Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 42

Thread: The RS250

  1. #1
    Join Date
    11th March 2008 - 19:12
    Bike
    2010 Triumph Street Triple R
    Location
    Hibiscus Coast, Auckland
    Posts
    132

    The RS250

    Hey all, well I am looking into these Aprilla RS250's. I would like something with a bita power but because of learners can only get a 250.

    Would just like to know how these bikes run and how reliable they are? Are they a decent bike for the street or are they more of a racing bike? I don't really know anything about them except for the fact they are double the HP of mose other 250's..

    Cheers.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    21st August 2004 - 12:00
    Bike
    2017 Suzuki Dl1000
    Location
    Picton
    Posts
    5,177
    Good on you for looking before buying.

    The Aprilla is not suitable as a learner's bike for a number of reasons. It is race bread, and being a two stroke it requires a lot more maintenance than a 4 stroke. While the handling is magnificent for someone experienced, a learner may find that things happen too quickly and will soon find himself in trouble.

    It is fully faired, and that means $$$$$$ when it falls over. Believe me, that at some stage you will drop this bike even if it just while manouvering it out of your garage.

    I would strongly suggest a naked bike (GN or Scorpio) while on your learners, and then progress to something a bit faster about 3 - 6 months after you get your restricted.
    Time to ride

  3. #3
    Join Date
    11th March 2008 - 19:12
    Bike
    2010 Triumph Street Triple R
    Location
    Hibiscus Coast, Auckland
    Posts
    132
    The maintenance was the only reason which was putting me off a 2-stroke. I have done quite a bit of riding before but mostly off road.

    My other options were a CBR, GSXR or ZXR something along those lines.. They just don't look so nice and the new 250's don't go so quickly.. :P

  4. #4
    Join Date
    5th May 2008 - 20:56
    Bike
    Z900
    Location
    Dunedin
    Posts
    666
    get your self a zx10r, that will solve your power problem's
    "your car is boring"

  5. #5
    Join Date
    27th October 2008 - 11:28
    Bike
    `
    Location
    dannevirke
    Posts
    1,699
    Been looking at two strokes like the RS myself, I'm on my R licence. Just adding on to what Jantar said, they are a little hardcore for a learner. Riding one myself it seems to take a lot more effort to actually make go fast even though they are more powerfull. Regular rebuilds every 10-11, 000 km's which from what I've heard on here can cost anything between 400-700 bucks. I wan't an aprillia or one of the other two strokes myself but they're too expensive aye. I guess they are more of a race bike but if you like a thrash on the street (don't admit it here) then it could be cool assuming you've done a bit of mx racing or some other form of motorcycle competition as experience. But maybe you should look at zxr/cbr/fzr/gsxr 250's. Reliable, cost not much to run and are quite fast if you want. I think the stock new zxr250 gets 0-100 in about 5 seconds which will smoke most cars haha. Ofcourse they aren't naked like Jantar suggested, but just take off the fairings for a couple weeks if you are scared of wrecking the plastics.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    27th February 2005 - 08:47
    Bike
    a red heap
    Location
    towel wronger
    Posts
    6,522
    if you are one of these complete learners that thinks "a motorcycle will be neat" and you are keen on one, i suggest you get insurance, both motorcycle and life.

    if you have experience with 250 2-stroke motorcross machines, or similar (and not just "i rode my mates one up his driveway once") you should be fine.

    and dont worry about the whole "get a naked bike, it will be cheaper to fix", and "you will drop it". get whatever turns you on.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    27th October 2008 - 11:28
    Bike
    `
    Location
    dannevirke
    Posts
    1,699
    Quote Originally Posted by Rych View Post
    The maintenance was the only reason which was putting me off a 2-stroke. I have done quite a bit of riding before but mostly off road.

    My other options were a CBR, GSXR or ZXR something along those lines.. They just don't look so nice and the new 250's don't go so quickly.. :P
    Actually, if you haven't done anything short of the 125gp thing I would say zxr250/cbr250's would seem pretty fast to you if you know how to ride one.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    27th October 2008 - 11:28
    Bike
    `
    Location
    dannevirke
    Posts
    1,699
    Quote Originally Posted by nodrog View Post
    if you are one of these complete learners that thinks "a motorcycle will be neat" and you are keen on one, i suggest you get insurance, both motorcycle and life.

    if you have experience with 250 2-stroke motorcross machines, or similar (and not just "i rode my mates one up his driveway once") you should be fine.

