My first street bike was a 2005 Kawasaki z750 s and was perfect.. I am 6 ft 1 and 210..
This is a discussion on Advise for new riders. within the The Training Ground - New Riders! forums, part of the General Forums category; My first street bike was a 2005 Kawasaki z750 s and was perfect.. I am 6 ft 1 and 210.....
My first street bike was a 2005 Kawasaki z750 s and was perfect.. I am 6 ft 1 and 210..
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I'm new to Sport bikes. Thank you all for this great forum. I've found so much great information throughout this site that will definitely help me throughout my riding. I have rode bicycles (raced with them) and rode dirt bikes all my life. I think it's definitely time to move up to the Sport bike class. I'm taking the MSF course this weekend coming up and then the next week I'm heading the the dealership to get a new 2012 650. Thank you all again.
Hi everyone,
I'm in need of some advice. I am a female 5'3 160lbs and just got a 2002 Meanstreak 1500 with hypercharger. The hypercharger sticks out way too much and I can't reach the break pedal, anyone have any suggestions? Also I am scared of it in turning it, I feel like I will drop it..any advice?
not sure with the hypercharger - cant help you with that.
As for turning it, im afraid its about practice. I am guessing that this is with you on the bike?
Start off by going in a large circle, anticlockwise. This way you are able to put one foot down if needed, but still have control of the rear brake.
Then do the same the other rotation. After that, tighten the circle till your on full lock.
You may want to put in some figure of 8s before you tighten the radius too much.
I think that the word "counter steering" for some folks (like me) gets confusing. I get the point of the name, but when the instructor at the MSF described it as when Peter Pan flies he leans his right shoulder to the right to turn right it finally sunk in for me. Sounds silly, but it was easier for me to grasp than trusting the physics of it. Now if someone asks me about counter steering when they are confused as I was I just tell them - push on the bars with the right hand to go right and they get it.
As far as the Hypercharger is concerned..I'm sure your knee is up against it and the angle your leg takes to get your foot on the brake in uncomfortable..I have the Chuckster intake on mine and its great. Does not protrude at all.
Slow turning takes practice but if your tires are worn and/or the steering stem bearing is worn it will be more difficult. If when taking low speed turns, 10-15mph, the steering feels "choppy" you may have an issue with one or both. For slower speed turning, you want to use what's called Counterweight Steering. This is where you actually turn the handlebars in the direction you want to turn and shift your bottom to the same side of the seat you're turning to..Left turn, turn front wheel to left and shift weight to left. Look into and beyond your turn and feather your clutch..
The technique is well documented. You should look on Youtube for it..
Here's the link for the intake..
ProductDetail
Here's mine
P1010162.jpg
2007 Meanstreak 1600
2012 Concours14 Candy Arabian Red
Hi Bobbie &to the forums. Theres another mounting/back plate for your Hypercharger that makes it NOT stick out so far.
Someone will chime in with the name soon I'm sure, I cant remember it right now. If you dont think that'll give enough room for you to reach the brake pedal comfortably
Then you'll most likely hafta remove the Hypercharger. Do you have the backplate from the OEM filter bowl on that side?
If you do there's an inexpensive route you can go with called a "Caddman" . Look it up on Gadget's Fix it page(google it). If not there's a few other options that dont
stick out so far. Good Luck with your choice & ride safe.![]()
'03 1500 Meany "Red"
Cobra FI2000
Spike Intake
Samson Long's
Kury Iso. grips/pegs/pass pegs
Mustang seat w/Custom World backrest
River Road bags
Tank Bra w/Streak patch
Memphis Shade
Tombstone brake/turn
Axle mount license w/brake
chrome shaft/swingarm/radiator/clutch/brake levers/Free Spirit Master cyl. covers
Lindby guard w/highway pegs
Vista cruise
200/55mm Michelin rear
Reed plates
12" apes, 3"Risers & SS lines
Chrome WOLO Air Horn
Just remember that your hypercharger is allowing the bike to take in more air, and if it runs good right now then there is probably a Power Commander 3 or other system that is telling your bike to put out a certain amount of fuel through the injectors. If you remove the hypercharger (sounds like you need to remove it or replace it with a different shape as someone said) then when you put on the stock intake I'm pretty positive your bike will be running rich as it will have less air coming in. You will likely need to get the Power Commander re-mapped when you change intakes (others can give you better advice on how to do this).
If you do have a Power Commander made by Dynajet then after you change your intake you can e-mail them (just google it) and they will send you the closest map code they have for the specific engine, exhaust, and intake on your bike - for FREE - they are nice!
JonF - Thank you helping out on the form. Any advice for a new rider who just brought a 2000 ZR-7?
New member, and first post here for me.
I bought a Honda Rebel a few years ago, and sold it later that same summer. Got some more street time on another bike this past year, as well as taking most of a MSF-certified course.
I'm currently in the market for a good bike (adventure-sport type) at a reasonable price (since I do actually have a pretty tight budget,) and since it is the middle of winter for me here, I figured I might be able to get a good price now, rather than later.
Once the snow melts off, I'm hoping to hit the road on a cross country (possibly even more - Mexico, here I come?) trip. Currently looking at a ZR7, as it is within my price range, and from all research I have done and advice I have gotten, seems to indicate that the ZR7 would be a pretty good bike for my stated goals.
Any advice is welcome,
Dan_S
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2004 Kawasaki ZR-7S
1984 Honda Nighthawk 450S (sold)
1978 Suzuki GT250-C Cafe Racer (sold)
My advice for new riders is to take a break if you need it. I would advise using a motorcycle safety course.
I like to go to the training area and take a few turns around the course even after 2 years and 10k miles on my bike.it keeps me nimble and ready.
Torque monger.