Pretty much the same story here mate,in the mid-70s there were something like 2 million bikes registered in Britain and it was very rare for a young guy to go straight to a car.Honda did a great pr job here as well,"You meet the nicest people on a Honda" and they outsold everything in Britain.Cars were relatively a lot more expensive than bikes and you didn`t need to pass any kind of test to ride anything up to 250.Mainly because of this the accident rate was horrendous and the Japs shot themselves in the foot by ignoring Government requests to cool it and just bought out more and more powerful 250s.The result was a learner 125cc/15 bhp limit brought in within a few days that left a lot of people with 250`s they couldn`t ride.Great days for me,you could pick up almost new 250s for peanuts for years afterwards.A lot of people lost money,got stuck with bikes no-one wanted and they couldn`t ride,no riding schools back then so they`d have had to buy or borrow a 125 to pass the bike test to able to ride their 250,most didn`t bother and there was a lot of bad feeling,a lot of people put off bikes forever.At the time biking was very much under threat and the casualty rate so high that there was serious talk of banning bikes completey or them having all kinds of protection lumped on.O.K. it was heavy handed but the manufacturers basically gave the Govt the finger every time they tried to get them to at least stop the learner-bike power race and a lot of voter`s 17 year-old sons were getting killed or crippled.Bike sales dwindled and it became quite unusual to see another bike,loads of the dealers went to the wall and there was even talk of a couple of the Jap manufacturers winding up in Britain.That was the time when there was a lot of cameraderie,bikers were a dying breed.
Mid 90`s and things started to pick up,oddly it seemed to stem from the commuter market,guys were going up from 250s to things like the 600 Diversion as they decided to get back into using a bike for more than just riding to work,the 600 Bandit came along and suddenly there was something fairly cheap that was a lot of fun as well and things took off.The slightly worrying thing here for a few years has been that despite the current boom a massive chunk of the market is the same old guys coming back to bikes rather than new blood,average age of bikers here is 40.However now things have swung around,again it`s a lot cheaper for a young guy to buy and run a bike than a car and the learner market is really taking off,the Honda 125 Sports(it`s as fast as the average lawn-mower!!) and trailbikes are selling in numbers not seen for several years.more and people ride all year round here now as well despite our notoriously cranky weather,better gear,better tyres and brakes and better everything now mean that wet weather isn`t a big deal and heated grips here are fast becoming very common.Funny thing is that the big safety concern isnt the youngsters it`s midde-aged guys on sports-bikes chucking them into hedges,same generation that used to do it on 250s back in the 70s
Bookmarks