How long did it take?

03CobraT

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Good Morning,

How long did it take you to get comfortable. I am a new rider and got a lesson from a really experienced rider. I have since been riding around my subdivson (2 miles), been doing this everyday for 30 min a day, for a week now. I was wondering how long it took everyone to feel comfortable in traffic. Thanks for your thoughts and advice.

wuggzwest

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Well, im picking up my busa tomorrow (My 1st busa). Iv been playing on dirtbikes and atvs for a good portion of my life. Iv been on a honda cbr 600f4i for about 2 years till I decided to up it to the busa. Im a fairly big guy, 6'2, 245lbs give or take. I got pretty comfy on my F4i after a couple weeks. I am anxious to get on the busa, I keep hearing all these horror stories about them and its making me a little nervous but I dont know. Id say keep doing what you are doing now and just get used to it. Im curious on how easy it is to get the tire up on a gen 2 busa. I hope its not that easy cause im not looking to midnight the wheel and go down!

BA BUSA

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A twist of the wrist :laugh:

TruWrecks

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Everyone is different. You need to start riding in traffic to get used to it.

A couple of hints:

1. Be Ultra-aware of the vehicles around you.
2. Don't crowd the cars in front. Whatever distance looks good, and double that for following distance.
3. Keep and eye on the cars behind you to make sure they aren't crowding you.
4. Get a Kisan PathBlazer headlight modulator, unless you are going to get an HID. The flashing gets better attention in traffic, but both are more visible to others than stock bulbs. Also, get a Back-Off on the brakelight ASAP.
5. Ride with good gear, all of it, even if it's just around the block.
6. Always look for an "out" that you can ride to for safety in the traffic. I have used the left median/shoulder a couple of times, which is the only reason I'm still alive today.

And the last:

7: Relax and enjoy. It's a passion that most people will never understand.

I stopped at 7 on purpose.

:beerchug:

TruWrecks

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I mentioned nothing of that topic, but to answer you yes. It will wheelie very easily. If you're game, roll you bike to 10 or 15 MPH and whack the throttle to about 80%. You will be looking at nothing but sky. I don't condone this practice to any inexperienced riders. Keep the rubber fully intact with the road until you feel that you really know the bike well. Then, ride it some more. Perfect practice makes prefect.

wuggzwest

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Oh absolutely agree, Im actually completely not interested in playing games or doing wheelies. I just recovered off a broken shoulder accident doing wheelies on a yz450 that I was still new on. I did a midnight and flipped it and i went down on shoulder. So my question was how sensitive is the throttle on this bike? cause im really trying not to brake the sholder again!

BusaWizard

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It depends on your riding skills, some sooner than others.

TruWrecks

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Okay. Ignore the post I just made in your thread.

The throttle is very progressive and very predictable. You will have no issue if you learn smooth throttle control. Smooth on, smooth off. Same with the brakes. You will have more than enough power on tap to play, but you have to learn smooth throttle going slow first. Ride it delicately and she is a lamb. Grip-it and rip-it, she'll become a beast with seriously dangerous amounts of power. Thing go wrong very quickly with high-speed. Take the time to go slow and you 'll learn far more about your Busa.

03CorbaT - Sorry for the thread-jacking. :beerchug:

brian7396

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:welcome: some good advise i got when i bought my first street bike was to ride like i was invisible to other cars, even if they see you they may not care, and to pay attention to the front tires on the cars around you, where ever they are pointed is where that car is going. also anticipate cars pulling out in front of you. good luck 03cobraT and wuggzwest. stay safe.:thumbsup:

jphilipson

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Welcome :)

and please tell me the Hayabusa is not your first street bike... either way, ride safe!

sweet tea man

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Heck my busa is my first sport bike, second bike I've owned, the first was a 900cc cruiser.

