I would get a bike round there and have a hoon.
The absolute BIGGEST thing to remember, is to watch where you want to go. Not down at where the front wheel is. Remember/practice that, and your new bike will stay nice and shiny.
I would get a bike round there and have a hoon.
The absolute BIGGEST thing to remember, is to watch where you want to go. Not down at where the front wheel is. Remember/practice that, and your new bike will stay nice and shiny.
I went on the ProRider gravel course, big eye opener on how to ride on the stuff ... good fun too! :-)
At 6'2" and 75kg you seem to be a lanky streak of .... ;-) Maybe go for something tall like a dirt bike or motard (I've a DR-Z400SM which is a great machine .. cheap to keep and LAMs approved) I'd skip the Scorpio 225's they are aweful to ride! A friend of mine has a Honda CB250 Hornet, very comfy machine but servicing costs more as it's a 4 cylinder.
I used to think that was the case when on gravel, but I went on a riding course and the rules for brakes on gravel are the same as on the road, more front brake than back .. too much rear brake and you lock it and then the stones roll around under the wheel making you go faster not slower.
First up, you have to pay to play. Look up the LAMS list (gooooooooogle) to see what is available to you as a learner i.e. what is learner legal.
My recommendation is one of the dirt bike based Motards. being dirt bike based they love a good falling over and are tall. plus they should handle the dirt path (oooh errr) pretty well.
I thought elections were decided by angry posts on social media. - F5 Dave
It is :-) But not as pricey as you think .. what is your budget ? My 2010 DR-Z400SM cost me $6500 and was barely used by the previous owner, I've run up an extra 10000km in the past 9 months of having it. But loads of road-legal dirt bikes out there, if you like the DR-Z, look at the Kawasaki KLX400 it's the exact same bike just in Kawasaki green :-)
Standard dirt-bikes can usually be converted to motard with only a little effort, but the dirt bikes handle the gravel even betterer (21" skinny wheel on the front works better on gravel than 17" road wheels)
Go to a dealer and have some test sit ons and rides see what feels nicest to you ... being tall you will probably be looking dirt/motard or tourer ... unless you enjoy the hunchback look you'll develop from a sports bike :-)
With your height and weight any of the street legal 250 trail based bikes will be fine - I'm 5'8'' and have a DRZ250 Suzuki. 28,000km travelled on this bike, oil and filter changes plus a set of front brake pads have been the only work needed so far. I run dual purpose tyres and care is required on wet slippery sealed surfaces. My $86 rear lasts about 6000km and the $70 front over 10,000km. This bike has been from Kaitaia to Queenstown and back twice so far. Motards are generally more expensive than a trail bike as they have more bling. Kawasaki, Yamaha and Suzuki all have sensible 250 road registered trail bikes available and have had for years. A very good 250 single will be far cheaper than a 20 year old 4 cylinder 250 street bike to run - but it won't be as fast! Or look as flash.
I'm 6 2 and around 97kg, I have a little CBF250 that I nip around on, bike takes it like a champ! Even around the 100kph it handles well......if I were you though I would start on a dirt bike, I think it should almost be compulsory for every biker!![]()
You could take a look at a Hyosung 250. They are a reasonable large bike for a 250 and might be a better fit for you given your height.
Makes sense to me. Learning anything is about pushing limits, and while a dirt bike's no better at that than any other sort the dirt itself is a helava lot softer than chipseal. Most novices chuck their machines away several times in the first months and I can't see how doing that on a dirt track isn't a better idea.
Sure, there's slightly different techniques required on the road, on a road bike, but at least in the dirt they get the basics right without loosing too much skin, eh?
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
Riding a dirt bike off road is a good way to work out traction sense, braking, how to make the thing go, top and turn without having to deal with asphalt, concrete, other vehicles and road users and also higher speeds. All I can offer is my own learner experience from 14 through 17 and learning to ride on my TS125 and impaling myself and the poor wee bike into the scenery all over the show. Plus when I started there was no such thing as organised training or stepped licences: I got a motorbike licence and that was it. the test consisted of the local cop watching me do a few figure 8's in a carpark and riding round the block.
Maybe today and particularly if you want to ride on road, all you neeed is road based training, but I personally think that dirt bike experience is still valuable. Hell of a lot of fun, too, lets not forget that.![]()
I thought elections were decided by angry posts on social media. - F5 Dave
Haha funny stuff! Yeah dirt is more forgiving than road! I have seen some terrible sights on the road, poor buggers learning to ride on the road. I like to think my dirt bike experience gave me a huge advantage over most road learners....
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