Question: what should be my first motorcycle? (experienced bike riders)?
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Answer #1:
I suggest you get life insurance so when you wreck the hayabusa, your family will get a little money upon your death.Answer #2:
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Maybe you should just stay away from the motorcycle scene until you do some research, and mature to the point where you realize that it's not all about how fast and whats the biggest bike. Its about riding safe, and not endangering your life, or anyone elses on the road. It sounds like you have a long way to go before you reach that point.
Answer #3:
Oh dude, no.No no no no no no no no, do you get it?
Seriously - you can't handle it, trust me. You may have a go on one, be really cautious, come out okay and think you'll be right on one. You may buy one, ride it for months and think you are doing okay and know what you are doing.
You won't. One day things will go wrong, and since you never learnt how to ride properly, the big beast will kick, hard. It may be the last thing you ever experience.
You have no idea what it takes to ride something like a Busa. You have no idea how FAST things happen on even a low powered bike.
Put it this way, the acceleration on a decent sportsbike is comparable to a Formula 1 car, would you learn to drive in an F1 car? What you want to do is comparable to seeing a boxing match on TV, then jumping in the ring with Mike Tyson.
Get a learner bike (250 or 500 at most) and learn the skills you need to ride a motorcycle, then move up as you learn.
Answer #4:
buy a shirmp dick 250cc around for about 6 months til you outgrow it and then go to a 600 and then mabye a 998cc if your still aliveAnswer #5:
yes get a hyabusa for your first bike , you will end up in hospital but im sure you will enjoy it .Answer #6:
i would not get a busa. their engines are 1300 cc and i can not even explain to you how much power that bike puts out. I would strongly recommend getting a 600. You'll see after riding it for a while that it's still ridiculously fast. ive been riding bikes for a good 11 years now and i can tell you along with anyone else that rides that you dont need or really even want 1300cc's to sit on as you first bike. accidents happen faster than you can even react on any street bike. you could be the best rider in the entire world and end up dead because someone else didnt see you. if al these answers dont convince you to just get a 600 or something first, at least go visit a kessler institute for motorcycle crash patients just so you can see what can happen. you literally cant be defensive enough riding a motorcycle. so my final answer to your question is no do not get a hayabusa, or an 1000cc. stick with a 600 like a gsx-r 600, cbr600rr, zx6-r ninja, or a r6.Answer #7:
When I first started riding, I already knew how to drive and use a clutch.It still took most of that first day to learn to keep the front wheel down.
On a 1974 Honda CL360.
Before you look into buying a motorcycle, look into getting your license.
Where you live matters a lot with that.
You might need to have a Driver's license - or at least complete standard driver's ed.
You may be required to take the Basic Rider's Course.
Some states make you keep a permit for a period of time - a year or so (ours is only 30 days).
Permits have restrictions.
You may be size restricted due to age.
Answer #8:
Why oh why does every beginning rider NEED a 150 mph to 180 mph road racing motorcycle for their first bike?Anyone suggesting a Hayabusa to a beginning rider is an idiot.
Read over the articles below to educate yourself.
Insurance is huge on the bikes you are considering. Insurance companies KNOW that high powered sport bikes in the hands of beginners is not a safe combination.
Yes, start small and learn to ride.
Answer #9:
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