MyBB Motorcycle Owners Thread

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I'm not an owner yet, but I'm planning to become one, as hopefully from next year I won't be doing school runs and my commute will be 7km each way into Sandton from Randburg - a bike just makes much more sense. I'm having thoughts about something like this: http://bikes.autotrader.co.za/used-...sertao--bfpa-8a81c83e56363013015655858609665c

Going to try to find the time to go book a bike learners test ASAP, then maybe see about a lesson or two. Are there any recommended schools in the Randburg area that don't require you to bring your own bike for the first few lessons?

nice starter bike - the scooter idea is good, but like spiderz says, if you plan on going onto the highway, then bigger is better.
Try gumtree and olx, they go for a lot less. also join these groups on FB:
Bikes and Accessories for sale - SA
Bikes for Sale South africa
Bikes for Sale SA
All bikes for sale south africa
 
Guys, OK so I have a bit of an issue with my battery charging system on my cbr250r. I need to get a rectifier for the bike, but don't know where to get one, except the agents which will be over priced. Any ideas where I can get one in Cape Town?

Don't assume that it WILL be overpriced.

A friend of mine recently got a whole door from Honda for less than the panelbeater job would have cost.

Find out and if it's pricey bargain them down.
 
I'm not an owner yet, but I'm planning to become one, as hopefully from next year I won't be doing school runs and my commute will be 7km each way into Sandton from Randburg - a bike just makes much more sense. I'm having thoughts about something like this: http://bikes.autotrader.co.za/used-...sertao--bfpa-8a81c83e56363013015655858609665c

Going to try to find the time to go book a bike learners test ASAP, then maybe see about a lesson or two. Are there any recommended schools in the Randburg area that don't require you to bring your own bike for the first few lessons?

Go do the BMW course...especially since you are buying a BMW anyway.

You can't go wrong and unlike us unfortunate Capies you have access to it.

And it's on their bikes.

http://www.bmw-motorrad.co.za/za/en/RiderAcademy/Novice.html

Yes it's pricey...but it's also far superior.
 
Get a scooter, they are more stable at lower speeds thru traffic. Unless you plan to do highway, then get a bike.
on a Scooter you want to go max 60-80km/h, so your traffic needs to be slower or dead still.

I have never encountered a stable scooter at any speed...so no idea what you are talking about.

Unless you are a girl used to sitting with her legs together or something?
 
Aimed at absolute beginners?

Yup. If you can ride a bicycle you are good to go.

This course is suitable for new riders with no or limited riding experience. This intensive course provides theoretical and practical training, which covers all the essential elements of riding, preparing new riders for the road. A 250 cc training motorcycle, helmets & gloves can be provided.

All practical training takes place in a controlled environment.

And way more professional than any other setup I've seen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07UZrir5Krk
 
R2350 for two days isn't bad at all from what I've seen?

Ag you'll see some fly by nights down here charging R500 for a (half) day.

But then they let you pretty much on your own and you just **** around.
 
Sweet so I'll be doing that I course I think. I wonder if they're open between Christmas and new year
 
I'm not an owner yet, but I'm planning to become one, as hopefully from next year I won't be doing school runs and my commute will be 7km each way into Sandton from Randburg - a bike just makes much more sense. I'm having thoughts about something like this: http://bikes.autotrader.co.za/used-...sertao--bfpa-8a81c83e56363013015655858609665c

Going to try to find the time to go book a bike learners test ASAP, then maybe see about a lesson or two. Are there any recommended schools in the Randburg area that don't require you to bring your own bike for the first few lessons?

I can recommend the BMW course since that is the route and the money is worth it.
 
I can recommend the BMW course since that is the route and the money is worth it.

Thanks. I see that the curriculum is the same for the one and two day courses, and they do weekends as well. Winner!
I see they also have the option of demo rides as well, if you have a learners... So, I think that's first priority.
 
Well my course did training on a 250 and if you are good enough they allow you on the demo bikes. Let just say jumping from a bicycle to a 250 Suzuki to a 1200GS over two days is a big leap.
 
Well my course did training on a 250 and if you are good enough they allow you on the demo bikes. Let just say jumping from a bicycle to a 250 Suzuki to a 1200GS over two days is a big leap.

They won't let you do the demo unless you have at least a learners, according to their blurb. Insurance reasons.

In other news, I'm glad I'm atheist.

Dietary Requirements:
Surcharge of R690 per Kosher Meal will apply.

So much extra money for no bacon!
 
San Francisco, California - Researchers at Stanford University have tested a bike helmet that comes in a soft pocket worn around the neck and pops up, like an air bag, around your head when it senses a potential collision.

Traditional “foam bike helmets can and have been proven to reduce the likelihood of skull fracture and other, more severe brain injury,” said David Camarillo, an assistant professor of bioengineering at Stanford. “But many falsely believe that a bike helmet is there to protect against concussion. That's not true.”

Hovding bicycle helmet comes in a soft pocket worn round the neck and pops up around your head when it senses a potential collision.
Given that bicycling is the leading cause of sports and activity-related concussion and brain injury in the United States, Camarillo's lab, which works on understanding and preventing concussion, decided to test a new type of helmet that was originally designed because people don’t like to wear helmets for aesthetic reasons and is becoming available in some European countries.

Mehmet Kurt, a postdoctoral scholar in the Camarillo Lab, said: “We conducted drop tests, which are typical United States federal tests to assess bicycle helmets, and we found that air bag helmets, with the right initial pressure, can reduce head accelerations five to six times compared to a traditional bicycle helmet.”

Results of the test were published in the recent edition of Annals of Biomedical Engineering. The drop test consisted of putting the helmets on a dummy head containing accelerometers and dropping it, neck-side up, from various heights onto a metal platform. The head form was tilted at two different angles, simulating hits to the crown and the side of the head. Researchers dropped the helmets from as low as 800mm to as high as two metres and measured the linear acceleration of the helmet as it hit the ground.

More cushioned fall

Kurt explained: “As our paper suggests, although air bag helmets have the potential to reduce the acceleration levels that you experience during a bicycle accident, it also suggests that the initial pressure that your air bag helmet has is very critical in reducing these acceleration levels.

Camarillo said the large size of the air bag helmet compared to foam bike helmets was the probable reason for its success. Being larger, it could also be softer, allowing for a more cushioned fall.

However, this cushioning also has a potential downside. In the testing, the air bag helmet was pre-inflated and the researchers maximized the pressure of the air inside the helmet before each drop in order to get these results. Without the maximum amount of air, the air bag helmet could bottom out, causing the head to hit the ground with much more force than if it were wearing a traditional foam helmet. In current versions of the air bag helmet, a chemical process triggers expansion, which doesn't seem to guarantee maximum air pressure.

http://www.iol.co.za/motoring/industry-news/researchers-test-airbag-bike-helmet-2077067

bf572d23138a89fda595b1aec7bcab7b.jpg
 
This designed for a bicycle but similar systems are in the works for motorcycles that function as emergency neck braces.
 
Thing is motorcycle helmets are somewhat better geared for concussions as well as neck injuries.

But beyond that biggest reason is protection from the elements in the sense of the sun, wind and the noise.

Safety aside now Americans choose to ride without them is beyond me.
 
I have never encountered a stable scooter at any speed...so no idea what you are talking about.

Unless you are a girl used to sitting with her legs together or something?

Ya I dunno what you have to be smoking to think that scooters are more stable at any speed.
 
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