That's what my kid found with his and he really likes the upright on the naked FZ8
you will be old some day , hopefully you can get it up, lol.sport bikes are the bee's knees i will only get a cruiser when I'm old and can't get it up. whatever though if you want to ride one then ride on i have seen lots of groups of sports and cruiser bikes together no problemo
HOLLA
I rode a cruiser for years and rode with all types of bikes. Only time it was ever an issue was when I hooked up with an all ss ride and they were riding like they were qualifying for a race! Sometimes you'll run into riders who only want to ride with bikes same as theirs, although in my experience this happens mostly with Harley riders not wanting to ride with japanese bike riders and not sport bike and cruisers mixing.
Since switching to a sport touring bike I've found it hard to find the right group to ride with. I'm too spirited for most of the cruiserriders too slow for most of the ss crowd. Up here in Peterborough, cruisers out number sport bikes 10:1 so it can be slim pickings. Mostly end up riding alone. I'm hoping to organize a few gtam meet and greets for the Peterborough and kawartha riders this season. All bikes welcome!
..i will only get a cruiser when I'm old and can't get it up....
Really? So much for the theory that the bike one picks and how one rides is based on his local roads. Man, how could, or better yet, why would anybody want to own a (just a) cruiser up and in around Peterborough?
I go on all day rides in order to get up into those juicy central ON roads, just to enjoy the scenery and sweepers "at speed". Now I'm not saying that one can't have a good time on a cruiser riding down say the 507 for example, but I know one would have a much better time on something that can handle the curves, ride, accelerate and brake a heck of a lot better than most cruisers, and I don't mean at break neck speeds or stunt riding either like I've seen so many reckless squids doing, but just at a nice quick but not dangerous pace.
I'm not anti cruiser, as I've owned a couple of nice ones in the past and wouldn't mind owning another one, but if that's all one has ever owned and operated, one's never graduated from "motorcycle riding 101" IMO, and that's a shame as those riders don't know what they're missing. (Ask a cruiser rider if he, or more likely *she* has set his/her sag, and see the response you get. )
Cruisers can be fun in the twistys. They just take more work.
I have a blast on my Sporty scraping the pegs on curve my Buell will take without a blink of an eye. Cruisers can be fun in the twistys. They just take more work.
There are a lot of times, I'd rather be on a small displacement like a Honda 250 and rip up the roads over a 600/litre SS. But, it's always different strokes for different folks. I just don't like it when the bias and presumptions are made based on what a person owns or rides.
In a dream world I'd like to own at least 5 types of bikes:
- super sport for spirited riding
- sport touring for long trips, involving lots of highway time
- touring/off-road capable bike for exploring on and off pavement
- cruiser for laid back city riding
- dirt bike for fun in the trails
Australia is much friendlier to that concept.
Insurance is cheap
A single seat machine no matter what displacement - basic third party liability insureance is $137 a year. That's all you need to ride
About double for standard two seat bikes.
For instance my ST1100 can be insured for $137 if I put the single seat option on it.
The KLR is already done that way....the mechanic removes the rear pegs and welds the threads. Cuts the seat back so no pillion. Writes up a certificate.
There is no sales tax on used bikes unlike Ontario.
One reason the insurance rates are low is there is stiff graduated licence as there is in Europe.
Any bike classed above LAMS takes a special test and several years of riding before you can get licenced for it.
So no conversations about "I'm new what sports bike can I get."
Horsepower is limited to about 50 and power to weight has some play as well.
So a 650 KLR is LAMS approved but no 600cc SS is.
This is very like Europe and Japan.
So you get sweet midrange machines available like the CB400F with Vtech that just slips into the LAMS approved but is a barn burner in the twists ( ala the RD400/RD350 two strokes ).
The CB500x was designed around that as well.
I've not got quite the mix I would like all on the same continent.
The Burgman 650 is do all machine from long distance to twisty fun to grocery shopping. But it's in Canada and does fine for the riding season there.
I'd prefer a lighter offroad than the KLR650 which does double duty here as do all.
I bought the ST1100 for long touring as it's legendary but find it top heavy to I'd prefer something in the 650-800 range.
Ideally here a KLX400 for offroad but street legal then a CB500x kitted for touring but with adventure tires as there is so many great dirt roads to explore.
Many here have stables of bikes ...BikerSmurf - the guy that took on R1 has 6-8 at any given time...he likes to play.
It's doable here.
Would be brutal in Ontario between insurance on each and HST on purchase.
Stupid system we have.
The Burgman covers the cruiser/sport touring of the 5 with fun in the twists
For sport the CB400 or one of the new Yammie triples would be sweet.
Off road the KLR covers dual sport and adventure riding and could tour but not sport touring.
The ST1100 was supposed to be in that spot....fantastic tourer and not bad in the twists but I'm spoiled by the Burgman which is effortless.
Need a lighter off road bike.
Working on it.
...Cruisers can be fun in the twistys. They just take more work....
There are a lot of times, I'd rather be on a small displacement like a Honda 250 and rip up the roads over a 600/litre SS. But, it's always different strokes for different folks. I just don't like it when the bias and presumptions are made based on what a person owns or rides.
Need a lighter off-road bike? Why not a honda Ruckus? Like a Burgman, but with knobbies. Lol
when that super-duper motorcycle you own doesn't "come alive" until your 30 over the limit.
Tho the ST1100 is not super duper motorcycle...
...it is only really happy at 130...
.. and that is a recipe for problems here in AUs..
Hardly. - the KLR is too heavy for this kind of riding
and you don't have to quote the original post to make an inane comment.
Got anything beyond an attitude issue and wasted space to contribute?
Summary: Going around Australia has been my dream since I migrated to Australia in 1995. I realised this dream between April and June 2010 riding some 26,500 km in 42 days, on my motorcycle, a Suzuki Burgman 650 Executive.