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FROSTY
18th May 2007, 20:40
I took one of these lil bikes for a bit of a blat today.
BLOODY NEAT LIL BIKE.:rockon:
What impressed me was the aparent build quality. How easy it was to ride,ease of use of all the controls --including the choke and YAAY its basicly dropproof.
It was grunty enough to ride--seemed to have more poke than a gn and similar handling to a FXR, The riding position is pretty neutral and its light and easy to pick up.
The gearbox was slick and easy to use --there is a heel plate for upchanges but looking at the gearshift thats easily hacksawed off
Its got a nifty lil fuel gauge
Yep--Ive found a bike Id suggest to ANY newbee rider.
EDIT--I must add having now lived with one for awhile on and off that I 100% stand behind my initial assessment of this bike.
My ONLY reservation is the utterly crappy factory front tyre. You MUST check the tyre pressures weekly they seem to go flat.
In my opinion the front tyre should be replaced almost right away as you are gonna take a fair while to wear it out.

marty
18th May 2007, 20:46
i took the heel changer off for a neighbour and put a shifter off (i think) a DT175 - the young guy supplied it.

took it for a good fang - heaps better than a GN - easy @ 100km/h whereas a GN struggles with me on it.

much harder to scrape the pegs......

rainman
18th May 2007, 23:24
... its light and easy to pick up....

I don't think you're meant to drop them... :innocent:

Big Dog
18th May 2007, 23:38
I had a ride of the Strangers one at the AWNMR a few weeks back. I'll second frostys motion.

Madness
18th May 2007, 23:44
YAAY its basicly dropproof.

I have it on good authority that the forks bend easily :shutup:

klingon
18th May 2007, 23:45
I had a ride of the Strangers one at the AWNMR a few weeks back. I'll second frostys motion.

oOoOOOOoOoOoh when my ribs are healed I'm going to have a ride on the Stranger's Scorpio. I'm looking forward to it after that rave review :D

Big Dog
18th May 2007, 23:59
I have it on good authority that the forks bend easily :shutup:

While I did experience some flex out of the forks, even:
emergency braking with 150kg of rider and gear
Riding over a see saw
and other such malarky there was no sign of bending.

If you have evidence to the contrary I would be keen to see it as I know a few riders who have or want to buy one.

Big Dog
19th May 2007, 00:03
On a seperate note what I did like about the little commuter / learner.
Zippy engine (even with me aboard).
Handles splendidly at low speed.
A hoot a medium speed.
Stable at 100.

As a learner bike the reason I feel I could recommend it is that it does not let you cheat as readily as a GN. You have to be giving it good inputs to get good results. Very entertaining.

Although I would look goofy on one I would buy one to commute on and teach others to ride on.

Lucy
19th May 2007, 17:18
As a learner bike the reason I feel I could recommend it is that it does not let you cheat as readily as a GN. You have to be giving it good inputs to get good results. Very entertaining.

Although I would look goofy on one I would buy one to commute on and teach others to ride on.

What do you mean by 'cheat as readily'? Do you mean you have to actually ride it? As opposed to a GN that lets you jump on and feel like an expert straight away? I'm not taking the piss or anything, I am interested in this.

Big Dog
20th May 2007, 02:09
What do you mean by 'cheat as readily'? Do you mean you have to actually ride it? As opposed to a GN that lets you jump on and feel like an expert straight away? I'm not taking the piss or anything, I am interested in this.

The GN250's that I have ridden can be pointed and the bike will follow.
I have seen riders on GN250's replace tryes because they are no longer legal. even though the tyre still has chicken strips as wide as, or wider than the worn part of the tyre on each side (including the "new nobblies").

Please note this is a generalisation based on my limited experience with GN's (test riding for friends without licenses and loan bikes when mine have been at the shop) and my experience with GN riders.

I think the reason for the lesser ability to just point and shoot (direct steering at its finest) with the Scorpio Z is the SLIGHTLY steeper rake of the front end.

