By reading your posts it's safe to assume you're not a young new rider. I don't think you have you M license yet?
This being said, if you want this bike, buy it and deal with the pitfalls (which you already seem to know)
But like many other have stated once the novelty wears off, you'll have some regrets...
I rarely listen to people when it comes to motorcycles, but I rarely ask questions that I know what the answer(s) will be.
I mean this with all due respect, if you are not licensed you're doing this all wrong. Focus on training and getting licensed (at least M2)
Then you'll find you're priorities on what bike you want may change.
Keep posting and asking questions!
Maybe my OP .... which many / most ?? people on forums tend to "scan" but not really read might help
I actually sat on one (CB750) (many times) back in the late 70's at Cycle world on Dundas / Kipling,
when I was a teenager.
I'm not exactly sure what you're thinking when you write "if you are not licensed you're doing this all wrong".
I am working on getting licensed. Which means working on getting my ID docs, (lost wallet). Hopefully I will have my M1 by next week, might even be as early as this Fri !
Do you mean, I shouldn't even be looking for bikes before I'm licensed ?
And don't buy a bike on an M1 ?
As for "training", I might start another thread .... or not.. as it will just start flame wars.
I've ridden a CT70 around the block back when I was 14-15, shifting it no big deal.
~40 yrs later, went up to the Honda-rock-the Red, and rode the Grom round inside a
~50x100 'cattle yard', even managing to shift it up and down from 1st to second lol.
No "training", they just assumed I could ride it, since I didn't ask anybody. The only thing
I couldn't figure out, is why it wouldn't start until I put up the kickstand (another rider clued me in).
Similarly I bought a standard car, (sight unseen lol) from someone I trusted, and drove it home, having never
driven a standard car before. Maybe stalled it once. And drove it home.
But only because I read / taught myself how a clutch / throttle work.
I got a parking space with the car. It was the "parking space from hell" for a standard.
Down near College and Bloor, the underground garage went up about a 5' rise, maybe a 20-30 deg hill,
where you had to gun it up the hill before the door closed on you.
Then get on the brakes to stay short of the sidewalk ! to yield to pedestrians.
Then do the "dance on the pedals" to hold the car sitting not quite on top of the hill,
with the brakes, with the clutch in, still in 1st, and not stalling it, when the pedestrians cleared.
When I got my G, back in 1973, I had about 2-3 hrs of "driver training".
Learned about the mirror blind spot, and that intersections were the most dangerous things.
Learned to look ahead of the car(s) in front and anticipate.
Learned to parallel park in about 20 minutes.
A couple of days later went to MTO and got my license.
Drove for ~40 yrs before having a couple of very slow speed fender-bumpers.
Stupidly I've let my license expire and now have to go through the whole G1 / g2 b.s.
Ya I'm ****** about it. I wrote to the MTO minister's office to try to get an "exemption" based on
45 years of (almost ) (two minor) accidents. No dice.
I *might* go to one of these over priced m2 exit schools, if insurance reqs merit it,
otherwise I'll just my M1 and go to MTO for the M2.
So not to (overly brag), but I do think I'm at least a bit above the average beginner rider.
I've read / watched a lot of videos, and have done the equivalent in my mind of already doing
the m2 exit course.
I actually went up to one of them, and watched what they were doing.
Watching one poor soul taking 2-hrs to learn how to feather / release the clutch without stalling.
I probably would have done just as badly with the Grom, if I hadn't educated myself before hand on
how the clutch / throttle / brakes / gears all worked.
I'm self taught in my day job too. Retired now.
When I teach myself, or get instruction from others, I go for the "meat", and skip the "fluff".
That always makes learning something much faster.
Mike