Stay level headed and learn the bike. No sense in getting hurt bc you are feeling cocky. I'm just now becoming confident in my abilities on my busa...and I bought it LAST september.

don't rush yourself and ride your own ride. You have nothing to prove to anyone
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RACER_X

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besides the obvious mistake of buying the fastest bike on the planet as a first bike, taking lessons from a friend is another bad mistake. 90+% of motorcycle deaths are people who are self taught or taught by family/friends.

take a Motorcycle Safety Foundation class ASAP.

rc51ny

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I have found that you can ride the 'busa at 30 MPH just as easy as---well---about 30 MPH! You need to keep a level head and YOU be in charge of the machine--not the other way around. As far as wheelies go--I'm a MSF instructor--and I've seen students get scared and wheelie a 250 honda Nighthawk!!! Almost anything can get wheelied--but the real question is--why would you want to do that out on the street?? You already own the fastest production motorcycle in the world. No need to prove anything to anyone!

Laylas_Mom

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besides the obvious mistake of buying the fastest bike on the planet as a first bike, taking lessons from a friend is another bad mistake. 90+% of motorcycle deaths are people who are self taught or taught by family/friends.

take a Motorcycle Safety Foundation class ASAP.

Busa is my first bike. As long as you are strong enough to hold the sucker up you should be ok. I am 5'10 and pretty strong so this wasnt an issue for me. I see a lot of people drop their busas in the first few months.

If you are aware that the throttle is very sensitive you shouldnt have any wheelie mishaps. LOL. You really should take the MSF class. Lots of men in my class had been riding for many years and walked out amazed at what they didnt know.

I rode in the neighborhood for about a week to get used to the throttle. This is a good idea. But it will never prepare you for traffic. That is something you must just get out an do.

What I did was have a friend meet me super early on a Sunday morning and we rode thru town. Getting use to the traffic light and stop and go and the feel of cars next to you is important. A friend can help you switch lanes by holding the traffic back a little until you are comfortable. Do this a few times and you should be good to go.

It is totally true that cars just dont see you. Most dont even look. I got pushed out of a lane twice last week by tourists and an old lady. But I live in Orlando. If something like this happens, just stay calm and remember what you learned. You should be ok.

The more you ride the quicker you will understand the bike and feel comfortable on it. I ride atleast 3 days a week and within a few months I am very comfortable with the bike. Just take your time. Dont let your friends push you too far too fast. Know your limits.

We had a girl go down on a long ride because she had only been riding a week but she wanted to ride to Cocoa Beach with the group. 2 hr ride in 100 deg weather to sit at the beach and then another 2 hr ride home in the dark...just a bad idea. Her friends told her not to go but she wanted to go and refused to listen to the 5 experienced riders and showed up with her one friend that told her it was ok. She missed a turn going 50ish off an interstate ramp. There were 60+ bikes riding that day. Had the rest of us known she was new we prob would have sent her back home and offered to take her out some more around town to learn.

Just be safe and be aware. Read the current thread about our friend that passed recently. We can never know what is on the roads in front of us no matter how hard we try.

RACER_X

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Busa is my first bike. As long as you are strong enough to hold the sucker up you should be ok. I am 5'10 and pretty strong so this wasnt an issue for me. I see a lot of people drop their busas in the first few months.
should covers alot.

i'm also an MSF inst.

i've seen 125s wheelie when they should have been braking........i've even had a student who ran into a building on his FIRST ride on his new R1, he should have stayed on the road.

just becuase you've "made" it however far or long that is, doesn't mean plenty haven't failed before you.

Laylas_Mom

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should covers alot.

i'm also an MSF inst.

i've seen 125s wheelie when they should have been braking........i've even had a student who ran into a building on his FIRST ride on his new R1, he should have stayed on the road.

just becuase you've "made" it however far or long that is, doesn't mean plenty haven't failed before you.

Yea. Thats true. Which is why I went one to explain in the next 3 paragraphs that people should take their time and learn at their own pace.

That was directed to the other dude that was concerned about the wheelies not the origional poster concerned about learning how to ride.

RACER_X

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it's the ineternet anything over 5 sentences is ignored........:rofl:

another MSF thing KISS keep it simple stipid :)

Laylas_Mom

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it's the ineternet anything over 5 sentences is ignored........:rofl:

another MSF thing KISS keep it simple stipid :)

Damn. I did all that heart-felt typing for no reason??? Oh well. It made me feel better to contribute even if it doesnt get read I suppose...:poke:
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