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Posted: Sat Feb 28, 2015 11:18 pm
by D-Rider
randomsquid wrote:And I seem to have bought an Honda.

A CB500F in red.

He'd only do me two hundred quid off on account of the low rate finance offer and free top box and panniers that Honda are doing to shift the stock before the new (fucking awful) colours come out.

Still that's transport and shopping sorted for the next ten years or so.
Take it back at once .... you need to get the cash back to spend on a beautiful carbon tank for the Falco.
:smt018

Posted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 6:16 pm
by nicketynoo
Well done Random! I do get a nice warm fuzzy feeling when people spend their hard earned cash. ITS WHAT ITS FOR! :smt023

Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2015 12:25 am
by Sixty7
Looking at ur post...it has to be the V7 such a beautiful little bike.....may as well make ur commute's special.... :smt001

Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2015 8:13 pm
by randomsquid
Sixty7 wrote:Looking at ur post...it has to be the V7 such a beautiful little bike.....may as well make ur commute's special.... :smt001
I just couldn't bring myself to inflict me on a defenceless little V7. My old Guzzi coped for 14 years but it was built like a tank with out any fancy modern stuff to break.

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Mon Dec 09, 2019 11:56 am
by Ben
For me, it totally depends on the roads you're commuting on and where you're parking the bike when you get to work.

If it's all A-roads and under 10 miles, there's nowt wrong with a second-hand 125. Cheap to buy, maintain and insure. Something like a small off on a V7 Guzzi is going to cost as much to fix as a 125 is to buy...

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Tue Dec 10, 2019 12:49 am
by BikerGran
Since this is theoretical, I can answer and make believe I'm still riding. I'd have a Yam RXS100 for a 9 mile commute (as long as there aren't any steep hills involved). I have great memories of my first bike that I rode for 3½ years, it was such fun!

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Tue Apr 07, 2020 10:53 am
by Ben
A YBR125 or a Guzzi V7 and you end up with a CB500F? I'd say that's a great compromise. More poke than a YBR, reliability by the bucket load and alright, not as much kerb appeal as a Guzzi but those parallel twin Hondas have great character.

How are you getting on with it?

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Tue Apr 07, 2020 2:21 pm
by yello
My current bike was actually a head based swap. No 'heart' involved at all. As much as I loved my previous bike (Yam Thundercat), I was beginning to fall out of of love due to back and knee aches. It was also (to be frank) too much for me, I'd become a different rider over the years and was riding the t'cat at half pace pootles. Tbh, I was on the verge of selling it and packing in biking completely. I thought I'd 'been there, done that'

Then I saw a lad's ad on Gumtree. He was offering to swap his dad's Dullville 650 for a sportsbike, I thought 'wtf' and broke all the rules (met him in a supermarket carpark) and did a straight swap. Bloody daft, I know, but tbh I've not regretted it! (Btw, I'd ridden a Deauville before, knew it's limitations and realised what I was in for) It's a gutless and lardy beast but suits me down to the ground... even if I do feel a little sheepishly defensive!

That said, this yt clip always gives me a chuckle...



Down to the guy's riding rather than the bike but it just shows what's possible (even if he does get done for top end now and again)

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Tue Apr 07, 2020 5:02 pm
by Gio
Hahahaha, what sort of riders are on sports bikes.................................

Re: Bike buying - head or heart

Posted: Mon May 11, 2020 11:09 am
by Dr Ridin
yello wrote:
Tue Apr 07, 2020 2:21 pm
Down to the guy's riding rather than the bike but it just shows what's possible (even if he does get done for top end now and again)
Yep - I have always said that a good rider can make anything handle (no insult to your scoot meant).