Welcome to ST.N
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 24, 2013, 10:52:11 PM
"The home of triple digit sight-seeing."
Home
Forums
Photo Gallery
Login
Register
Shop @ MG.C
Shop @ ST.N
Contact
Sport-Touring.Net
»
The Open Road
»
Beginner's Garage
» Topic:
How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
Pages:
1
[
2
]
All
Go Down
Print
Topic: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever? (Read 4073 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
black hills
Reputation 50
Offline
GPS: Rapid City, SD
Miles Typed: 5443
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #20 on:
May 11, 2012, 11:56:59 AM »
loosen the perch so it rotates just hard enough not to move during normal use. when she drops it it will simply rotate instead of breaking the lever.... old dirtbiking trick
Logged
'04 CBR1000rr '09KTM300exc '11 990Adventure R
the above opinion is simply that of an average middle aged hick with one too many brain injuries... or, don't take it too serious.
Members, please
login
to hide this ad.
Guests, please
register
to hide this ad.
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #20 on:
May 11, 2012, 11:56:59 AM »
Logged
Pat S.
Reputation -6
Offline
Motorcycles: several
GPS: northern Idaho
Miles Typed: 27
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #21 on:
June 07, 2012, 10:20:26 AM »
Quote from: sfalexi on May 10, 2012, 03:44:33 AM
Just tough when you're trying to teach a spouse. You can suggest things all day, but when it's a spouse, you have to go back home with them after riding, so you kinda have to gently "suggest" everything. would've been MUCH easier if I had a friend I could trust to teach her so she could be mad at HIM constantly telling her to turn off her signal light!!!
Alexi
LOL
So true. A good friend of mine was an MSF instructor and attempted to teach his wife to rider after being a passenger for years. Almost ended in divorce. Spouces definately sometimes don't make the best teachers.
Have you thought about putting her through another rider course as a refresher? Some sites offer a BRC2 on your own bike?
Pat
Logged
former MSF Instructor
sammyseaman
AH3
Reputation 201
Offline
Motorcycles: 1 1/2
GPS: Grand River Valley
Miles Typed: 9651
My Photo Gallery
Владимир Константинов
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #22 on:
June 07, 2012, 10:42:17 AM »
Quote from: spd2918 on May 10, 2012, 04:53:15 AM
Not everyone should ride a motorcycle.
So true.
Logged
"Warm them with your breath or in your hand then insert them to a comfortable depth." ~Mr. Black~
"Polar bears can't jump." ~black bear~
black hills
Reputation 50
Offline
GPS: Rapid City, SD
Miles Typed: 5443
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #23 on:
June 07, 2012, 12:15:25 PM »
Quote from: Pat S. on June 07, 2012, 10:20:26 AM
Spouces definately sometimes don't make the best teachers.
tried to teach my wife to ski, should have just paid for the lessons in the first place instead of wasting a day pissing her off
Logged
'04 CBR1000rr '09KTM300exc '11 990Adventure R
the above opinion is simply that of an average middle aged hick with one too many brain injuries... or, don't take it too serious.
Carbonero
23 Klingon FOUR
Reputation 137
Offline
Motorcycles: Vee-Strom. The big boy.
Miles Typed: 1763
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #24 on:
June 07, 2012, 02:27:49 PM »
Quote from: lionlady on May 09, 2012, 03:11:18 PM
She really should work up the courage to ride on her own, just a little. Mostly because she needs to figure out for herself how to operate a motorcycle. She's got to make it happen from inside her head and depending you may be preventing that.
Re-reading this thread, this pops out as some of the best advice one can give. LionLady, you've touched on a VERY important point.
I was riding up the interstate the other day with my girlfriend on her bike behind me. It was raining out. We were approaching a curve then an exit ramp. I saw her dropping back. I assumed she was simply slowing down given the rain and road. Turns out she had run out of gas, and stopped the bike. there was no shoulder as there was road construction. By the time I'd figured out she must have stopped for some reason, I was at a place where I could stop ok and get off the road. I did so, and hopped the construction wall and started jogging back to where she was. A few moments later she came whizzing by and stopped up where I parked. I learned what happened when I got back up there.
