This is what I’ll be doing with my Wednesday evenings for the next three weeks
http://www.subcycles.com/BMMC.html
Somehow I managed not to inherit my father’s magic touch with all things mechanical, but heck, maybe that’s just because I never tried.
Don’t worry, I’m not going to try fixing an in-warranty bike myself. I just want to learn the fundamentals. Looks like fun, eh?
you have a good trainer to
you have a good trainer to learn on & rip apart, until you actually get a real motorcycle.
After reading your last
After reading your last posts, rather than trying to tool your scooter or pretending to be a biker, do this instead-
http://www.ca-msp.org
Yeah, whatever Randy. If you
Yeah, whatever Randy. If you *had* read my posts you’d know I took the MSF course before buying the bike. If I hadn’t, how would I know I wanted a bike in the first place?
I have been thinking about taking the ERC, but I hardly qualify as an experienced rider, now do I? 2100 miles in 10 weeks falls short of the 3000 mile/6 month minimum recommendation made by the Bay Area Motorcycle Training website. So maybe I’ll take the ERC in a couple of months.
Also thinking about taking Reg Pridmore’s CLASS, but there too I think I shouldn’t waste my time until I trade the bike in for a bigger model.
Next, what the fuck does “pretending to be a biker” mean? Sorry, I have no desire to start a meth lab or tattoo a gang sign on my shoulder. I’ll never patch in. Whatever. I do go on group rides and solo rides. I don’t know what baggage you have attached to being a “biker” but I don’t think I want any part of it.
It’s a good thing you’re not this much of an asshole in real life. Maybe you can start to work on bringing that part of your personality to the 90% of your day spent online.
Quit being so paranoid
Quit being so paranoid Steve. I gave you the like to the advanced course because you need a *lot* more experience before even considering working on a motorcycle for a very important reason.- many different problems on a cycle can only be known from experience. And you can only get that experience riding.
“pretending to be a biker” is in reference to your riding just around the bay area, as well as using words such as “cager”. San Francisco is by far the worst possible city to get your miles & experience in. Get across the bay bridge and get some real riding in. Ride down to Los Angeles and back. Hell, ride to Hollister or even Napa Valley. Ride to Placerville via the backroads or Delta route.
You didn’t link to the
You didn’t link to the advanced course. You linked to the MSF.
Speaking of following links, did you read the description of the maintenance course at Subterranean? It’s a very basic course. It covers stuff that every rider should know, but that I don’t. Adjusting the slack out of my chain was just explained to me a week ago. I don’t think that’s really a problem that can only be known from experience.
I’ll take your San Francisco comment with a grain of salt, knowing that you think that San Francisco is the worst possible city to breathe in. It’s certainly *not* the worst city to ride in. I imagine Chicago, with its expansive grid and no hills for hundreds of miles, probably offers far less for sharpening one’s skills. It’s not much, but I get to ride through the Presidio every day as I go to and from work. The rest of the commute is all straight lines and 90-degree turns from a stop, nothing that will teach me anything, but most cities don’t offer anything but the grid. And San Francisco has a hell of a lot of riders compared to other cities, so I have a lot of people around to help me out with my questions and to go riding with.
That said, the other advantage San Francisco has is that it’s close to the “real riding” you described. I went to Concord to see a show a month ago, and rode nothing but boring-ass freeway and suburbs, so just crossing the bridge doesn’t cut the mustard. But you’re right. Riding the delta and all those levy roads was great riding. The Santa Cruz Mountains made a great day, and yes, riding up through Winters to Calistoga and then across Skagg’s to Stewart’s Point and down Route 1 with 11 other riders made for just about the best day of my life. Next Sunday I’ll be going up to Clearlake with the same group. Hopefully on Memorial Day I’ll be riding up to the Lost Coast and Avenue of the Giants for a three-day weekend, but we have to see about money and lodging. That might not work out.
At this point I wouldn’t presume to lay out any rides for my group. The rides that the other riders have picked out are giving me a lot to go by.