The result is that the Scorpio is dependent on counter steering and lean to take any turns.

The difference between the two (In my opinion) is that the GN can be ridden much faster under direct inputs than the Z. On the Z if you try direct inputs above about 40kmph and supply enough counter lean to prevent it counter steering it keeps going in a straight line.
do the same on a GN and it will go in the direction the wheel is pointed.

6 of one and a half dozen of the other as to which is better for a learner.
The GN can certainly be ridden using counter steering and can in good hands be a very effective bike. The GN is also very forgiving bike and will get you out of a lot of mischief with no more than a sinking feeling as a warning. get enough of these sinking feelings and you find you think that it is just a part of the riding experience until some one shows you what it really should feel like on their pillion seat or you push your own limits.
But I have seen a few riders climb off them and onto bigger machinery and really crap themselves (and other riders around them) because they have made it all the way to a full license having never taken a corner at a lean.

There is not really sufficient room to go into why leaning is good. There are lots of good books at the library and or threads on here about the same, but that would be a long way off topic.

Suffice to say lean is good for most if not all cornering. Direct input steering (point and shoot) fights all of the natural instincts of a bike.

Riders tend to lose fights with bikes.

The GN is not bad. It just takes a little more discipline and preferably someone with experience mentoring you to not develop some bad habits that will not be forgiven as easily on less learner oriented bikes.

Gizzit
2nd June 2007, 18:08
i took the heel changer off for a neighbour and put a shifter off (i think) a DT175 - the young guy supplied it.

took it for a good fang - heaps better than a GN - easy @ 100km/h whereas a GN struggles with me on it.

much harder to scrape the pegs......

I just had a look at one these the other day, and yes that heel changer would be the first thing to go!

I have been looking for a new 250cc for commuting on, and the odd run out on the open road, and had seriously been looking at a GN250. I would be interested to hear from as many people as know, which is the better bike, and why. I know the GN has a large following and have been around for years, and I guess these Scorpion's are pretty new on the scene.
Any input from people who have ridden them both would be greatfuly received, as I'm about to lay down cash for one or the other, next week.

Highlander
2nd June 2007, 18:14
I didn't ride it but sat on and looked at it struck me as a modernised, naked SRX

Waylander
2nd June 2007, 18:23
I've seen one crash at about 60k and the forka were bent quite badly.

Great commuter though and if the rider is carefull (as a newbie shouldbe) they wont have any problems.

Dutchee
4th June 2007, 11:20
I've had my Z for 6 weeks or so. Bought it solely for commuting on, as wanted something low to the ground. Tyres - not good. Being skinny little wheels, when you hit a scrape mark (not sure what they're called) on the motorway, you can feel the bike flexing. Rear brakes - at the RRRS course the other week, I had all my weight on the damn thing & it only just slowed down. Mirrors - seeing multiple cars & bikes can be bloody annoying and can make it harder to decide whether to lanesplit or wait for a bike to pass.
Mileage - 35.6k/1l - finding it strange not to have to fill up a couple of times a week. About 336k I have to switch on to reserve. Reserve is easy to find & switch over. The choke is a PITA to find as it seems too far back.
The heel changer Henderson motorcycles chopped off for me at the first service. When standing up I found I hit it, didn't notice it the rest of the time.
The footpegs fold up easily, so have to ensure I've got somewhere to rest my feet before taking off. Great for when you drop the bike on the dirt, though.
Gravel - not a gravel basher, too much flex, too light.
Definitely a fun little bike. Seat gives me a sore butt after about 60k, so wouldn't want to tour on her. Haven't checked whether the suspension can be softened as you do feel every bump stock.
I hate GN's even though I've never ridden one, so can't compare the two bikes, just give you my opinion on the Z. Forks bending doesn't surprise me, they look more like matchsticks, but for the price, you can't expect an R1.

