Best starter cruiser bike - Vulcan 500. Ninja 500 engine. Faster than most 600-700 cruisers out there but still light and nimble. Discontinued few years back, can be had dirt cheap.
Best starter cruiser bike - Vulcan 500. Ninja 500 engine. Faster than most 600-700 cruisers out there but still light and nimble. Discontinued few years back, can be had dirt cheap.
Best starter cruiser bike - Vulcan 500. Ninja 500 engine. Faster than most 600-700 cruisers out there but still light and nimble. Discontinued few years back, can be had dirt cheap.
i looked into the vULCAN 500 before getting my shadow 600.+1 on the Vulcan 500. Trust me you don't want a 650 lb bike as a starter. A VLX 600 would also be a good one.
Have you checked out the Kawasaki Vulcan S?
http://www.kawasaki.ca/product/vulcan-s-abs
650cc, adjustable ergos.
The Yamaha Bolt is also a nice ride.
If you want to go used there are a lot of clean 750cc Honda Shadows around. Nice bikes.![]()
... In my head i feel like 600-900cc is the 'starter range' for cruisers, am i wrong????
The vstar 650 i looked at, but didnt like the fact it was air cooled and carbureted
Yeah I like the vulcan S, and the shadow/phantom, Havent looked at the bolt too much.(maybe i should)
How is the vulcan 900 or boulevard m50 for starter bike? In my head i feel like 600-900cc is the 'starter range' for cruisers, am i wrong????
The vstar 650 i looked at, but didnt like the fact it was air cooled and carbureted
V star 650 or honda shadow
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The torque on the 900cc bikes will be a bit milder than the 1300s, so it would be a better choice for a starting bike.
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they wouldn't get squirrelly as quickly as a 1300, but certainly have enough power to get into trouble.
I think the Vulcan 900 and the Suzuki M50 are both Fi, the others are carbed.meh i think if i dont go over 900cc i should be fine, so far im deciding between vulcan s, honda shadow/phantom, vulcan 900, m50
My Starter Cruiser Bike was a 250. I went to McBride's looking for something in the 400-500 range, and they tried to upsell me to a 750+, "because of my size". I do regret getting rid of it sooner than I should have, and you learn much more on a smaller bike than a larger one. In the end the choice is yours.
Personally i don't think cruisers require the same beginner treatment that sportbikes get. If you are a bigger guy i wouldn't recommend starting on a 250cc paint shaker. You wouldn't tell someone to put a 9.9 Merc on his new bow-rider just because he's never had a boat before.
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You wouldn't tell someone to put a 9.9 Merc on his new bow-rider just because he's never had a boat before.
That's the reason I bought my wife a small beginner bike. I know it'll be a 1 season bike for her (heck, if she picks things up and is as gung-ho as I hope we might be looking for bigger by the fall), but it's super light, super easy to ride, and will be very difficult for her to get in trouble on as a completely new rider. Yes, we'll eat some costs by going small to begin with and upgrading in probably short order, but I didn't care about the cost, I care about the safety. I'd recommend anyone starting out to keep that in mind and put their "dream bike", or their concerns about buying a beginner bike and upgrading "costing a lot of money" second to safety.
As has been mentioned a few times, it's cheaper to drop a beginner bike, and less likely to happen even to begin with.
And yes, you can get in trouble on a big CC cruiser. The torque can be surprising and it's entirely possible to break the rear wheel loose just accelerating moderately hard - I've done it. If that happened to a new rider and the bike got too sideways before getting off the throttle, or it happened in a corner, it's not going to end well.
I don't believe I'm saying this, but, I pretty much agree with what you said ?This and I would also add just for variety.
Suzuki S40 (650cc)
Kawasaki Vulcan S (650cc)
Basically don't go above 650cc and it'll be fine.