“I’ll take your San
“I’ll take your San Francisco comment with a grain of salt, knowing that you think that San Francisco is the worst possible city to breathe in.”
It’s certainly *not* the worst city to ride in. I imagine Chicago, with its expansive grid and no hills for hundreds of miles, probably offers far less for sharpening one’s skills.”
Steve,
I have rode in every major city on the west coast. I have rode up & down Route 66, PCH, I40, I‑90, and places that would cause you to soil your pants. I ride an average of 200 miles A DAY. I have been riding motorcycles since I was 7. I ride in rain, snow and sunshine.
So you can take my word that SF is the worst city to ride around in. The only “skills” that SF will sharpen, is the skill of being frustrated with congestion, pedestrians, ill-timed lights, no parking, and overheating engines.
Gee, sorry Mister Tough Guy.
Gee, sorry Mister Tough Guy. I should have realized that your Bad Attitude makes you an expert on all things, regardless of any personal prejudices you might have. Please accept my humble apologies for not recognizing your greatness. If I can lick your boots someday, please let me know. Thank you for deigning to show me how much cooler you are than me.
Now shut the fuck up and go away.
There is no prejudices here,
There is no prejudices here, you insecure paranoid jackass. Just statement of fact. If you want a city that will give you oodles of riding experience, try Portland, Seattle, or any city in-between. Want a place a little closer? Try Nevada City, or even Aburn. Keep in mind, I’m also paid to ride and wrie about such places.
As per your “cool remark” as I am, get yourself a real motorcycle, instead of the underpowered scooter in disguise, and then we’ll talk.
The prejudice is an old one:
The prejudice is an old one: you hate San Francisco for not living up to the coolness that you thought that it had 30 years ago. You always have and you’ve always exaggerated any defect the town might have.
And hey, I respect your cred. But I already have people to talk to who have the kind of riding experience you have but who don’t have such a shitty attitude. You’re the kind of asshole who would leave a broken-down Lambretta rider on the side of the road because your bike is superior. I have no time for that sort of crap.
So, yeah, I’ll get another bike, but no, we won’t talk. I’m taking Quaker’s advice on this: never trust an unhappy philosopher. You’re bitter and angry – why the fuck would I want to take on your attitudes?
And hey, I do have a real motorcycle. It’s the largest engine allowed by law in many asian countries.
“The prejudice is an old
“The prejudice is an old one: you hate San Francisco for not living up to the coolness that you thought that it had 30 years ago. You always have and you’ve always exaggerated any defect the town might have.”
No, it has to do with the traffic, the congestion, the lack of parking, the parking tickets, and thefts. SF if a city of pedestrians, which is a good thing. But as far as it being a city for motorcycles, it’s horrible.
“So, yeah, I’ll get another bike, but no, we won’t talk. I’m taking Quaker’s advice on this: never trust an unhappy philosopher. You’re bitter and angry – why the fuck would I want to take on your attitudes?”
One word- projection
“And hey, I do have a real motorcycle. It’s the largest engine allowed by law in many asian countries.”
But not in the United States, where you are. Get something with more than 1000CCs, and we’ll talk.
Man, that class looks
Man, that class looks awesome. I should hope to find a class like that nearby.
Ahh you seem to be one of
Ahh you seem to be one of THOSE. IF it aint a liter bike then it aint a real bike. The size of you penis being measured by the CC’s of your bike even though an R6 can go well over any speed limit anywhere same with a ZX7. Any liter bike today is far too much power for anyone to have. I rarely say this about other riders but i look forward to reading of your demise in the papers. This line of thinking that you aint a biker unless you ride something that is far too large for any human to control safely. A true biker rides because he appreciates the ride not because he is the fastest (read-dumbest) biker on the road. Ive been riding for over 10 years and i grew up with a father and a grandfather that both rode. You, are a fucking moron.
