I know the feeling, that's why I sold my sports and bought a cruiser. Lots of Wellington trips. The old bike had my back and ass screaming bloody murder by 2hours. When I bought this in Wellington, rode it up with quick stops only at petrol stations, didn't even need to get up and stretch.
True enough, but that's exactly why I wouldn't want to dive straight into a 6-8 hour epic journey without knowing what it's going to do to me!
Suntoucher: Yeah, if I was doing longer trips around the place then I'd definitely be getting a more laid back bike. For all my normal riding, the VFR suits me fine, though.
Your riding position is wrong.
You should be using your core to hold yourself up on the NC30, and should have essentially no weight on your wrists and the bars at all.
I've ridden to Wellington and immediately back on my first VFR, and apart from some cramping and sleep deprivation, had no major issues.
This man speaks the truth.
Should be your abs hurting rather than your wrists.![]()
I'd say most sports ducatis are far more agressive than that - plus a lot of the modern supersports, which a lot of riders on this ride may have. The VFR is more compact than aggressive.
The only problem I've had on my nc30/35 is my legs cramping after hours hard riding on the road. Considering I get this on most bikes, and that regular breaks (or relaxed riding) is the easiest solution, this isn't a big deal :P
VFR flaw #1: can't adjust clutch lever to optimum position due to cable interfering with speedo. fixed for RVF (and trackbikes without speedo)
You're also like a foot shorter than I am...
Was going to make the same point as Andrew, the clutch lever has to sit high because otherwise it nails the speedo when turning right... The lever on mine is bent into a Z shape to make it a bit better but it's still high.
I'm sure there are a million things I can improve, but it seems to me that my legs don't fit into the tank grooves right therefore I can't stop myself sliding around if I rely on my legs to grip... I also have to sit far more upright than the shorter people I've seen sitting on my bike. This makes my arms more vertical, hence more issues with the clutch lever. Not complaining, love the bike to pieces...
Besides, ergonomic stuff is all pretty variable, just because you can do it doesn't mean it's feasible for me... Maybe you lot just have stronger wrists![]()
http://www.techspec-aus.com.au/honda.html
I'm going to get a set when I end up finding which one would fit.
I've seen places stocking stuff that looks suspiciously like that in rolls... 3mm closed cell foam, adhesive backed, non-slip pattern on the top... Could always cut a few pads out to fit.
Come to thing of it, the loose all-weather riding pants probably don't help in the grip department, but they do alleviate the VFR leg roasting, too.
BACK ON TOPIC NIMRODS
KiwiBitcher
where opinion holds more weight than fact.
It's better to not pass and know that you could have than to pass and find out that you can't. Wait for the straight.
So like, is this like, gonna happen?
KiwiBitcher
where opinion holds more weight than fact.
It's better to not pass and know that you could have than to pass and find out that you can't. Wait for the straight.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks