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empiricalem

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  • Current Bike(s)
    Daylim Daystar 150 cc but not for much longer, I hope ...

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  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Singapore

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  1. Many thanks, everyone, for your responses. The majority seem to favour starting off on a 650 cc and I'm going to heed that piece of advice, I think, and get a few miles under my belt before I go for anything bigger. Thanks again.
  2. Hi. I've had a warm welcome and some sound advice on this members' club since I joined a few days ago, and so I've come back for more. Everyone that responded to my previous post on here has encouraged me - at the ripe old age of 61 - to "go for it" and to buy the Dragstar Classic 650 cc that I've had my eye on since passing my test last summer. Trouble is I've now seen a 2004 Dragstar Classic 1100 cc for a very good price and it's in mint condition. Given that I passed my DAS test on a Kawasaki 500 cc and have since been riding a Daelim Daystar 150 cc every day is the jump in engine size to 1100 cc a completely daft idea? It seems that there is very little in it when it comes to dry weight - another concern of mine - but obviously it's got a lot more power. What would people with a lot of biking experience advise, please? Em
  3. Thanks for the warm welcome and the words of encouragement. Much appreciated.
  4. Hiya. Here's the back story. I'm 61 years young. As a 60th birthday present to myself I decided to learn how to ride a motorbike. Best decision I've made in a while. I passed my test on a Kawasaki 500 cc back home in Wales last summer, and since then I've fallen head over heels in love with a Yamaha Dragstar Classic 650 cc. Can't keep my eyes off her. The wife's getting worried. Meanwhile, having taken the compulsory 2B motorbike test out here in Singapore, I now ride a Daelim Daystar 150cc to work every day and so, slowly but surely, my riding skills are improving. So, here's the 64,000 dollar question before I go and make a complete fool of myself: should a man of my age, who's short in the leg and not exactly Mr Universe, even look at - let alone fall in love with - a cruiser whose dry weight is a damn sight more than any 150 cc tiddler? Or is it true that it's really down to a good sense of balance, plus confidence gained through practice, and not brute strength when it comes to handling a mid-sized motorbike? Your honest answers would be greatly appreciated as I don't want to be crushed to death in the car park before I actually get to ride off into the sunset of my life. Thanks a lot. Em
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