Learning how to tool a bike in no way is dependent on riding experience. I worked on my first bike quite a bit. Its best to not do anything like overhauling an engine but basics are ABSOLUTELY within the realm of possibility not to mention he stated his father is one that knows how to turn a wrench and im sure he would assist him whenever he asked. Liter bikes are for people that WANT TO BE REAL BIKERS. Real bikers know that a smaller bike will hit the twisties much better and with much more control than any monster that the morons that saw on Biker Boyz. Keep talking cool and thinking you are the shit, be overconfident so you can be eliminated from the bikers because you reflect badly on us all.
It’s extremely clear that
It’s extremely clear that you’ve never ridden in Boston. But you know, despite the urban battleground that is the greater Boston metropolitan area, despite the ice and snow and sand that threaten to throw us head-first into the asphault for nearly half a year, despite the cagers who don’t yield to each other much less to us, there’s a fuckton of bikers out here. We’re on everything from Goldwings to choppers with ape-hangers to Ducatis to UJMs to BSAs to Vespas to my little Savage, and for the most part we wave at each other when we pass by. So maybe, just maybe, it isn’t the area you ride in, or the displacement of the bike you’re on, or the name brand on your jacket. Maybe being a biker is about loving to ride and loving motorcycles, and being able to recognize that passion in others.
“Ahh you seem to be one of
“Ahh you seem to be one of THOSE. IF it aint a liter bike then it aint a real bike. The size of you penis being measured by the CC’s of your bike even though an R6 can go well over any speed limit anywhere same with a ZX7.”
I don’t ride a Harley, but I do ride American.
“Ive been riding for over 10 years and i grew up with a father and a grandfather that both rode. You, are a fucking moron.”
I’ve been riding for 27 years, as did my father & grandfather (who rode in WW II). The guys I ride with, well, you have heard of them in legend and are 100% responsible for you being on two wheels today.
“Learning how to tool a bike in no way is dependent on riding experience.”
Really?
*what will improve a curving ratio by 30 degrees?
*In what cituation on pavement will counter-steering be bad, and why?
*At what point will you get a false mistiming, and why?
*In what situation would you sit on the gas tank, and why?
“I worked on my first bike quite a bit. Its best to not do anything like overhauling an engine but basics are ABSOLUTELY within the realm of possibility not to mention he stated his father is one that knows how to turn a wrench and im sure he would assist him whenever he asked.”
Considering his father lives on the east coast, I don’t see that happening.
“Liter bikes are for people that WANT TO BE REAL BIKERS. Real bikers know that a smaller bike will hit the twisties”
I’ve seen people in full-dressed cruisers who take curves at speeds above and beyond what would be considered safe (i.e. 20MPH posted, taken at 60MPH). So the idea that only small bike can do such things is really a myth.
That’s true, I haven’t rode
That’s true, I haven’t rode in Boston, yet. That will come next year for Laconia when we ride from San Diego. So who knows. Perhaps Boston will overtake SF.
“Learning how to tool a bike
“Learning how to tool a bike in no way is dependent on riding experience.”
Really?
Yes. I could provide many examples, but I’ll settle for 1 word:
Rossi.
According to you, your 30 years riding experience (longer than he’s been alive) should make you a better rider. So I ask — Do *you* have 6 world championships to your name?
Experience is needed, but it’s not everything. Neither is the size of the bike. If you think otherwise, try telling that to the 17 year olds who take great pleasure in humiliating all-comers at the local track, riding nothing more than Aprilia RS250s (Even 125s in some cases). Tell that to the friend of mine who posted a 102mph lap of the isle of man on a GSXR400. (And riding ability/experience be damned, there’s not a cruiser built that could do that)
And why knock town riding? If you’re as experienced as you say, you’d be fully aware that it gives a hard but extremely effective lesson in spacial awareness, knowledge of the bikes reactions in emergency circumstances and defensive driving.
In short, you’ve been riding for 27 years. Congratulations. It still doesn’t make any of your points more valid. Nor throwing in a bunch of pseudo technical questions, which could more than likely be looked up in a textbook and *still* not make any difference to the riding of the person that knows the answers.
