John Lofgren Monkey Boots Shinki Horsebuttt - $1,136 The classic monkey boot silhouette in an incredibly rich Shinki russet horse leather.
Grant Stone Diesel Boot Dark Olive Chromexcel - $395 Goodyear welted, Horween Chromexcel, classic good looks.
Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. Holy **** that R100R build is next level! Did you do that work yourself?HD Road King TC 103 2015; BMW R100R Mystic 1994, first and only owner, Yamaha XT 250 1981 barn find 2023, restored in 2024
Cant go wrong with a Triumph.I don’t ride a motorcycle, but I’m so tempted to get one I’m between a Harley sportster or a triump either t100 or bobber, btw it will be the first time ridding a motorcycle do you think it’s a good idea to start with one of the above options?
I don’t ride a motorcycle, but I’m so tempted to get one I’m between a Harley sportster or a triump either t100 or bobber, btw it will be the first time ridding a motorcycle do you think it’s a good idea to start with one of the above options?
So even the t100 that is somewhat lighter is a no go as a first bike?
Agree - the most important thing when you are learning is just time on the bike so the best bike is the one you will ride the most. That being said, a drop can shed 30% percent of the bikes value. So if you are willing to stomach that go for it. Its not impossible to learn on a bike like that. I learned on a ducati scrambler 750 that felt much easier to flick around (and light enough to catch if it started tipping) vs the triumph. If you are stateside, would highly recommend taking a MSF course. You will get a much better sense of low speed maneuvering and how heavy of a bike you are comfortable learning on.The perfect first bike is whatever bike you get first that will keep you excited about riding.
But a T100 isn't really a lightweight. New ones are about 230kg wet.
My KTM is just 170kg wet weight.
Sports bikes will always be lighter than a cruiser or a retro. It goes back to what you want the bike for. Lightweight flickable handling, or planted, stable cruising.
I’m from Greece eu, but we have similar riding courses that I was thinking to get, well I don’t really care about speed or fast and technical riding I mainly want a motorcycle that I like and after some time to be able to do a few road trips I like, if I drop it I’m willing to fix it and I don’t really care if I’ll lose 30% because I doubt I’ll resell it soon I want something that I’ll like, obviously the correct way is to learn on something lighter and more forgiving and then move up to a better one but I don’t think it will inspire me to ride itAgree - the most important thing when you are learning is just time on the bike so the best bike is the one you will ride the most. That being said, a drop can shed 30% percent of the bikes value. So if you are willing to stomach that go for it. Its not impossible to learn on a bike like that. I learned on a ducati scrambler 750 that felt much easier to flick around (and light enough to catch if it started tipping) vs the triumph. If you are stateside, would highly recommend taking a MSF course. You will get a much better sense of low speed maneuvering and how heavy of a bike you are comfortable learning on.
Always more fun riding a slow bike fast than a fast bike slowIt entirely depends what you want the bike for.
But @jfive67 is absolutely right too, you'll very likely drop your first bike.
My first big bike was a Honda CB650 and I dropped that once. It was mortifying.
Many years later and now I've got a Triumph T100 Bonneville and a KTM RC390 (you can see them both in the very first post of this thread).
I adore the Triumph - I've put lots of time and money and effort into making it what it is today. But it's the KTM I ride every time now.
Which fits back to "what do you want the bike for?" My Triumph is easy to ride, relaxing, comfortable and cool. It gets lots of comments and people like to see it.
My RC is an absolute joy machine. It's super light and nimble and handles like nothing I've ever experienced. It's only a 400, so it isn't especially quick, but you can absolutely wring its neck almost all the time without being at risk of killing yourself. You know that scene in Return Of The Jedi where the speeder bikes chase through the forest? That's how it feels.
It's genuinely the best vfm fun I can imagine.
I've never ridden a T100 but the Sportster has a very uncomfortable pegs/seat/bars ratio such that if you're anywhere close to 6' tall or more that would be a very uncomfortable bike to sit on for any length of time.I don’t ride a motorcycle, but I’m so tempted to get one I’m between a Harley sportster or a triump either t100 or bobber, btw it will be the first time ridding a motorcycle do you think it’s a good idea to start with one of the above options?