To recap...
The road conditions were awful for stopping. She got the bike stopped, figured out the reserve on the petcock, got the bike started and going again, saw me walking down the road, found my bike, stopped and waited, laughed about it when I got back there. She's been riding a couple of months, tops.
Figuring stuff out on your own really makes it stick.
Logged
this is my hammer. my dad gave it to me. he got it from his dad who got it from his before him. it's been in the family for generations. we've had to replace the handle a few times and the head twice but it priceless because of its family history.
Kootenanny
"Not That Good"
Reputation 29
Offline
Years Contributed: '09
Miles Typed: 4455
My Photo Gallery
Buellshit!
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #25 on:
June 12, 2012, 08:37:34 PM »
Quote from: sfalexi on May 08, 2012, 06:34:53 PM
She keeps wanting to leave her right foot on the back brake as she stops, which has led to a series of the bike being dropped on the right side cause as she realizes it's going down, can't put her foot out in enough time to stop it. Couple that with stalling while slowing down due to being in 2nd or 3rd gear, well.....we need more practice.
As Lionlady suggests, leaving her right foot on the rear brake when she stops is a good thing, and should be encouraged. Of course, it means she has to learn to come to a stop and balance with her left foot down only...one thing that might help is to get her in the habit of pulling in the clutch as she stops, to prevent stalling the engine.
Logged
E=MC2
Kneescrubber
King of the 90º flat turn
Reputation 5
Offline
Motorcycles: '99 Honda VFR, '73 BMW R75/5
GPS: The western U.S. is strewn with paper maps I've lost from my tankbag.
Miles Typed: 3197
My Photo Gallery
Just a little more
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #26 on:
June 13, 2012, 05:53:30 PM »
This may seem from left field but; how good is she at riding a bicycle? Riding a motorcycle at parking lot speed is essentially the same as a bicycle but with added weight. Maybe she needs to practice with her upright balance on the bike. Something I practice all the time is what's called "slow racing" at most m/c rallies. It involves going as slow as possible while keeping your feet on the pegs. A very good practice for gaining your balance.
P.S. Do you have a friend who's an experienced rider and your wife trusts that can spend some time with her?
Logged
I'm on ST.N so its not like I'm a productive member of society anyway. DogBoy
It's the internet. It runs on drama. Cablebandit
A squid with gear is a Hooligan. dm_gsxr
Members, please
login
to hide this ad.
Guests, please
register
to hide this ad.
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #26 on:
June 13, 2012, 05:53:30 PM »
Logged
sfalexi
Reputation 1
Offline
Motorcycles: 2012 weestrom adventure, 2012 cbr250r
GPS: Lexington, SC
Miles Typed: 456
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #27 on:
June 13, 2012, 07:18:24 PM »
Quote from: Kneescrubber on June 13, 2012, 05:53:30 PM
This may seem from left field but; how good is she at riding a bicycle?
Sucks at it. Hasn't ridden a bicycle in about 15 years cause she crashed once and got "the fear".
Quote
Something I practice all the time is what's called "slow racing" at most m/c rallies. It involves going as slow as possible while keeping your feet on the pegs. A very good practice for gaining your balance.
I practice this at every stop sign, every time there's traffic, etc. and I feel great with slowspeed stuff. Right now, she's been off the bike for about two weeks and I just need to get her back on, but our dead end street opens to a busy road so I need to get her riding in our apartment parking lot again first.
Quote
P.S. Do you have a friend who's an experienced rider and your wife trusts that can spend some time with her?
Nope. Just moved, and don't know anyone yet. But I'll keep giving her the "nudge" to ride on her own when I'm not around, or go out together on a weekend on two bikes. But I have a feeling that it's pretty quickly going to turn into my second bike and, well, at least she gave it a shot and kept picking it up for a while to get back on.
PS -
Putting on new clutch/brake levers this weekend, that fold up, so that'll help a little
. She at least won't feel bad if she drops it anymore.
