Its shorter but harder than the Ontario "M" licence exam.
Been there, done that.In 1980, you rode by a tester who planted himself on a busy live intersection.
Drive up to intersection, changing lane to turn left at light. Go one block, turn left. Left at first road. Turn left onto original street. Lane change to turn right. Turn right back into facility parking lot.
Done
Do both wheels have to stay within the white lines on that circle?
It looks pretty tight for a big cruiser.
maybe throw several big logs and cinder blocks across the path, then we can give it a try.He does indeed go outside the lines whenever he switches from straight line to circle and back.
I'm sure there's a couple of people who could do it here, but not more, and even they may need a bike without a seat, and some practice time.
maybe throw several big logs and cinder blocks across the path, then we can give it a try.
No for me just leave your car parked on the middle of the course, I would enjoy thatFor a Pro like you, that would be best.