how much of a difference is there between riding a sportsbike and a cruiser? im currently riding my dad's BMW cruiser, but ive always been interested in sportsbikes. im thinking of buying an older sportsbike, but thought id first ask for the perspective of someone whos ridden both. my main concern is really the riding position, since the handlebars on a sportsbike are about even with the seat, while on a cruiser theyre at least a foot above the seat. i would testdrive a bike if that was an option, but its really not for someone my age. if i buy a bike used from someone i would of course ask to ride it first, but i thought id ask for the perspective of AO before i commit to driving an hour and a half with a few grand in my hand.
the bikes i have ridden so far are a 1972 BMW r60/5, 1997 R100RT, and honda at the MSF course.
the bikes im looking at are mainly a ducati supersport 750, suzuki SV 650 S, or suzuki GSX-R (ranging mainly from 1997-2000) any other sportsbike is either very old or out of my price range.
the bikes i have ridden so far are a 1972 BMW r60/5, 1997 R100RT, and honda at the MSF course.
the bikes im looking at are mainly a ducati supersport 750, suzuki SV 650 S, or suzuki GSX-R (ranging mainly from 1997-2000) any other sportsbike is either very old or out of my price range.




ok so there is, but to be honest on a sportbike, just stick to around 5-6k rpms for normal riding. will give you decent responsiveness if you MUST excell fast. i mean you will probably have between 13-16k rpms to go through before you redline, so riding at 5k or 6k or even higher up to 8 or 9 really wont hurt the bike.
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