Logged
Giaka
UFO Identifier
Reputation -385
Offline
Years Contributed: '09, '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: ST1300A, Versys
GPS: So Cal
Miles Typed: 5200
My Photo Gallery
Our UAV is online!
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #28 on:
June 22, 2012, 04:43:25 PM »
Quote from: spd2918 on May 10, 2012, 04:53:15 AM
Be very careful. Not everyone should ride a motorcycle.
Those people should be turned loose in a field with a small cheap dirt bike until they get it.
Logged
"You don’t have to find our you’re dying to start living"
-Zach Sobiech
sammyseaman
AH3
Reputation 201
Offline
Motorcycles: 1 1/2
GPS: Grand River Valley
Miles Typed: 9651
My Photo Gallery
Владимир Константинов
Re: Re: Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #29 on:
June 22, 2012, 05:18:35 PM »
Quote from: Giaka on June 22, 2012, 04:43:25 PM
Those people should be turned loose in a field with a small cheap dirt bike until they get it.
Yep. The whole "tipping street bikes over several times" makes me feckin cringe. Ride dirt for a while and figure it out or don't ride.
Logged
"Warm them with your breath or in your hand then insert them to a comfortable depth." ~Mr. Black~
"Polar bears can't jump." ~black bear~
HipGnosis
A.K.A. MrRSr . . . . . . It's Hip to Gno
Reputation 5
Offline
Years Contributed: '10
Motorcycles: K1200RS, Ninja 650
GPS: SE Wisc
Miles Typed: 4444
My Photo Gallery
Mercenary doppleganger scout
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #30 on:
June 22, 2012, 07:34:00 PM »
Safety trumps manners.
If she can't stop consistently, confidently, she's not ready to ride on the street - any street.
You ride the bike to the parking lot. She follows in the car.
Offer to show her how you stop - ride around a bit and stop right in front of her, to the right and left of her.
Then you switch vehicles. Bring a book and/or music for you.
Have / suggest she repeat all the exercises of the BRC, with extra time spent on stopping of course.
Then you ride the bike home - until she shows improvement.
Logged
K12RS: Haulin Class - Kawi 650R: Neighborhoodlum
Kootenanny
"Not That Good"
Reputation 29
Offline
Years Contributed: '09
Miles Typed: 4455
My Photo Gallery
Buellshit!
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #31 on:
June 22, 2012, 09:43:34 PM »
Helping a friend learn recently, what I did was have him ride across an empty parking lot, stopping with his front tire on every 3rd painted line. He was having difficulty, trying to "go easy"--I got on his bike and showed him what I wanted, which was--strong acceleration, hard stop (with the wheel on the line), repeat, repeat, repeat. After showing him how, he did just fine. The problem was, he wasn't being aggressive enough; while I didn't want him to ride like a squid, I did want him to ride confidently and start/stop with authority. and it took some coaching to get him there.
This is one area where a small, light beginner bike is really handy, because the intimidation factor is minimal. You want a bike the newbie isn't afraid to toss around a bit!
Logged
E=MC2
Leanintree
Move along...
Reputation 17
Offline
Years Contributed: '09
Motorcycles: '95 GPZ1100, '02 Bandit600
GPS: Longmont ensconced, right on the edge of Kalirado
Miles Typed: 3358
My Photo Gallery
Halcyon days of youth...
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #32 on:
June 23, 2012, 08:01:50 PM »
The responses here make me wonder... each bike I have purchased required me to adjust the controls to fit my size. Likewise I did the same for each bike my wife has had. There's a difference between the controls where I like them and where my wife feels comfortable using them. Is it possible that the OPs wife could be riding the rear brake more from an ergonomic challenge? Ive had to rotate the brake and shift levers by a couple splines to keep from riding them (big feets and long legs), and I could see that it would be easy to catch your foot on the pedal... something that would be a tough hurdle for a new rider to identify as an easily avoided issue.
Just a thought of course. Might be helpful, and its totally a no cost check.
