I really try to put neither down
Right foot down only. Left is always ready to manage gears.
The last time I put my left foot down was when I was learning how to ride. Unless you are already in gear and clutching in, left foot down means a rider simply is not ready to move and placing themselves at risk, or they will be an annoyance to other drivers as they will need to do a footdance before being able to move off.
Minor brown undies moment at Mallory yesterday
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKiyvo2eed4
Thankfully the grass was dry. Wet grass and slicks don’t mix well.
Andy
Wanted - Damasko DC57
Usually both, unless it's just a touch and go.
I remember moaning about a bike I wanted being too tall for me to put both feet down, and saying I didn't feel comfortable because of it, only to be shown this....(hats off to the guy for skill)
https://youtube.com/shorts/sHm_wizutuA?feature=share
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
After lusting over an Indian scout bobber last year, I’ve always wanted to add a cruiser. Just ordered one of these following a windy test ride.
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Finally got my new bike today after my MT 09 being stolen from home last month.
Safe to say its a very different bit of kit. Feel much higher up but it goes around corners great.
It's a 2018 KTM 1290 Super Adventure S
I reckon it's quicker than the MT from about 30mph onwards too.
Unbelievably Today was also the day I dropped my first bike
Dropped it on its side on my patio and smashed the mirror. Was bloody heavy getting it off the floor too!
Oh well could have been worse.
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Finally received the rearsets for the Guzzi
Back 137mm & up 20mm. Very comfortable along with Guzzi's own "sport" flatter bar.
I hadn't fitted the hydraulic brake switch yet in this photo.
Nice little run out yesterday.
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Anyone else doing the MCN #ride5000miles thingy?
The aim being to ride 5000 miles over a 12 month period - some people (like me) do it over a calendar year, others start e.g. when they get a new bike.
Anyway if you do it over a calendar year, unless you go out and ride 13 miles on Jan 1st and another 13 miles on Jan 2nd and so on, you're playing 'catch up' until roughly this time of year.
Yesterday I caught up. On target to hit 5000 miles on Dec 31st, I should have done 2274 miles by June 16th and I'm on 2299 (across 2 bikes). I'll step on now and get further ahead of target over the sunny months so I don't have to do too many miles in Nov & Dec.
(yes, very bored at work (both today and early last year when I pulled the spreadsheet together to track the bikes' mileage and progress vs. plan))
MCH I have been watching the Ride 5000 mile challenge at MCN over the last three years and have to say I am a bit cynical. Its a bike mag promoting bikes and gear and wants people to get their arse into gear and really use their bikes. Thus wearing out tyres, needing new bikes and wanting new kit.
As a concept I like it BUT ……with fuel prices Im a great believer in quality over quantity. Now if they did “How many piers , castles, Chippies ‘ did you do? I would be in .
[QUOTE=chris2982;6011979]Nice little run out yesterday.
That's a beautiful bike, the reviews for the Triumph 660 Tiger Sport have been so good. Enjoy your ride =)
Put on new tyres, chain and sprockets yesterday, so out for an early morning test run……..
Lovely ride out today.
Had to stop for a coffee to soak the bugs off my visor =)
On the lookout for a late Superduke GT if any of you know anyone who's selling one for a good price.
Probably urban myth but there was a story about a guy in our town who was told to ride round the block until the instructor stepped out with his clipboard at which point he was to do an emergency stop.
So, around the corner he came on his silver Superdream in his black leather jacket and white Bell helmet to find the instructor on the deck having been hit by a silver Superdream ridden by a guy in a black leather jacket and white Bell helmet.
Similar but not quite the same , my instructor barked out a series of left / right/ straight on etc to set up the emergency stop. In my nervous state I forgot the lot and winged it arriving behind my instructor looking the other way for his candidate. Amazingly I passed
It starts in neutral, left foot on the ground, right foot covering the rear brake. On Red/Amber you put your right foot down, left foot taps the bike into gear then goes back on the ground so the right foot can go back onto the brake before you pull away.
I took my test on a 125 and like a few here also got lost but somehow still passed first time. Only then could I move to LCs
I also got lost on my test - 250 Superdream, Manchester Rd, Swindon, December 1982 - but still passed first time after I managed to turn around and find the examiner.
Did anyone not get lost on their test in the days when the examiner simply told you a number of turns and sent you off?
Typing this I've just realised that by the end of the year I'll have had my full licence for 40 years! Eek!
I didn’t but lt was pretty simple here as it was usually based around 2 sets of gardens built in a square
He had ‘hidden’ behind a transit for the emergency stop but it had windows in the back doors I spotted him 50 yds up the road
Surly your referring to the ‘wet’ dream as it was fondly known
Pedant alert! The original Honda Dream was the 1960's C72 pressed steel frame OHC 250 twin, a larger version of the 1960's 125cc Benly twin.
I owned a very early 1959 CB72 Super Dream 250 twin (with 305cc CB77 barrels pistons and heads, naughty) when I was a learner driver. I was told it was a press bike from when Honda was making the push into the UK marketplace but with nothing to back that claim up. Registration VAN 667, where are you now?
Got back yesterday from an 10 day ride around Scotland (and some bits of England).
The trip started a bit damp but ended in fine weather and great roads (and some views)...in no particular order:
Last edited by Stanford; 24th June 2022 at 15:12.
Yeah, similar in size, but your Tiger has that lovely triple that I did enjoy in a Tiger 800 I had. For me, the CBX is a good choice for a simple 'do it all' second bike - if it was my only bike, I think I would probably be back on a Tiger of some type.
Although having been badly let down by Triumph recently, I am not giving them another £, so if and when the time comes to change my T120, I will look elsewhere.
Yes just a mirror thankfully.
I figured I would be able to just lift the bike like a deadlift....... realised it was really heavy and decided against it.
I ended up doing the thing where I turned around backwards and lifted it that way.
Really enjoying the bike though. Changing the suspension settings turns it from a great tourer into something resembling a sporty naked bike. The engine is an absolute gem!