Hey Ocean i find my xb9s easier to ride through the city as it is a little revier then the xb12s. But wat ever you do mate, stick with the buellsO and im sure the loud exhaust is part of the reason i havnt been hit yet.
new tire already
What about a Moto Morini Corsaro 1200cc 140hp situp like an XB12S
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Now - are you saying that a Buell has the acceleration and torque of an 800cc bike? Brings the VFR800 to mind - excellent reviews but slightly underpowered if you are the type of rider who expects high acceleration.
Fortunately I'm no longer impressed by HP because most modern bikes have heaps more than the old bikes I used to ride and modern bikes perform well above our roads and speed limits. Even 250s.
Neither am I interested in revs, except from a design and torque perspective. High revs I associate with inline 4s, two smokes and numbing vibration/buzzing. So to discover my Duke redlnes around 11,000 was a surprise, but with watercooling I figured the Ducati engineers knew what they were doing. Plus the vibration is the acceptable (to me) twin throb.I've can't recall red-lining my bike and can't imagine needing to, plus the rev limiter stutters in about 10,000 so you have to want to get through that.
Sounds right.
Particularly the bit about rolling on the gas on tip-in. They can get REALLY vague and scary if you overcook things and decide otherwise. In "Brisk" mode I like to get on the gas going in at about 3000rpm, aiming for full throttle at about 4000, just past the apex. By the time you're at around 6000 you're almost upright and changing up.
If i get bored with that I lift the whole rev-sequence 1000rpm.
Conditions permitting.
I had a wee feel of the 1125CR last week. I was dissapointed to find the ergonomics pretty much identical to the 1125R. Neither of them look to be any more ammenable to tweaking than than the XB12, so I can't see it fitting the bill. Still, I'll try one, eventually.
Wouldn't surprise me, smaller is good for a lot of things.
Edit: And welcome, dude.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
Don't know anything about them. Will look, though.
Cheers.
What sort of 800cc bike? 110hp is gettable from a 600, just not in any engine I'd want to have in a road bike. The torque certainly ain't, though.
Like I said, I genuinely don't give a fuck for the numbers. If the power characteristics I wanted were the exclusive domain of a 125cc Stirling engine with a reasonable mass budget then that's what I'd have.
High acceleration means HP and low mass. Nothing else. Lots of HP in a new bike is exciting, for a while. About six weeks I reckon. The good times from a torque curve that very closely matches a bike's available traction through a corner lasts longer.
HP means revs. Other things too, but if everything else is optomised for hp/cc then you want a bunch of revs. Multiple cylinders means shorter absolute stroke, which allows more revs. V10 = (potentially) bulk HP. V twins are said to be more tractable, and a lot of very clever people with a lot of money have spent a lot of time trying to work out why. They're interested for competitive reasons, but if they ever manage to reproduce the full effect in an engine with more cylinders then Ducati's racing days are limited. I think they're safe for now.
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
if you are considering bmw800,v stroms,varedeo(sp) there is one bike that many people rate as better than all those......Yamah TDM 900...$15000 last time i looked,lacking in some character compared to Buells,Ducatis etc...Bloody good allrounder from my own research
so it seems to have a CVT trans....ffs how hard is it to move your hand and foot in a semi co ordinated fashion with very little effort involved.I spose someone will say the conventional trans is to intricate/complex to manufacture...not to mention you have a clutch in there too....
No, it's not CVT - it uses hydraulic clutches, so it's actually an electro-hydraulic automatic transmission, and MORE complicated than a typical m/cycle gearbox.
As for "how hard is it to change gears"? You have to realise a lot of Mrkns (and perhaps Yrpeens) have never driven a vehicle with manual transmission, so riding a motorcycle is a daunting prospect. Thus the market for a cruiser-styled bike with auto trans, combined braking system with ABS (like a car) is potentially huge. Lots of people who fancy a bike but can't deal with having to concentrate on changing gears for the first time will find this quite attractive (even if it is rather hideous).
... and that's what I think.
Or summat.
Or maybe not...
Dunno really....![]()
Well hey - people are different.
There are a lot of them that are not sports motorcyclists - not enthusiasts - they just want fuel efficient transportation.
Vehicles like the DN-01 offer the performance/safety/comfort/passenger aspects of a mid power motorcycle with the ease of riding of a scooter.
Rossi would hate it, Edna from Takininnipuna thinks it might be a blast.
The infinitely variable ratio transmission, economy and sports modes or a 6 speed triptronic are pointers to the future.
They will not be compulsory - but many will benefit from the availability
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