Gizzit
5th June 2007, 18:27
I've had my Z for 6 weeks or so. Bought it solely for commuting on, as wanted something low to the ground. Tyres - not good. Being skinny little wheels, when you hit a scrape mark (not sure what they're called) on the motorway, you can feel the bike flexing. Rear brakes - at the RRRS course the other week, I had all my weight on the damn thing & it only just slowed down. Mirrors - seeing multiple cars & bikes can be bloody annoying and can make it harder to decide whether to lanesplit or wait for a bike to pass.
Mileage - 35.6k/1l - finding it strange not to have to fill up a couple of times a week. About 336k I have to switch on to reserve. Reserve is easy to find & switch over. The choke is a PITA to find as it seems too far back.
The heel changer Henderson motorcycles chopped off for me at the first service. When standing up I found I hit it, didn't notice it the rest of the time.
The footpegs fold up easily, so have to ensure I've got somewhere to rest my feet before taking off. Great for when you drop the bike on the dirt, though.
Gravel - not a gravel basher, too much flex, too light.
Definitely a fun little bike. Seat gives me a sore butt after about 60k, so wouldn't want to tour on her. Haven't checked whether the suspension can be softened as you do feel every bump stock.
I hate GN's even though I've never ridden one, so can't compare the two bikes, just give you my opinion on the Z. Forks bending doesn't surprise me, they look more like matchsticks, but for the price, you can't expect an R1.

Interesting that you say you "hate GN's" even though you've never ridden one :mellow: It's good to get your view on the Scorpion.
Thanks. I'm still working through the pros and cons of a variety of bikes, and will now probably head towards second hand mid range 500 - 650 size maybe.

TONO
5th June 2007, 18:34
I've seen one crash at about 60k and the forka were bent quite badly.

Great commuter though and if the rider is carefull (as a newbie shouldbe) they wont have any problems.

WELL THEN! YOU SHOULD GET ONE:yes:

Waylander
5th June 2007, 18:36
WELL THEN! YOU SHOULD GET ONE:yes:
already have 3 bikes. one is a 250 why would I need another?

nz3rdsqr
18th December 2009, 15:04
im a new rider and i have ridden dirt bikes and a couple of road bikes. i have found the scorpio is a easy light and all round fun bike. the heel shifter is pointless and has no feeling but other than that it is good. im 60kg and it will go over 110.

cruza
18th December 2009, 19:27
im a new rider and i have ridden dirt bikes and a couple of road bikes. i have found the scorpio is a easy light and all round fun bike. the heel shifter is pointless and has no feeling but other than that it is good. im 60kg and it will go over 110.

Took rumgirls heel shifter off with a angle grinder, as it was annoying, 100 percent better. Neat little bike for the price

BikerDazz
18th December 2009, 19:37
Took rumgirls heel shifter off with a angle grinder, as it was annoying, 100 percent better. Neat little bike for the price

Bought mine from Yamaha 2 weeks months or so ago. Told them I'd buy it as long as the cut off the heel shifter.

Looking forward to a bigger bike but it's great for commuting through traffic - light and "zappy". And I'll probably keep it for work.:cool:

cruza
18th December 2009, 19:39
Bought mine from Yamaha 2 weeks months or so ago. Told them I'd buy it as long as the cut off the heel shifter.

Looking forward to a bigger bike but it's great for commuting through traffic - light and "zappy". And I'll probably keep it for work.:cool:

I sneak out a bit on it. Reminds me of my first bike a cb250rs years ago.

Stickchick
18th December 2009, 19:45
I absolutely love my Scorpio. I ride it to Napier and back quite a fair bit and have even ridden to Welly on it. Planning to do a North Island tour once I can get some time off work. :banana:

cruza
18th December 2009, 19:49
I absolutely love my Scorpio. I ride it to Napier and back quite a fair bit and have even ridden to Welly on it. Planning to do a North Island tour once I can get some time off work. :banana:

Rg did 1000km+ weekends on it already. What kms are you getting b4 reserve. on south island kb rally last weekend we did 265km to reefton and put 11 litres in tank, and still weren't on reserve!

Stickchick
18th December 2009, 19:56
Rg did 1000km+ weekends on it already. What kms are you getting b4 reserve. on south island kb rally last weekend we did 265km to reefton and put 11 litres in tank, and still weren't on reserve!

Have no idea actually....never run it down to reserve. I have run out of petrol but never actually looked at the clock to see how many k's I had done. More worried about being stuck out the back of beyond and trying to work out how to get back home.

cruza
18th December 2009, 20:10
Have no idea actually....never run it down to reserve. I have run out of petrol but never actually looked at the clock to see how many k's I had done. More worried about being stuck out the back of beyond and trying to work out how to get back home.

Know the feeling. I had a 2.25 coke bottle full of gas on the pack rack just in case. pushing is not a option I like ;)

FROSTY
30th December 2009, 18:42
Know the feeling. I had a 2.25 coke bottle full of gas on the pack rack just in case. pushing is not a option I like ;)
Hmm dude its virtually impossible to run one outa gas completely.
Reserve is good for 30 km then you get another 5 kmby doint the lay her on her side trick (tip the gas fromthe bottom of the right tank cheek)

Big Dog
31st December 2009, 22:32
Hmm dude its virtually impossible to run one outa gas completely.
Reserve is good for 30 km then you get another 5 kmby doint the lay her on her side trick (tip the gas fromthe bottom of the right tank cheek)

Provided the you have regularly used the fuel in your reserve.

A couple of months ago I ran out of gas on the way to the gas station from work.

No worries says I.

Switch to reserve.

Kick it.
No.

Kick it some more.
No.

Kick it lots more.
No, no, no almost, no, no, no.

Bugger.

Push the bike to the top of the hill and coast to the gassy.

Fill up with gas.

Starts first kick.

Drain tank at home to investigate.
60mls of water in the reserve.

Would have got to gas eventually but I could have damn near kicked it home in less effort.

Since then I dutifully run the first 5km in reserve on each tank, just to make sure the condensation does not build up again.

Daffyd
4th January 2010, 11:03
I didn't ride it but sat on and looked at it struck me as a modernised, naked SRX

The SRX I had was naked. Bloody good wee bike, too.

newbould
6th January 2010, 21:53
Rg did 1000km+ weekends on it already. What kms are you getting b4 reserve. on south island kb rally last weekend we did 265km to reefton and put 11 litres in tank, and still weren't on reserve!

350 k before reserve. But if you fanbg along at 100 on th eopen road that drops markedly. Most of my ride is 80 - 100 open road and 50 round town. As for gravel - no problem. I keep looking at 600 - 650 bikes but the scorp does all I need (maybe not all I want) so may well end up getting a bigger bike just for longer trips. time will tell.

newbould
6th January 2010, 21:56
Know the feeling. I had a 2.25 coke bottle full of gas on the pack rack just in case. pushing is not a option I like ;)

Sounds dodgey to me. Gas stations haven't let you use coke bottle for many years. But could be urban legend like cell phone use at gas station

cruza
6th January 2010, 22:34
Sounds dodgey to me. Gas stations haven't let you use coke bottle for many years. But could be urban legend like cell phone use at gas station

fill them at home from lawnmower fuel tin. Used bottles for many years when dirt biking, very tough, don't leak .
Dodgey? doubtful.

GeForce
8th January 2010, 10:10
I recon' the Virago is way better. Scorpio is good for commuting not 'long' rides. Also looks a bit 'cheap'

cruza
8th January 2010, 12:22
I recon' the Virago is way better. Scorpio is good for commuting not 'long' rides. Also looks a bit 'cheap'

No disputing that, But for a value bike to buy, learn on , fix and run they're pretty good. Sure 2010 will see sub 2k 2007 bikes starting to appear. Both are pretty underpowered for the open road, but still get there in the end.