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10 answers

there is a video out that i highly recommend. check out http://www.ridelikeapro.com
i have 1 of his video's, i ride a sportster, and these bikes are notorious for feeling extremely top heavy at very low speed. these vid's helped me figure out a countermeasure to be able to keep the feet on the pegs while at a snail's pace. they're worth the coin.

2007-01-27 06:17:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Contact a professional riding school to learn. Some of the schools have smaller, less powerful bikes to learn on. If your bike is above 500cc in size, then it can get away from you before you blink.

An alternative is to find a friend with a smaller bike, dirt bike even better and learn from a nice soft dirt surface. The hardest part of riding a bike, other than dodging maniac car drivers, is slow speed manuvers - next comes advoidance driving after getting the slow speed down. Learn what to do for high speed braking - it could save your life.

2007-01-26 21:11:13 · answer #2 · answered by Wolfen 2 · 0 0

The best way for riding practice is to go to a riding school in your area. But for maintanance you need to know how your bike really works go to howstuffworks.com and look up everything dealing with the bike from brakes to basic engine functions. When you know how something work then you develop a experience way of dealing with repairs and maintanance.

2007-01-27 02:05:09 · answer #3 · answered by william_ray87 1 · 0 0

Contact the Motorcycle Safety Foundation about instructional classes. I hope it's a 250 or 500 Ninja you have.

2007-01-26 18:07:11 · answer #4 · answered by BULLITT 2 · 0 0

hello there...in one way i agree with gr. you should take a riding course from a professional. riding a motorcycle is nothing that you can learn from the net, however on your own you might just be able to do it. depends, some people learn it instantly and other spend most of the time face-down with the bike on top of them.

anyway, first worry about learning how to ride, and THEN maintenance.

take care and safe riding!

2007-01-26 17:48:50 · answer #5 · answered by BigBear 2 · 0 0

honestly! the recent Kawasaki 250R merely went with the help of a finished upkeep over the past type. Given the justifications for wanting one, this bike will coach to be an truly good commuter motorcar because of low upkeep prices and widely used 60+ mph. yet do not imagine that's only a money saver, it also seems tremendous at the same time as travelling and handles very very similar on your widely used activities bike (i.e. via the undeniable fact that is!). briefly, for a 1st time rider, this can make an truly good mode of transportation. that's totally self belief inspiring and also you'd be satisfied to procure one over a supersport like the R6/GSXR600/and so on.. strong success on your decision!

2016-12-03 02:40:26 · answer #6 · answered by cheathem 4 · 0 0

Learn to ride then think about maintenance easy to ride if you can ride a pushbike you can ride a motorcycle but not falling off is the trick get someone who REALLY knows to teach you or get a professional to do it

2007-01-29 19:01:16 · answer #7 · answered by bazbikes49 3 · 0 0

Once you learn to ride and are ready for mods and maintenance, join up at my forum wwwdotbigbikeworlddotcom. We discuss Ninjas there!

2007-01-28 10:28:53 · answer #8 · answered by Michael B 3 · 0 1

forget videos, enroll in a riding course, they will teach you the proper way to ride and help you get a license. usually its a 3-day course, do this before you kill yourself.

2007-01-26 17:39:53 · answer #9 · answered by gr 5 · 1 0

ask bruce lee.

2007-01-27 00:40:36 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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