Shopping for a new bike... - Page 3 - Total Motorcycle Community Forums
BACK TO TOTAL MOTORCYCLE - DAILY MOTORCYCLE NEWS - MOTORCYCLE MODEL REVIEW GUIDES

Total Motorcycle Community Forums

26 Years. 430 Million Readers. 54 years of Motorcycle Guides ∙ Reviews ∙ The friendliest motorcycle community on the internet!

Skip to content

Advanced search
  • Quick links
    • Unanswered topics
    • Active topics
    • Search
  • FAQ
  • Login
  • Register
  • Board index Total Motorcycle Talk Forums Total Motorcycle Talk
  • Search
  • Unanswered topics
  • Active topics

Shopping for a new bike...

Post Reply
  • Print view
Advanced search
26 posts
  • Previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
Message
Author
User avatar
CYLax
Veteran
Veteran
Posts: 64
Joined: Wed Apr 19, 2006 10:55 am

  • Quote

#21 Post by CYLax » Mon Jun 26, 2006 3:40 pm

Can't say I'm going to be a whole lot of help since I've only had my bike for 5 days now...

My bike come with a record for every time a tool even got near the bike for all 13,000 miles of it's life thus far. From what I've seen in the records, it's been a maintenance dream...but the previous owner was a very good rider and kept the bike dealer maintained.

I had a Suzuki before this one and I was in that thing with a wrench almost every day...and EVERY time before a decent ride, without question.

What kind of ride are you looking for? Both the Daytona and Sprint are great bikes, but very different. The Daytona has an aggressive ride position which is a blast in the twisty's and a rocket ship on the straights, but tough on the wrists and the back if you want to ride it any sort of distance. I only briefly rode the Sprint, but from what I could tell, it handles very well in the twistys and would be a great bike (stylish too) for longer rides.

Anyways...there's my dos centavos
Top
User avatar
ZooTech
Site Supporter - Platinum
Site Supporter - Platinum
Posts: 3233
Joined: Mon Jun 13, 2005 3:23 am
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 18
My Motorcycle: Nomad / Ninja 500 / VLX Bobber / C3 / VS
Location: Ohio

Re: M109R

  • Quote

#22 Post by ZooTech » Mon Jun 26, 2006 4:25 pm

VTX1300C wrote:Big bike for big guys. Sit on one and you'll know what I'm talking about.
Not to take anything away from the M109R, but I did sit on one and found that it felt nearly identical to my Streak. Check the specs for both bikes and you'll see the M109R's wheelbase is only 0.2" longer, confirming my belief. The only cruisers that "feel" physically large to me are the VTX1800 and the Valkyrie. Largeness is not something you want to percieve when you're about to tackle a curvy road, and I think Suzuki did a commendable job cramming a lot of power into a relatively nimble cruiser chassis.
Top
User avatar
M109R
Legendary
Legendary
Posts: 289
Joined: Thu Jun 15, 2006 8:22 am
Sex: Male
Location: CO

VTX1800

  • Quote

#23 Post by M109R » Mon Jun 26, 2006 6:32 pm

My brother's friend owns a VTX1800 and says that the bike is very heavy in the turns. Others that I spoke with also said that the VTX1800 was hard to handle in curves. More that the bike decided how it was going to handle the curve rather than the rider.

So far the M109R has been awesome in the curves. As long as you are looking into the curve, the bike follows along smoothly.
Top
User avatar
tex1230
Elite
Elite
Posts: 106
Joined: Mon Jun 26, 2006 12:52 pm
Sex: Male
Location: CT

  • Quote

#24 Post by tex1230 » Mon Jun 26, 2006 11:01 pm

CYLax wrote:What kind of ride are you looking for? Both the Daytona and Sprint are great bikes, but very different. The Daytona has an aggressive ride position which is a blast in the twisty's and a rocket ship on the straights, but tough on the wrists and the back if you want to ride it any sort of distance. I only briefly rode the Sprint, but from what I could tell, it handles very well in the twistys and would be a great bike (stylish too) for longer rides.
I like the sprint, as it is closer to the bikes I've had in the past. But 95% of the use of my next bike will be commuting (less than 10 miles)...mostly on local streets... So I am thinking of getting a smaller lighter bike (and about $3k less expensive)

Sorry - should have listed bikes I've had in the past:
1980 Harley Sportster - too much work for me, but I got it cheap!
1982 Suzuki GS750 - rode it till it fell apart
(most recent) Kawasaki Concours - Loaner from my brother - but he wanted it back :(

I've had a few others, but those were the ones I put the most miles on.
Top
User avatar
drevil
Veteran
Veteran
Posts: 99
Joined: Sun Nov 20, 2005 5:06 pm
Sex: Male
Location: WI (Stevens Point)

  • Quote

#25 Post by drevil » Wed Jun 28, 2006 7:11 pm

I think the warrior is also faster, but harder to turn.
I do believe that is the first time I've ever heard that. Trust me, the Warrior turns really well and is revered by most who own one, myself included, to be the best handling cruiser on the market, especially in the twisties.
Take 'er easy and if it comes easy, take 'er twice!
Top
User avatar
CYLax
Veteran
Veteran
Posts: 64
Joined: Wed Apr 19, 2006 10:55 am

  • Quote

#26 Post by CYLax » Thu Jun 29, 2006 1:02 am

So I am thinking of getting a smaller lighter bike
Of the two, I would lean towards the Sprint. The Daytona is a pretty aggressive bike. Unless you're planning to hit the twisty's on the weekend or the occasional track day...

The best way to really know is go sit on both and get a good feel for them. If the dealer will let you, test ride.
Top
Post Reply
  • Print view

26 posts
  • Previous
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Return to “Total Motorcycle Talk”

Jump to
  • NEW: Please Login/Register to see ALL forums
  • Total Motorcycle Talk Forums
  • ↳   Start Your Engines - Introduce Yourself
  • ↳   Total Motorcycle Talk
  • News, Events and Stories
  • Total Motorcycle Garage Forums
  • Reviews
  • Rider Cafe'
  • Off Topic!
  • Total Motorcycle General
  • Board index
  • All times are UTC-11:00
  • Delete cookies
  • Contact us

Powered by phpBB® Forum Software © phpBB Limited

Privacy | Terms

 

 

TMW Privacy Policy - Forum Privacy Policy - Terms and Conditions

Follow us on X / Twitter - Facebook - YouTube - Pinterest - Instagram - News RSS Feed