LT
Logged
'95 GPZ1100- The Almighty Geeper
'02 Bandit600 - Appropriate name pending
---Guns and bikes, peanut butter and jelly. See the comparison? One's just stickier.
Papa Lazarou
Reputation -46918
Offline
Years Contributed: '09
Years Supported: '11
GPS: Sussex
Miles Typed: 8850
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #33 on:
July 07, 2012, 01:46:46 PM »
Wrapping an old pair of slippers around the brake lever has always worked for me. Perhaps.
Logged
Eat more eels
Members, please
login
to hide this ad.
Guests, please
register
to hide this ad.
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #33 on:
July 07, 2012, 01:46:46 PM »
Logged
GetFuzzy
Junior Member
Reputation 10
Offline
Miles Typed: 197
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #34 on:
August 22, 2012, 11:05:45 PM »
The best advice I got with low speed (parking lot) riding was do not use the front brake at all as it will turn your front wheel into a magnet and suck your bike to the ground.
It is easier to control speed and maintain balance just using the rear brake, especially if the bike is top heavy.
Logged
black hills
Reputation 50
Offline
GPS: Rapid City, SD
Miles Typed: 5443
My Photo Gallery
Re: How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
«
Reply #35 on:
August 23, 2012, 06:14:44 AM »
Quote from: Leanintree on June 23, 2012, 08:01:50 PM
The responses here make me wonder... each bike I have purchased required me to adjust the controls to fit my size. Likewise I did the same for each bike my wife has had. There's a difference between the controls where I like them and where my wife feels comfortable using them. Is it possible that the OPs wife could be riding the rear brake more from an ergonomic challenge? Ive had to rotate the brake and shift levers by a couple splines to keep from riding them (big feets and long legs), and I could see that it would be easy to catch your foot on the pedal... something that would be a tough hurdle for a new rider to identify as an easily avoided issue.
Just a thought of course. Might be helpful, and its totally a no cost check.
LT
Logged
'04 CBR1000rr '09KTM300exc '11 990Adventure R
the above opinion is simply that of an average middle aged hick with one too many brain injuries... or, don't take it too serious.
Pages:
1
[
2
]
All
Go Up
Print
Sport-Touring.Net
»
The Open Road
»
Beginner's Garage
» Topic:
How can i protect my wife' cbr250r's brake lever?
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Administration
-----------------------------
=> Announcements & Rules
-----------------------------
The Open Road
-----------------------------
=> General Sport-Touring Discussion
=> Ride Reports
=> Motorcycle Polls
=> Beginner's Garage
=> ST.N Rallies/Meets
===> STN National
===> Borscht Burn
===> ESTN
===> SNOB
===> WCRM
-----------------------------
The Club House
-----------------------------
=> Pit Row
=> Iron Butt
=> Dirt Lovers
===> Off Road Ride Reports
=> Manufacturer Row
===> Aprilia
===> BMW
===> Buell
===> Ducati
===> Harley-Davidson
===> Honda
===> Kawasaki
===> KTM
===> Moto Guzzi
===> Suzuki
===> Triumph
===> Yamaha
===> Other
-----------------------------
The Tech Zone
-----------------------------
=> Mods & Maintenance
=> Gadgets
=> Gear and Apparel
-----------------------------
Global Positioning
-----------------------------
=> U.S. Region 1
=> U.S. Region 2
=> U.S. Region 3
=> U.S. Region 4
=> U.S. Region 5
=> U.S. Region 6
=> Canada
=> Europe & U.K.
=> Australia & New Zealand
-----------------------------
The Marketplace
-----------------------------
=> Bike Tech
=> Bikes Only
=> Non-bike Items
=> Vendor, Group Buy, Member Offers
-----------------------------
The Lounge
-----------------------------
=> Off Topic Discussion
=> EOE: Experts On Everything
Loading...
Copyright © 2001 - 2013 Sport-Touring.Net.
All rights reserved.
SimplePortal 2.3.1 © 2008-2009, SimplePortal