(Oh and by the way, no matter who you ride with, I can guarantee they’re in no way relevant to the reason I ride a bike, unless they’re the people that taught my Grandfather to ride in the early 1900s)
“I don’t ride a Harley, but
“I don’t ride a Harley, but I do ride American.”
I fail to see what this has to do with the debate, there are many fine motorbike manufacturers from many countries around the world, and they make a lot of fine bikes. I suppose your bigotry extends to those of us who ride the most appropriate bike to our situation rather than the fastest most flashy one too…
“According to you, your 30
“According to you, your 30 years riding experience (longer than he’s been alive) should make you a better rider.”
I’ll clarify- getting out and riding daily/constantly is what gives you the experience.
“And why knock town riding?”
I never did. I said that SF is a terrible town to ride in. SF is a concentrated, pedestrian-oriented town. I never knocked city riding. As a matter of fact, I offered alternatives.
“Nor throwing in a bunch of pseudo technical questions, which could more than likely be looked up in a textbook and *still* not make any difference to the riding of the person that knows the answers.”
Believe me, they are not pseudo-technical questions. They are things that you discover in many cases, not from a classroom or book, but just riding.
“I fail to see what this has
“I fail to see what this has to do with the debate,”
Ask the person, who assumed to know what I ride that I was replying to.
“Ahh you seem to be one of
“Ahh you seem to be one of THOSE. IF it aint a liter bike then it aint a real bike.”
Doesnt mention what bike you ride, just a (very) general statement of capacity range (1000cc+, lots of bikes in that catagory).
“The size of you penis being measured by the CC’s of your bike even though an R6 can go well over any speed limit anywhere same with a ZX7.”
Again, no mention of what bike you ride, he does mention two bikes, but he doesnt say you ride them, merely that they are quite fast enough for any honest law abiding citizen.
I havent quoted the rest of his post because it makes no reference to the make, model, origin, or type of bike that you ride. He did say that you do not consider anything with less than 1000ccs to be worthless, which you infact implied yourself “Get something with more than 1000CCs, and we’ll talk.”.
Frankly sir, your an asshole. I ride an XL125, and Im no less a biker than you are for it. Id like to see you tell the guy who rides the same model bike as me who rode to portugual from Ireland on it that he isnt a real biker. He went to a meeting of guys who ride the 1000cc version of the bike and recieved major cred for doing it, as far as Im concerned those guys are real bikers, who accept bikers for how and why they ride and not what they ride. You are merely a self important bigot.
“Doesnt mention what bike
“Doesnt mention what bike you ride, just a (very) general statement of capacity range (1000cc+, lots of bikes in that catagory).”
Yeah, and your point is.…?
“He did say that you do not consider anything with less than 1000ccs to be worthless, which you infact implied yourself “Get something with more than 1000CCs, and we’ll talk.”.”
No, he said that, not me. However, for clarification, I do consider the particular model of 250cc that Steve rides to be a scooter in disquise. Especially in light of many of his posts.
“Frankly sir, your an asshole. I ride an XL125, and Im no less a biker than you are for it.”
Yeah, I’m an asshole. I’m also in the United States. I would in no way consider consider to discuss riding in Europe Vs. the U.S.A, in that they are litterally worlds apart.
“Id like to see you tell the guy who rides the same model bike as me who rode to portugual from Ireland on it that he isnt a real biker”
I’d have great repsect for him, considering that, looking at the last map available, Portugual & Ireland are seperated by a body of water. But hey, in a few months I’ll be riding from San Diego to Skagway. He’s welcome to join us.
“s Im concerned those guys are real bikers,who accept bikers for how and why they ride and not what they ride.”
Even when it’s weekend-riding, middle-class twits who view it as a hobby like yourself? Please, go back to discussing “cool armour” and LARPS.
So wait, who are you
So wait, who are you claiming wrote, “But not in the United States, where you are. Get something with more than 1000CCs, and we’ll talk.”???? Because from where I sit, you wrote that. Are you claiming that there’s more than one anonymous poster in this thread? Who are you trying to fool?
