cool!Sevulturus wrote: Verm, I don't think you'll ever have to worry about how you'll react to dragging a knee.

nope, stickers won't cut it, i want the real thing.BuzZz wrote:V, I'll bet you a $1000 dollars right now that your stock suspension is not set-up anything near to optimum, or that you could tell the difference if it was. Money spent on upgraded suspension is money wasted at this piont in your career. But you can't honestly hang aftermarket suspension company stickers on your forks if they are stock, can you? And that's what you really want.
I'll double that Grand on your ability to use your stock brakes to thier potential. You can't. Don't be upset, 99.9999% of all the other riders you see out there and in ads and whose words you seem to reguard as Divine and Holy can't either. More wasted money. Nice and shiny though......
And I'll triple it over tires. Confidence? You want confidence, learn how to use the already awesome street rubber you have. Learn the limits it has, how to ride well enought to reach them, and how to compensate and correct when you do surpass them. Race tires are not going to do you a dam bit of good if you can't use all of your street rubber.
Goodbye.
I'm going to have to agree. Like it or not Verm you're still a new rider. In all honesty if you threw the best suspension/brakes/tires you could buy on your bike you probably wouldn't be any better at all simply because you wouldn't know what having that benefit feels like. I'm in the same boat myself. Learn to use what you've got and then worry about upgrading. And unless you're a hardcore racer all those upgrades are going to be wasted money, money you could spend on bettering your skills instead of making your bike blingy.BuzZz wrote:V, I'll bet you a $1000 dollars right now that your stock suspension is not set-up anything near to optimum, or that you could tell the difference if it was. Money spent on upgraded suspension is money wasted at this piont in your career. But you can't honestly hang aftermarket suspension company stickers on your forks if they are stock, can you? And that's what you really want.
I'll double that Grand on your ability to use your stock brakes to thier potential. You can't. Don't be upset, 99.9999% of all the other riders you see out there and in ads and whose words you seem to reguard as Divine and Holy can't either. More wasted money. Nice and shiny though......
And I'll triple it over tires. Confidence? You want confidence, learn how to use the already awesome street rubber you have. Learn the limits it has, how to ride well enought to reach them, and how to compensate and correct when you do surpass them. Race tires are not going to do you a dam bit of good if you can't use all of your street rubber.
Once again, I'm going to agree. Throw any rider who's had some experience on that SV or any bike really and he is going to absolutely dismantle you. My 17 year old friend knows Barber well and rides a 48 horsepower Hawk GT. This past weekend he lapped so many guys on Gixxers who have been riding for years and years simply because he knows what he's doing. He hasn't spent thousands of dollars on new brakes, sport tires, etc. He bought a new rear shock because his old one was falling apart, but that's it (that happens on a 18 year old bike...). Instead he spends most of his free time practicing and most of his free cash on track days and riding courses.BuzZz wrote:That SV... remember the bike this thread was about before you started yippin'???.... is more bike than you can use right now.
man, we rehash the same stuff in like all of your ongoing threads. were I one w/ mod powers, they'd just get consolodated into one, and the rest locked :p See my response to the quoted misinformation in whichever thread I just replied to.VermilionX wrote:but i still will get race tires. track temps here in CA can reach up to 100+ and street tires can't handle 100+ track temps, as i heard.
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