

Moderator: Modsquad
I figured the centre of gravity should be higher with the higher fuel tank. I know my CBR 125R is awkward to maneuver around compared to my BWS.Steph wrote:A little over 200 lbs heaver the the PXC. it's a real motorcycle classified as a medium size sport cruiser. Only took a very sort ride so far. My first impression was much more power and heaver.Due to it's low center of gravity, Once I get use to it, I should be good to go.
The DCT transmission is unlike the CVT transmission. Dont yank the throttle up and down since this will cause unnecessary shifting.
900lb?! That's like half my first car, an 86 Honda Civic. I guess the Gold Wing is up there too at 800lb. Still, dang. Not something I want to push around in the garage or parkade on a daily basis.tbln930 wrote:Can you imagine a 900 lb Harley and just moving it around in the garage?My Forza with the top case loaded is near 450 lb and I think 400-550 lb area is just about perfect for medium touring mix I see. It's still light enough for slow curvy hilly roads yet does fine on the interstates. I have a lot of miles on a Harley Sportster that was pushing 650 lbs and even it is starting to be a bridge too far when you get on some of our curves IMO not to mention uncomfortable with the stock seat. After a while I dreaded climbing on that thing.
Safety feature. They do it so you are unable to push it over a cliffdkazzed wrote:I figured the centre of gravity should be higher with the higher fuel tank. I know my CBR 125R is awkward to maneuver around compared to my BWS.Steph wrote:A little over 200 lbs heaver the the PXC. it's a real motorcycle classified as a medium size sport cruiser. Only took a very sort ride so far. My first impression was much more power and heaver.Due to it's low center of gravity, Once I get use to it, I should be good to go.
The DCT transmission is unlike the CVT transmission. Dont yank the throttle up and down since this will cause unnecessary shifting.
900lb?! That's like half my first car, an 86 Honda Civic. I guess the Gold Wing is up there too at 800lb. Still, dang. Not something I want to push around in the garage or parkade on a daily basis.tbln930 wrote:Can you imagine a 900 lb Harley and just moving it around in the garage?My Forza with the top case loaded is near 450 lb and I think 400-550 lb area is just about perfect for medium touring mix I see. It's still light enough for slow curvy hilly roads yet does fine on the interstates. I have a lot of miles on a Harley Sportster that was pushing 650 lbs and even it is starting to be a bridge too far when you get on some of our curves IMO not to mention uncomfortable with the stock seat. After a while I dreaded climbing on that thing.
Good call. If I owned a Harley, I'd want to push one off the cliff. So they designed it so the captain must go down with the ship.you you wrote:Safety feature. They do it so you are unable to push it over a cliff
The convenience. Ease of riding. The simple fun factor. Now I'm having a blast on my CBR 125R and most of it comes from trying to master the art of riding a manual since I've already quite competent with driving a manual. I have my BWS for sale just to get maximize resale value as people start thinking of two wheel transportation. But part of me wants to get an inexpensive 125cc+ scooter again for winter riding maybe in the fall when people are looking to off load their two wheel machines, and part of me wants to keep the BWS. There's a simple joy about it I just don't get from riding a motorcycle.Bash On! wrote:For me, an automatic is for convenience, and I'd definitely want one for stop-and-go traffic (either for a bike or a car).
However, part of the essential thrill of motorcycling for me is the skill needed to coordinate throttle, clutch, and gear shifter and the control mastering all that provides.
What a joy it is to fire up the now 44-year old BMW and snick its transmission into first gear. Or quickly downshifting the Kawi for a burst of speed, hearing the engine wind out. If you haven't ridden a non-automatic bike, you're missing a one-of-a-kind experience, IMHO.