And “weekend-riding, middle-class” certainly sums me up. You make it pretty clear that riding to work, unless riding *is* work, doesn’t count for anything. Neither does getting groceries or just going to the ocean to see the waves roll in. Visiting a friend on the other side of one of the bridges doesn’t count and neither does going on a business appointment or a job interview. The only thing that apparently meets with your approval is riding only for the love of it, without any destination in mind to soil the purity of riding nor with any enjoyment that might make it fall pathetically into the realm of “hobby.”
So why would I, or anyone, aspire to your ideal of bikerhood?
There’s a moment in The Wild One where the sheriff’s daughter asks Johnny what they do when they ride, where they go and she specifically asks, “do you go for picnics?” It’s poignant because she’s so naive and only some weekend-riding middle-class twit would think of going for a picnic on something as wild and bad as a motorcycle. But you know, a picnic sounds good to me. If being a biker means no picnics because I’m too busy being tough and glaring at the badass world that Just Doesn’t Understand Me, I have no time for it. I have places to go and I’m going to go to those places instead of worrying about whether I’m cool enough to hang with Randy.
And shit, call it a scooter if you like. I know a woman who took her 150cc Bajaj to Las Vegas and back solo. I might have gotten a scooter except that I believe in the stability of larger rotating masses. Too many years of riding a bicycle, I trust the gyroscopic effect of larger wheels. And I’m sure that bicycles are even more pathetic in your eyes, so why not just call it a bicycle? I’m sure that will help you to feel important.
“Yeah, and your point
“Yeah, and your point is.…?”
“Ask the person, who assumed to know what I ride that I was replying to.”
My point is that he never claimed to know what you ride.
“No, he said that, not me. However, for clarification, I do consider the particular model of 250cc that Steve rides to be a scooter in disquise. Especially in light of many of his posts.”
He drives a Rebel right? Lets see, engine in front of rider, manual transmission, sounds like a bike to me. This is a scooter in disguise.
“Yeah, I’m an asshole. I’m also in the United States. I would in no way consider consider to discuss riding in Europe Vs. the U.S.A, in that they are litterally worlds apart.”
I dont believe we are discussing the difference between the US and Europe, we’re discussing your idiotic attitude. Nowhere have I compared riding in the US to riding in Europe, you are merely trying to avoid the topic of conversation.
“I’d have great repsect for him, considering that, looking at the last map available, Portugual & Ireland are seperated by a body of water. But hey, in a few months I’ll be riding from San Diego to Skagway. He’s welcome to join us.”
I would imagine he took a ferry from Ireland to Wales, and a ride on Train from Dover to Le Harve, exactly the same as any other biker (including the 1000cc bikers who attended the same meet) would. Tell me, how would you cross the great lakes?
“Even when it’s weekend-riding, middle-class twits who view it as a hobby like yourself?”
You sound like exactly the kind of middle class corporate drone who dons a leather jacket and a bad attitude at the weekend in order to escape from his meaningless life. I clock up on average 20 miles a day, I ride to and from work, I ride to the store, I ride into town when Im going out, I ride to the cinema, I ride out to the mountains when I need to relax, I even ride cross country when I want to visit my folks. I dont have a car, truck, SUV, or any other form of transport, just my faithful motorbike.
FYI, My father was a fisherman, I just finished up a job as a security guard to make money for university. My grandparents and thier parents before them were farmers, Im not middle class, far from it.
“There’s a moment in The
“There’s a moment in The Wild One where the sheriff’s daughter asks Johnny what they do when they ride, where they go and she specifically asks, “do you go for picnics?” It’s poignant because she’s so naive and only some weekend-riding middle-class twit would think of going for a picnic on something as wild and bad as a motorcycle.”
Funny you should mention ‘The Wild One’. I know many of the guys who were the inspiration behind that unintentional comedy. Be sure to look for the book which I helped research when it hits the bookstores this July. I think you’ll really dig it.
“I have places to go and I’m going to go to those places instead of worrying about whether I’m cool enough to hang with Randy.”
