From what I hear, it's a lot of bike - might not be wise for a first time bike. As cliche as it sounds, starting on smaller displacement is the best move.
I think a 250/300 is a good start for sport/touring types.
Dang. Honestly, if a dealer specializes in a certain brand of bikes and not know what kinds of software the bike has. I agree don’t bother going there. They don’t even know their product so why would they give good service. .
Dang. Honestly, if a dealer specializes in a certain brand of bikes and not know what kinds of software the bike has. I agree don’t bother going there. They don’t even know their product so why would they give good service. .
A tuono at 150 km/h is motogp? While I would be ****** if they hurt my bike or got it seized, that speed is obviously no issue for that bike and it could happily do it all day every day.
A tuono at 150 km/h is motogp? While I would be ****** if they hurt my bike or got it seized, that speed is obviously no issue for that bike and it could happily do it all day every day.
Yeah, knowing first-hand how fast you can get to 150 and back on my bike (especially starting from 80 - I may or may not do worse on almost every ride at some point), I'm not sure how I'd feel about it. I'd definitely bring it up to them, though.
My bigger concern about Two-Wheel is that Aprilia is obviously a sideline for them among the Can-Ams, Yamahas, Kawasakis, Suzukis, Husqvarnas, etc. and the wait time for service when I've called has been hilariously long. I think they said the next opening for a certification when I moved here was three months out?
A tuono at 150 km/h is motogp? While I would be ****** if they hurt my bike or got it seized, that speed is obviously no issue for that bike and it could happily do it all day every day.
Just had the pleasure of riding a Tuono on track on Thursday… OMG.. this bike gives me poops and giggles at the same time. Running q3’s and not slicks, not my bike, so I was taking it easier..
4th gear power wheelies are just totally bonkers.
All I can say is, I WANT ONE, I WANT ONE NOW!!!
Just a quick question where you insured your V85? I went with TD, but I thought it was quite expensive. Many other companies didn't wouldn't even insure the bike. Is it because it is a new/relatively rare bike?
Just had the pleasure of riding a Tuono on track on Thursday… OMG.. this bike gives me poops and giggles at the same time. Running q3’s and not slicks, not my bike, so I was taking it easier..
4th gear power wheelies are just totally bonkers.
All I can say is, I WANT ONE, I WANT ONE NOW!!!
Yes.. the 1100cc v4...
I've always liked them, sound is absolutely ear-gasmic...
First time I've ridden one with a "mildly annoyed" status (instead of riding in full on anger mode).
Giggles. Poops. Pure adrenaline. May as well have hit me with a mainline shot of heroin...
IMHO if you own any Euro bike, you better have a nice toolbox, good mechanical aptitude, deep pockets, and a DHL account. I have all that, and I still wont own one.
I can service and repair my stuff, I'm not interested in anything Euro as even a good tech can't do everything unless they can get access to factory diagnostic equipment.
IMHO if you own any Euro bike, you better have a nice toolbox, good mechanical aptitude, deep pockets, and a DHL account. I have all that, and I still wont own one.
I can service and repair my stuff, I'm not interested in anything Euro as even a good tech can't do everything unless they can get access to factory diagnostic equipment.
That is how it used to be 10-15 years ago, but no longer the case. My Aprilia has over 30,000kms and not a single issue. I own 6 Italian bikes and they are all very reliable.
That is how it used to be 10-15 years ago, but no longer the case. My Aprilia has over 30,000kms and not a single issue. I own 6 Italian bikes and they are all very reliable.
Don't mind Mike. Every time someone types Ducati, Aprilia, BMW, KTM, etc., he'll pop in and tell everyone about how he likes Japanese bikes better because they're more reliable. It's reassuringly predictable, and a sign that some things can be counted upon to stay unmoved in this era of upheaval...
Don't mind Mike. Every time someone types Ducati, Aprilia, BMW, KTM, etc., he'll pop in and tell everyone about how he likes Japanese bikes better because they're more reliable. It's reassuringly predictable, and a sign that some things can be counted upon to stay unmoved in this era of upheaval...
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