Should we insist on demo ride
- sapaul
- Legendary 2000
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- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2005 3:45 am
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- Years Riding: 90
- My Motorcycle: 2011 R1200R 07 BMW GS, Kymco 250 little
- Location: South Africa
It is really interesting to see how the manufacturers deal with this and the comment about the BMW dealership. In SA some BMW dealerships will lend you a bike for a weekend if they consider you a serious buyer and are not sure which model you want. All the BMW dealers here have demo bikes. It is the Japs and Brit bikes that you can not get demos on. If I put my BMW in for service they will give a loaner to get home on.
I spent my therapy money an a K1200S
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
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I was able to test ride "2" models before making my purchace. The dealer only required safety gear, rode along side one of the service techs.
Interested buyers should be given the opportunity to test ride before a purchace. At the same time dealers need to have a system in place both for the protection of the rider and the motorcycle.
Interested buyers should be given the opportunity to test ride before a purchace. At the same time dealers need to have a system in place both for the protection of the rider and the motorcycle.
04 1000 RR
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05 Big Dog Chopper
- QuietMonkey
- Legendary 750
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- Joined: Mon Jun 14, 2004 6:11 pm
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- Location: Okanagan Valley, BC
I've always test rode bikes before purchasing, and don't think i would ever purchase a bike without riding it first, new or used, unless I had ridden the same model bike at some time and knew the seller well.
oh, actually, one bike i did buy without test riding was an unrideable crash damaged bike that I had never ridden, and only had magazine reviews to go with... after the expected fixing up it worked out very well. In that case it was sort of like getting a steal of a deal on a mint used Porsche that needed a little TLC. It was a "no lose" situation.
The "feel" factor in riding has often been very important to me with most bikes. Some bikes just don't have that mix which comes together and works for ya: Synergy. There are so many subtelties that can be determined from a short test ride which all the spec numbers will never reveal.
The more ya ride, the more discerning you become with certain things and the more forgiving of others. Sometimes when moving to a dramatically different bike (like 1980's motocrosser to 2005 motocrosser, or 1985 FZ750 sport bike to 2005 Scorpa 250 Trials bike) you just have to accept that the bike will feel VERY different and ya have to somewhat start over in your thinking of "how and what" a bike is capable of, then adapt your riding style and learn anew...
//monkey
oh, actually, one bike i did buy without test riding was an unrideable crash damaged bike that I had never ridden, and only had magazine reviews to go with... after the expected fixing up it worked out very well. In that case it was sort of like getting a steal of a deal on a mint used Porsche that needed a little TLC. It was a "no lose" situation.
The "feel" factor in riding has often been very important to me with most bikes. Some bikes just don't have that mix which comes together and works for ya: Synergy. There are so many subtelties that can be determined from a short test ride which all the spec numbers will never reveal.
The more ya ride, the more discerning you become with certain things and the more forgiving of others. Sometimes when moving to a dramatically different bike (like 1980's motocrosser to 2005 motocrosser, or 1985 FZ750 sport bike to 2005 Scorpa 250 Trials bike) you just have to accept that the bike will feel VERY different and ya have to somewhat start over in your thinking of "how and what" a bike is capable of, then adapt your riding style and learn anew...
//monkey
"Zounds! Zorched by Zarches, Spaceman Spiff's crippled craft crashes on planet Plootarg!"
For Sale: Ninja 600 with parts bike, needs minor work, $30, no title... (GEE THAT DOESNT RING ANY WARNING BELLS DOES IT?)
For Sale: Ninja 600 with parts bike, needs minor work, $30, no title... (GEE THAT DOESNT RING ANY WARNING BELLS DOES IT?)
- sapaul
- Legendary 2000
- Posts: 2387
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2005 3:45 am
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 90
- My Motorcycle: 2011 R1200R 07 BMW GS, Kymco 250 little
- Location: South Africa
Some of the long timers on another thread said that new bikes have no soul. I disagree and say it is a fusion of souls when you find that right bike. I have really liked some bikes looking at the tech specs and hated them when I have ridden them. I also have to feel them or I just will not buy. Luckily for me my wife is the same way. As 80% of our riding is together she also wants to feel what it is like as a pillion. Mostly we agree.
I spent my therapy money an a K1200S
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
The therapy worked, I got a GS now
A touch of insanity crept back in the shape of an R1200R
- jmillheiser
- Legendary 2500
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- Location: Cheyenne, WY
The local Harley dealer will allow test rides for those that they determine are serious buyers and not "just looking". When my wifes cousin bought her sportster she got to test ride it first. Only condition is the sales guy rode his bike along with you. Not sure of the other dealers in cheyenne except the suzuki shop. The Kawasaki dealer is tiny and I doubt would have any demo bikes. The yamaha shop is decent size but no clue if they have demo bikes or allow test rides. The Suzuki shop does allow test rides and even allows test rides of their dirt bikes and ATVs on their own little course. Honda is sold locally by the same shop that sells Harley, though getting them to willingly sell you a honda could be difficult (their honda selection stinks and they always try to steer customers towards harley or buell).
- old-n-slow
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I was told by the BMW dealer that it was MANDATORY for them to provide demo bikes as part of their dealership agreement. Every time I stop by there, they are offering one for me to ride. Only problem is, I can't get past the price tag. For that kinda money, I'd sooner have a Harley............. 

GarryS ---- "We learn from experience that men never learn anything from experience."