Hey. knock yourself out. Enjoy those rides to Daly City. Revel in your rides through Golden Gate Park, or down to Cala Foods. Or perhaps, someday, I’ll run into you at someplace like The Rock Shop or Neptune’s Net. And if I do, I’ll buy the first round of Odouls.
“And shit, call it a scooter if you like. I know a woman who took her 150cc Bajaj to Las Vegas and back solo.”
Yes, and I knew the man who first rode a motorcycle accross the Baja, when such a feat was considered suicidal.
“And I’m sure that bicycles are even more pathetic in your eyes,”
I love bikes. Good excersise, and for a place like the bay area, they’re the perfect mode of two-wheeled transportation.
“that unintentional
“that unintentional comedy”
What do you mean? That was an EXTREMELY IMPORTANT and TRUE warning about the dangerous influence of CRAZY JAZZ MUSIC and motorcycles. Be careful, because it could happen in your town.
We’ll see you at Hollister,
We’ll see you at Hollister, then.
“My point is that he never
“My point is that he never claimed to know what you ride.”
That is true. but he did assume to know what I ride.
“He drives a Rebel right? Lets see, engine in front of rider, manual transmission, sounds like a bike to me. This is a scooter in disguise.”
I’ll grant you that. But undeliably, what he does ride, is a Sportster wannabee. On the surface, not a lot wrong with that. I often recomend it to beginners. But, again, we come back to my point- get more experience before tooling. steve has far less than 5,000 miles total riding experience. Possibly 2,000. A good example, would be teaching a person how to assemble, and disasemble a gun. They can know all the mechanics, but it doesn’t help much when trying to hit the target unless they’ve fired the gun a few times.
“I dont believe we are discussing the difference between the US and Europe, we’re discussing your idiotic attitude.”
See below.
“Tell me, how would you cross the great lakes?”
I wouldn’t I would go around- like I did before.
“You sound like exactly the kind of middle class corporate drone who dons a leather jacket and a bad attitude at the weekend in order to escape from his meaningless life. I clock up on average 20 miles a day, I ride to and from work, I ride to the store, I ride into town when Im going out, I ride to the cinema, I ride out to the mountains when I need to relax, I even ride cross country when I want to visit my folks. I dont have a car, truck, SUV, or any other form of transport, just my faithful motorbike.”
I’ll just say the following-
1. I was born and raised in Butte MT.
2. On average, I put 200 miles in per day.
3. All I’ve had are cycles.
“FYI, My father was a fisherman, I just finished up a job as a security guard to make money for university. My grandparents and thier parents before them were farmers, Im not middle class, far from it.”
1. Trust me, you’re middle-class. No matter how much you hate to admit it.
2. You’re still a LARPer.
I’ll grant you that. But
Here I have to disagree, and it doesn’t have anything to do with motorcycles per se. Owning a machineâany machineâcarries with it a usually-neglected responsibility to know something about it and how it works, and how to maintain it. The class doesn’t pretend to teach me to take an engine apart and put it back together. It’s showing me what the parts are and what they do, and it promises nothing more than to know what I’m paying for when I bring it to the shop.
Furthermore, I don’t think that you’re saying that someone should ride 5,000 miles before learning to clean and lube one’s chain. (I probably won’t make it to 5,000 miles without replacing the bike with a shaft-driven model, but that’s another story.) A generation ago, it was unthinkable to own a car without knowing how to change the oil. It’s hard to believe that you, mister purist, think there’s anything wrong with learning about how a machine works.
For the record, it’s a Virago, not a Rebel. Wannabe Sportster? I guess. I picked it for a variety of reasons, all of which I still believe valid. First, I determined not to be one of those guys who buys a motorcycle and then doesn’t ride it and sells it five years later with a thousand miles on it. eBay and Craigslist are lousy with those, and it’s disgusting. So I took the MSF course not to learn how to ride, but to learn if I would enjoy riding. I was fully prepared to take the course and never get on a bike again if it didn’t appeal to me.
