sure future 250 people will see what youve written.
hey koba good right up mate. thats really good im sure future 250 people will see what youve written.
not a bad bike to learn on. is starting to get a little hard getting stock parts for it tho.
my owners manual says the dry weight is 169kg
im getting about 300km a tank, thats about 25L, and i rev the shit out of it everywere i go
top speed is about 165
Damn is this reassuring to hear! I'm thinking of buying [This](http://www.trademe.co.nz/Trade-Me-Mo...-181294971.htm) and getting it back on the road, I've been reading all the old threads about reregistering bikes and it's good to hear the frame definitely won't be an issue.
Check it!
Check every aspect of it, even with stringline if you ca to make sure the headstock is in line with the rear shock and swingarm pivot.
They are hard to bend but it is possible on anything.
Make sure it is all there and easy enough to get going.
That buy-now sounds like HEAPS of money for a fucked bike...
He will probably find it hard to sell so if you let him wait a bit you will prob get it cheaper.
Heinz Varieties
Hi Koda,
You mentioned in an earlier post about adding a 15 tooth front sprocket to your GSX 250. I'm pretty green - is that something that I could source and easily do myself or would I be better off letting my new mates at Haldanes sort it out for me?
Cheers, Stevio
http://www.trademe.co.nz/Browse/List...?id=1037832934
Or if you don't mind putting in a little bit of work, I'm selling mine for $1k!
They are awesome bikes but I wouldn't pay $6k for my first bike. I remember the feeling - I nearly bought a Ducatti 400S in my excitement and then saw sense. Save the extra $1000s for your big bike.
Kidnapped one and rode it for a good 10,000 kms. Even with high miles it didn't skip a beat. Being a twin it has a nice smooth power band also being a tourer its comfortable on longer rides. You can feel the weight at low speeds and it is no rocket ship - if you look after it it'll run forever and wont feel as cramped compared to a full sports 250 - I'm geberalising the older ones (MC19/22 and FZR's etc).
It made me realize I'd be quite happy with a sports tourer rather than full out sports. I was really wanting an R6 for my first "real" bike but Now I'm thinking maybe an SV and evetually Zx14.
Skulls N Flames. Bye bye FZR may you have many more miles with your new owner. 600cc time soon!
Bit of a thread resurrection but I thought I'd chip in considering I bought one as my first bike.
I bought mine in late April in Napier and rode it all the way back to dork land. The only reason I bought it was because it was cheap and there wasn't much in Auckland at the time that brother thought were suitable to learn on. But in saying that I am pretty happy with it and it's been really reliable and good on gas (I get about 300km's from an 18 litre tank.)
The good:
She's quite easy to ride and very forgiving of my profoundly average riding with the only times I have nearly gone into a ditch are because of misjudged corners rather than because of the bike.
Despite weighing a lot more than she ought to, when I dropped her she wasn't too hard to pick up (although getting her onto the center stand eludes me) and the only damage was more cracks on the fairings but the indicators are bendy ones so they're fine.
The bad:
The gearbox ratios feel quite short. First doesn't seem really necessary and when cruising at 100km/h it seems to rev quite high at 9000 rpm but I have read that a 15 tooth front sprocket from a yamaha yz450f fits and helps with this.
The steering feels very heavy compared to the 250 bandit I've ridden. She also feels very slow when you ride other 250's.
She weighs a lot. 160 odd kilos. Changes depending on the year I think.
All in all If you don't spend a whole lot on them they're not bad first bikes but I wouldn't spend more than a couple grand on one as there are plenty of better bikes out there.
300km from a 18l tank? That's flippen terrible.
I'm getting 240 - 250kms from the 12L tank on my VL250. Not bad considering the 90kg fat bugger on her back.
[QUOTE=jafagsx250;1130980746]Bit of a thread resurrection but I thought I'd chip in considering I bought one as my first bike.
I bought mine in late April in Napier and rode it all the way back to dork land. The only reason I bought it was because it was cheap and there wasn't much in Auckland at the time that brother thought were suitable to learn on. But in saying that I am pretty happy with it and it's been really reliable and good on gas (I get about 300km's from an 18 litre tank.)
The good:
She's quite easy to ride and very forgiving of my profoundly average riding with the only times I have nearly gone into a ditch are because of misjudged corners rather than because of the bike.
Despite weighing a lot more than she ought to, when I dropped her she wasn't too hard to pick up (although getting her onto the center stand eludes me) and the only damage was more cracks on the fairings but the indicators are bendy ones so they're fine.
Okay how my dad taught me face the bike left hand on handle bar right on the seat or grab rail right foot on the centre stand.
push down with the foot and the bike will lift easy . use the arms to steady the bike . one smooth motion . not rocking rolling .
always walk the bike on the lft hand side or get on the bike left hand side side stand never the right.
[QUOTE=actungbaby;1130981075]The couple times I have tried I ended up rocking and rolling it. I will give it another go tomorrow. I am cautious about dropping the bike onto my legs so i keep the side stand on. or dropping it onto its side so if I keep it long term I'll probably buy a paddock stand which uses the swing arms rather than pegs as there isn't room for them.
How come its bad to get onto the bike from the right hand side?
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