The motard suggestion is something I've never even thought about for beginners. Wonder how many bad habbits it would create if one wanted a road bike when they got a full licence.
The motard suggestion is something I've never even thought about for beginners. Wonder how many bad habbits it would create if one wanted a road bike when they got a full licence.
if you buy the bike new from the dealer, throw some lights on, getting it road registered just costs $300 for the compliance, so i was told by the Manager of a VTNZ station. The biggest problem is getting the paper trail sorted. If you can get a trail back to the dealer, eg, your the second owner, you get a reciept and last owner proves they bought from dealer, not a problem.
Had a similar idea involving a suzuki RM250
Unfortunately if the vehicle was never intended for road use from the factory then it is enevitably expensive and generally a pain in the ass to get it road registered. Hence the reason you can't road regiser racing quads in NZ, the best you'll get is a 'farm vehicle'.
Getting a bike like a WR250 and putting a YZ250 engine in it aint hard, you're just placing the racing MX engine in the place of the enduro engine... it's not likely to show up as a problem come WOF time.
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.
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.
Well, technically, if you bought one from a dealer, provided the bike is manufactured by honda for the unwashed masses and has documentation (crumple zone tests ect) that you would find on most vehicles (read, that are required for compliance), there is no reason you can put on some lights and register it :S Buggered if i know why you would want to
I stand corrected....and man does that seem like a dodgy sales practice.
Good thing I don't live in Australia, I probably would have been sucked in ages ago.
OK, so my next suggestion (silly though it might be) is to get your hands on a KTM 250 FRR
http://www.ktm.com/Bike-Spec.6395.0.html
Not road legal...and probably hard to get hold of without a full race team to support ya....but 110HP...can't complain about that
AFAIK that's not a barrier. As long as it meets the standards, it's possible. Lots of the larger kids trail bikes get road registered as adventure bikes for short-arses. Those bikes were never meant for road use, either. It's just problematic to fit up all the required parts, eg brake light switches to brake assemblies not designed for them.
Cheers,
Colin
Originally Posted by Steve McQueen
Did anyone ever wonder *why* learners are limited to 250cc ?
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
$2,000 cash if you find a buyer for my house, kumeuhouseforsale@straightshooters.co.nz for details
The question was actually ironical.
If there was a wide choice of new 250cc bikes which young men did not consider "gutless", then the law would most certainly be changed , and the limit reduced to 125cc, as was the case in the UK.
The reason for the 250cc limit is precisely to prevent young men from learning to ride on machines that are not "gutless'. In the hope that they may perhaps survive to become somewhat older men. The relatively small fleet of aging race replica machines is under the radar.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
"Can anyone tell me why 250cc bikes have to be either old or gutless?"
Because they only have 250cc. The first rule of internal combustion engines is: "There aint no substitute for cubic inches."
If you want more power, then get a bigger engine.
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