Then I looked for bikes that I thought appropriate. 250cc seemed like a good size for someone who had never ridden on the street before. How many stories have we all heard about the squid killing himself with a half-mile on the odometer? I rode a 250 in the MSF course, and it seemed capable.
I bought new because I know I have no mechanical aptitude. I’m better off letting a service department take care of the machine. Further, I wanted to know what running right sound and feels like and I knew I wouldn’t have a clean slate with someone else’s machine. Third, hey, financing. Yay America and credit. Maybe that’s not a good reason, but there we go.
I also have the romantic poseur image in my head that says “cruiser” rather than sportbike. The dealer’s salesdrone tried his damndest to get me on a Ninja 250, and while I might put in some time on one this weekend, I still know that black and chrome makes my heart pound, while fairings and hidden machinery just make me sad. OK, the naked bikes have some appeal, and perhaps I’ll get converted to the crouched-forward position, but till then, no, I’m in the cruiser camp.
Next is the sound. OK, it’s a tiny bike, but it sounds better than any other (new and unmodified)bike under 400cc. Not as throaty as I’d like but what do I expect for a 250? It doesn’t sound like an electric razor. A vanity point, but yeah, i like the sound.
I bought this bike knowing that I was going to learn a lot about what I wanted in a bike, but it’s exactly the bike I wanted. Yeah, I’m thinking of trading it in a lot earlier than I expected, but I love this bike and, well, fuck you for dissing it. It’s agile, simple, reliable, picks up nicely from a stop, doesn’t get weird at its high end (I’ve buried the needle of the speedo without any disturbing vibration as I’ve heard a lot of people complain), it’s comfortable on longer rides (I know, 300 miles in a day is nothing to you, but for me that’s a pretty full day of riding) and it looks good (no accounting for taste, right?). What else could I ask for in a starter bike?
Well, so yeah, I probably am going to move to a liter bike. Doesn’t take a damn thing away from my Virago. This is a sweet little ride and I wouldn’t choose different if I had the choice to make again.
Hm. Well, it’s not that far
Hm. Well, it’s not that far away…
“That is true. but he did
“That is true. but he did assume to know what I ride.”
No, he didnt, that point has been proved, you are flogging dead horse because you know you have lost the arguement and shouting pointlessly makes you feel good.
“But, again, we come back to my point- get more experience before tooling. steve has far less than 5,000 miles total riding experience.”
You are wrong, this course is not a comprehensive mechanics course, its a basic mechanical aptitude course. It covers things everyone who rides should know about thier machine and how it works, if you claim to know so much about riding you should acknowledge the importance of knowing such things.
“A good example, would be teaching a person how to assemble, and disasemble a gun. They can know all the mechanics, but it doesn’t help much when trying to hit the target unless they’ve fired the gun a few times.”
Hes not trying to make his bike better, hes trying to learn how to keep it running properly and not be raped by unscrupulous mechanics.
“I wouldn’t I would go around- like I did before.”
Imagine for a minute that you cant go around.
“I’ll just say … had are cycles.”
I hope you can now appreciate the stupidity of your previous remarks then.
“Trust me, you’re middle-class. No matter how much you hate to admit it.”
Lets see a sensible breakdown of exactly what it is that makes me middle class?
“You’re still a LARPer.”
I do not pretend to ride a motorbike, I sit on it, move the controls and it physicly bears me off in whatever direction I point it, this is not pretend.
Unlike you, I also dont pretend to be a badass biker, I have long hair, some facial hair, and I ride a bike sure, but it ends there. I dont need to pretend to be an angel to justify myself so I dont. It is you who are the LARPer.
Sounds good I’ll probably be
Sounds good I’ll probably be hawking books, or at Johnny’s bar (for obvious reasons).
See you July 4th.
ok, I’ll grant you that.
ok, I’ll grant you that. I’ve grown up with motorcycles around me. so I either misunderstood what the class teaches and take for granted that people would know the stuff they teach. So my bad.