fully tucked with the wind at your back it'll do 140.
you forgot downhill.
fully tucked with the wind at your back it'll do 140.
Can you even take 250 on a highway? It probably blocks all the traffic because its so slow. One should only ride 250 on his/her own private property. just construct a small track and have fun with your 250 there, dont even take it on a street.
the only thing the 125 cant do is wheelies...
Bigger you are, the easier it is to wheelie. You really need to watch out when you 2up.I don't know about that... I accidentally did a wheelie during my M1 Exit course on a 125. And I'm not a tiny guy either...
I am the one saying the thing is not for the hwy. my wife found it too slow within a month and told me she should have gotten the 250 instead.I dont know, tell her to take a riders course? If you aren't confident on a bike then you will most likely crash, so if she feels confident on the 250 then that's great. I feel very confident on the 125 on the highways, i've even taken the thing in the left-most lane on the 401 passing other riders, without tucking and without tailwinds guiding me... the only thing the 125 cant do is wheelies... But it does amazing stoppies (the brakes are VERY good)
and yes that does help. when I would sit up straight the thing would drop in speed by 20km/h and I'm only a 150lb guy.you forgot downhill.
If the asking price on the bike is $4000.
You could offer the seller $3500 or $3700. $3700 if they are willing to put a much lower number on the bill of sale.
HST on used vehicles sucks!
13% on 3500 is $455
13% on 100 is $13
Seller makes $200 more, you save $255. Everyone is a winner?
You just have to pray the seller doesn't rat you out later for ***** and giggles!