    and dont worry about the whole "get a naked bike, it will be cheaper to fix", and "you will drop it". get whatever turns you on.
    I don't really agree with the 250 motocross thing. For a start the powerbands are nothing alike being a different engine config aprt from the fact that they both peak right up the tacho. Second-two stroke mx bikes are actually the most reliable mx bikes you can get (complete oposite for roadbikes lol). New piston and rings every 40 hour riding, and never break down or sieze like the road bike two strokes where as mx fourstrokes are always dropping valves and shiet like that. I think the difference in reliability between road and dirt two strokes is that dirt bikes always get the snot revved out of them (on the limit) all the time. No oil or carbon build up. And someone once told me the long stroke of the road bike v twin is why they always suffer from seizures

  9. #9
    Join Date
    17th February 2005 - 11:36
    Bike
    Bikes!
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,649
    The maintenance needs to be regular yes, but it's also very very simple. The motors themselves are incredibly simple, and a lot easier to work on than the four cylinder four strokes... for the amount of room to work on if nothing else!

    Changing plugs, gearbox oil, and cleaning powervalves... they're all easy to do, and require little more than a 3/8" drive socket set.

    It's the frequency that matters the most.... every 4000kms odd you want to clean and adjust the power valves... take you about an hour by the time you've done it twice already.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    27th October 2008 - 11:28
    Bike
    `
    Location
    dannevirke
    Posts
    1,699
    Hey Imdying, tell me if I was anywhere near the mark when I said the long stroke of the two stroke v-twins is partly responsible for poor reliability compared to dirt bike 125's/250's

  11. #11
    Join Date
    27th February 2005 - 08:47
    Bike
    a red heap
    Location
    towel wronger
    Posts
    6,522
    Quote Originally Posted by wbks View Post
    I don't really agree with the 250 motocross thing. For a start the powerbands are nothing alike being a different engine config aprt from the fact that they both peak right up the tacho. Second-two stroke mx bikes are actually the most reliable mx bikes you can get (complete oposite for roadbikes lol). New piston and rings every 40 hour riding, and never break down or sieze like the road bike two strokes where as mx fourstrokes are always dropping valves and shiet like that. I think the difference in reliability between road and dirt two strokes is that dirt bikes always get the snot revved out of them (on the limit) all the time. No oil or carbon build up. And someone once told me the long stroke of the road bike v twin is why they always suffer from seizures
    im not talking about reliabilty, im talking about the experience of being able to manage the sometime unexpected kick of a powerband, wether it be on a 2-stroke MXer, or a 2-stroke road bike. for a complete learner having the powerband kick in mid corner (or anywhere for that matter) unexpectedly can be a pants shitting experience.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    17th February 2005 - 11:36
    Bike
    Bikes!
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,649
    Quote Originally Posted by wbks View Post
    Hey Imdying, tell me if I was anywhere near the mark when I said the long stroke of the two stroke v-twins is partly responsible for poor reliability compared to dirt bike 125's/250's
    They don't have poor reliability, so no, you're off the mark.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    24th October 2007 - 08:19
    Bike
    GSX-R 750 Y
    Location
    West Harbour
    Posts
    1,262
    Quote Originally Posted by Jantar View Post
    It is fully faired, and that means $$$$$$ when it falls over. Believe me, that at some stage you will drop this bike even if it just while manouvering it out of your garage.
    I think the whole dropping it thing is bullshit and reserved only for muppits, i'm yet to meet someone on their learners/ restricted who dropped their bike just moving it around.........
    Cats land on their feet. Toast lands jamside down.
    A cat glued to some jam toast will hover in quantum indecision


    Curiosity was framed; ignorance killed the cat

    Fix a computer and it'll break tomorrow.
    Teach its owner to fix it and it'll break in some way you've never seen before.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    27th October 2008 - 11:28
    Bike
    `
    Location
    dannevirke
    Posts
    1,699
    Quote Originally Posted by imdying View Post
    They don't have poor reliability, so no, you're off the mark.
    What are you comparing them to, papermashe gp bikes?

  15. #15
    Join Date
    17th February 2005 - 11:36
    Bike
    Bikes!
    Location
    Christchurch
    Posts
    9,649
    Quote Originally Posted by wbks View Post
    What are you comparing them to, papermashe gp bikes?
    Experience... what are you comparing them to? Stuff others have told you and what you've read on the all knowing internet?

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •