Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Learn Riding
Collapse
X
-
Learn Riding
I'm going to buy RTR 180 in few months but I'm totally new to bikes. I drive car well and cycle too. Tried a few riding a month before. Wanted to be a confident rider before I buy the RTR, I'm from Kolkata. What should be proper approach ?Tags: None
-
Advice is a form of nostalgia.
Dispensing it is a way of fishing the past from the disposal, wiping it off, painting over the ugly parts and recycling it for more than it's worth.
Antz Travelz!! | South India Exploration Ride | Leh Triplog (Work in progress)
-
Well nice thread. My motive to post this if I'm going in a wrong direction. Buying a 180cc bike without having much riding experience. I'm practicing these days after office if I managed to get a chance. And once I buy it will take it early morning and learn fully.
Comment
-
Hi,
Its not at all a wrong decision to buy a bike of 180cc. I would even say any bike up to 250cc would be good for learners if they are ready to bear some scratches here and there and get some parts repaired.
I recently bought a 200cc bike and started learning on it with no prior experience with diving cars or riding scooters. Am still learning but yes, getting better it day by day. I started taking it out to office which is around 14 km one way so I have a good practice.
I would recommend you to lend your bike to an experienced friend and ask him to drive you around. This way you can observe when to do gear shifts etc. Also ask him to keep telling you what to do in case of bike is to be slowed, started on a hill, taken over a speed breaker and some other similar stuff.
One thing to note would be is don't go by RPMs or Speed on bike to know when to shift gears. I used to do that. But the sound of engine and fel of bike is enough to let you know when you need to Up-shift or Downshift.
But then again, I am still a beginner and these are just my inputs.
Comment
-
Re: Learn Riding
Really? Learn riding on a new bike? I hope you are not overdoing it. Otherwise it'll kill the bike. RTR 180 is a very good option, but beware of the beast as it wants to pounce every now and then. I own one and I would strongly suggest you buy one with ABS.
Comment
-
The website generally reports the ex-showroom price at a certain place. On top of that many things will pile up - like octroi, registration tax, handling charges, smart card charges, insurance.
Ask you dealer to give a detailed break-up. Most dealers will have that. It will give all the details I mentioned earlier.
Hope that helps.<<<< If you stand for nothing, you'll fall for anything! >>>>
Comment




Comment