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13 answers

NONE!

Sport bikes are FAR to powerful for the beginning rider! (In the biz, we call newbies on sportbikes "organ donors".)

You need to start out with something small (350cc or less) until you become familiar with the hazards of riding.

Sign up for the lessons with your local chapter of the Motorcycle Safety Foundation. Get smart first, then move up as your skills improve.

2006-07-25 19:10:31 · answer #1 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 0 0

Are you a beginner beginner, or just new to sport bikes?
I'd say if you are completely green, don't start off on a sports bike. But if you got your mind set on that type of bike, (motorcycling is about passion) Choose something below or around 500cc or at least not a new 600cc+. They are build to take you to light speed in the blink of an eye. If you don't crash it, you will most likely find yourself riding like an old lady, because you are afraid of what the bike is capable of. Where as if you choose an older or smaller sports bike, you will quickly be the one who ride the bike, and not the other way around. Reach that point and that's when you really learn to ride a motorcycle.

2006-07-26 03:43:02 · answer #2 · answered by Jesper Bram 1 · 0 0

welcome to the first step of the motorcycle culture! You will want bigger, and bigger as time goes by and you leanr how to master your machine. This is a great hobby as man becomes one with machine and moves fluid throughout obstacles and obstruction. To start I highly recommend a 1995 Honda CBR 600 F3. This is a great starter bike well balanced, excellent ont he acceleration and forgiving enough to stay rubber side down in the event you lean the wrong way into a turn or brake to hard, etc. On the American side I recommend the Buell Blast. A sport bike with the growl of the Harley Davidson motor. One thing you must consider is motorcycles are manufactured with one of two engines. a V-Twin or an Inline 4. The first is a torque monester with an overall spped lower than its equivalent counterpart. This engine feels like its pulling you right along. The latter is an engine built for overall speed witch has a slower accelration rate (not by much) and will require a bit more maintanence. This engine feels like its pushing you right along. Probably more info than you wanted but remeber the difference in the engine and go out and test ride some bikes at dealers (if they offer it). BTW the Honda F3 has in Inline 4 engine., the Blas has the V-twin. Make the choice YOURS

2006-07-25 19:39:39 · answer #3 · answered by Cool Guy 1 · 0 0

Stay away from sport bikes! They're not for beginners! Start with a 100-125 dirt bike get a used one they're cheap. Ride that until you get used to turning and stopping in the dirt. It hurts a lot less to fall in the dirt.
Sell it when you're good with it and buy a used 250-350 and ride it the same way. When you have mastered these then buy your sport bike. You'll be much safter to yourself and ALL the other drivers and riders on the street.
Always wear a helmet your head is the only one you get. Don't be a human vegetable because you rode without your helmet!
When you're ready for a sport bike, Honda. Yamaha, and Kawaszki make some good ones. Stay away from buying ANY Suzuki. That could turn out to be a nightmare of a mistake.
My brother and I bought 2 new bikes for a summer vacation. His 1200 Bandit leaked gas and ruined the motor before it got 2000 miles. We asked Suzuki to replace the motor so we could go on vacation.
It took 2 months to get a rep, then he said it’s to expensive and would cost $3000. After 4 months and the vacation gone they got the motor rebuilt at a their cost of $3700. The dealer wanted to replace the motor but Suzuki Rep squashed that.
The gas stained cases and burnt exhaust pipes were not replaced. The bike got nicked and scratched all over from being apart for 6 months. The rep rode it and looked at it, then said it’ good as new. It ran like crap and looked worse.
We called Japan, and even wrote the US CEO all for nothing. We spent $15,000 for the bikes to get ripped off by Suzuki. We spent our vacation hassling with Suzuki, and not one person there gave a damn!
Beware Suzuki’s warranty is not worth the paper it’s on! Buy one of their lemons, get shafted, we did!
I’m a 30 yr garage vet and I know when a rep and a manufacturer have ripped off a customer. This one stinks to high heaven! RUN from buying any Suzuki!

2006-07-25 21:52:55 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A Kawasaki Ninja 250/500/650 or Suzuki SV650 and GS500 would be good choices as a first bike. The lower displacement ones would be easier to learn on. Make sure to buy used because everyone drops their bike at first and also budget for gear. All the bikes mentioned are twins, so with the exception of the 250, it'll have decent low end torque which helps with learning, especially when moving slow.

2006-07-25 19:20:09 · answer #5 · answered by crazy_sherm 4 · 0 0

As everyone else is saying, a sport bike is not a good idea for learning to ride. What the person above said about a dirt bike being the best to learn on, he is right. But most do not have dirt areas to ride around on. For people that don't have dirt to learn on buy a light weight cruiser type bike. You can get a Honda Shadow 600 used for $1,000-3,000. Ride that for one summer then think about your options of what kind of sport bike you would like.

2006-07-25 22:04:01 · answer #6 · answered by Little Jim 2 · 0 0

Im a clean rider.. I took the riders safe practices classes ( I quite Reccomend) i purchased a Honda CBR 600 and that i love it.. before each and every thing i assumed it must be too a lot skill.. Then i replaced into debating that it wasn't gonna be sufficient skill So i needed a 750 or something.. anyhow. i purchased the 600cc and it has each and every of the skill i choose.. i have had it for 2 years now and prefer it. Its mushy, i'm about 5'5 and that i have quite some room to the contact the floor. Its also large mild (purely in case you drop it).. If i ought to are turning out to be something with less than 600cc's i must be wanting to promote it by now. It has large shift factors for begginners, so its no longer so jerky or quickly to the position it is going to scare the worried novices. yet.... It nevertheless has the upward push up and pass, It reacts large, so proper dealing with and overall performance. also, i love the pull once you upward push up contained in the skill band. It definetly holds its own.. My suggestion is get the 600cc Honda CBR !!! i love it !!! that is a spectacular novices motorbike !!!

2016-10-15 05:26:36 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I would try the Harley Davidson 883 Sportser. It's small, light, and good for a beginner. As with previous advise, a motorcycle safety course would be a good thing to check out. Beside the training, you should get a 10% discount on your insurance.
Good luck and have fun...I love riding.....

2006-07-26 08:40:26 · answer #8 · answered by Tracy J 1 · 0 0

The Buell Blast is supposed to be one of the best entry level bikes on the market. That is the bike that many riding schools use for their students.

2006-07-25 20:23:01 · answer #9 · answered by shel_bug66 4 · 0 0

Any 250, 500, 600cc bike.... Honda makes nice ones.... I ride Kawa, so prefer those.... they make a couple types of 600cc sportbikes... both are ok... get the older style if you don't want to go too racy.

2006-07-25 19:08:41 · answer #10 · answered by warriorn639mr 4 · 0 0

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