PDA

View Full Version : Motorcycle courier job?



SMOKEU
7th May 2014, 12:50
Has anyone here done that for a job? What's it like?

The bike will probably be a CT110. Is it hard changing from a "normal" gear shift pattern to the postie bike gear pattern back and forth all the time? Is it hard getting used to no clutch, and then having a clutch again, or is it easy like going from a manual to an auto car?

scott411
7th May 2014, 12:55
Has anyone here done that for a job? What's it like?

The bike will probably be a CT110. Is it hard changing from a "normal" gear shift pattern to the postie bike gear pattern back and forth all the time? Is it hard getting used to no clutch, and then having a clutch again, or is it easy like going from a manual to an auto car?

having got on and off bikes, quads, scooters etc for a long time, you get used to it pretty quick,

ellipsis
7th May 2014, 13:26
Is it hard changing from a "normal" gear shift pattern to the postie bike gear pattern back and forth all the time? Is it hard getting used to no clutch, and then having a clutch again, or is it easy like going from a manual to an auto car?


...should I have toast for lunch with marmite, and will I be able to eat it properly if I butter one side and put the marmite on the other side...?

gjm
7th May 2014, 18:45
I as a courier in London, bike and motorbike, back in the late 80s. I rode a Suzuki GS550.

You'll need all the usual biking awareness skills, in spades. And (depending on where you are riding) body armour.

Camaraderie between riders is generally superb, but for some reason drivers see a courier and see a target. More so than with regular motorcyclists!

I enjoyed it.

Madness
7th May 2014, 18:50
...should I have toast for lunch with marmite, and will I be able to eat it properly if I butter one side and put the marmite on the other side...?

Dunno mate. I think I might do a poo.

skippa1
7th May 2014, 18:54
Dunno mate. I think I might do a poo.
Yeah....first thing every morning

jim.cox
7th May 2014, 19:13
Has anyone here done that for a job? What's it like?

A: Yes

B: Dangerous

As GJM the Scooterboy says you are going to need ALL your riding skills. You are out in all weathers and at all hours. Most couriers dont last that long, but it is an experience that will colour the rest of your life - If you live, that is :)

With this city's fucked up streets, winter coming on and a shit heap bike I reccon you'll last a month or two or at most

I'd also suggest you should lay off the green stuff - you need to be awake and aware to avoid being just another statistic

Like GJM I enjoyed my stint at it - although I suspect it does seem better in retrospect than it did at the time

Just my $0.02

SMOKEU
7th May 2014, 19:32
A: Yes

B: Dangerous

As GJM the Scooterboy says you are going to need ALL your riding skills. You are out in all weathers and at all hours. Most couriers dont last that long, but it is an experience that will colour the rest of your life - If you live, that is :)

With this city's fucked up streets, winter coming on and a shit heap bike I reccon you'll last a month or two or at most

I'd also suggest you should lay off the green stuff - you need to be awake and aware to avoid being just another statistic

Like GJM I enjoyed my stint at it - although I suspect it does seem better in retrospect than it did at the time

Just my $0.02

Thanks for the advice. It sounds like a pretty hardcore job then.

So instead of the green stuff, you reckon I should stick to speed so I can focus more?

jim.cox
7th May 2014, 21:22
Thanks for the advice. It sounds like a pretty hardcore job then.

So instead of the green stuff, you reckon I should stick to speed so I can focus more?

I'm hardly likely to advocate illegal chemicals on a public forum frequented by members of the constabulary, but I do know that too much coffee also isn't such a great idea

Gremlin
7th May 2014, 23:13
Why don't you try being a bicycle courier. You espouse the awesomeness of bicycles, and they're a whole lot cheaper to maintain.

awa355
8th May 2014, 07:51
Why don't you try being a bicycle courier. You espouse the awesomeness of bicycles, and they're a whole lot cheaper to maintain.

You can get heaps more on a pushbike than a motorbike. I suspect the water tanks may be empty.:niceone:

http://i1074.photobucket.com/albums/w420/awa355/Untitledpicture-16.png

F5 Dave
8th May 2014, 15:36
they went out of using bikes years ago. there's a good reason, several really.

I would suspect the end result is that you are destined to leave the job having made no real money, have no transferable skills to add to your CV, exposed yourself to lots of risk & lose the joy of riding motorcycles. Couriers seem to enter the job thinking they are making good money and bragging excessively about it & exit a few years later knowing the awful truth.

SMOKEU
8th May 2014, 15:40
Why don't you try being a bicycle courier. You espouse the awesomeness of bicycles, and they're a whole lot cheaper to maintain.

Well they supply the motorbike, so the running costs are not for me to worry about.

But from all the negative feedback I've been hearing, I won't apply for the job after all. I thought it would be a fairly cruisy job, but it seems like I was wrong.

I don't want to do it just to end up hating motorcycling and then not getting much enjoyment from my own bike, so I'll choose to keep motorcycling as a hobby and not as a job. Thanks everyone!

Gremlin
8th May 2014, 15:42
I don't want to do it just to end up hating motorcycling and then not getting much enjoyment from my own bike, so I'll choose to keep motorcycling as a hobby and not as a job. Thanks everyone!
A mate once said, never make your hobby / passion your job, otherwise it's no longer your hobby / passion.

Makes sense to me...

SMOKEU
8th May 2014, 15:48
A mate once said, never make your hobby / passion your job, otherwise it's no longer your hobby / passion.

Makes sense to me...

That's really good advice. You're not the first person to have told me that either.

bogan
8th May 2014, 15:51
A mate once said, never make your hobby / passion your job, otherwise it's no longer your hobby / passion.

Makes sense to me...

Also, don't get a job which you are too passionate about otherwise you'll have no time for your hobby either :scratch:

bogan
8th May 2014, 16:41
I have read another saying that if you enjoy your job you never indirectly have to work.

Yeh, I've also read working is for plebs anyway.

DMNTD
8th May 2014, 17:37
A mate once said, never make your hobby / passion your job, otherwise it's no longer your hobby / passion.

Makes sense to me...

Hence why I stopped motorcycle sales. It's a sad day when you get to work to see "just another red Ducati" :facepalm:

Gremlin
8th May 2014, 18:01
Hence why I stopped motorcycle sales. It's a sad day when you get to work to see "just another red Ducati" :facepalm:
Much better to say that about flash cars :msn-wink:

Gotta say, after 8 years in IT, early on, plenty of passion, playing with my own gear etc. Now, any problems for myself are a groan, and I-just-want-it-to-work

gjm
8th May 2014, 21:11
Much better to say that about flash cars :msn-wink:

Gotta say, after 8 years in IT, early on, plenty of passion, playing with my own gear etc. Now, any problems for myself are a groan, and I-just-want-it-to-work

Yup. IT is great to start with. Gets a bit old quite quickly...

Back on topic - if you can get a courier job doing longer distance work, I'm told that can be nice. When the sun is shining, at least.

Katman
8th May 2014, 21:26
I did it for 2 years, thinking it was the greatest job ever, before starting to become disillusioned with it - so I went on holiday.

When I came back I did it for another year thinking it was the greatest job ever, before I became that fucked off with it that I went on holiday.

When I came back I did it for another six months thinking it was the greatest job ever before I though "Fuck this for a joke".

Looking back almost 20 years now and I truly think it was the greatest job I've ever had.

I've never felt so alive.

Laava
8th May 2014, 22:48
Quote----A mate once said, never make your hobby / passion your job, otherwise it's no longer your hobby / passion.

Must be a lot of disappointed hookers about!