• Required reading for all forum users!!!

    Welcome!
    Register to access the full functionality of the GSResources forum. Until you register and activate your account you will not have full forum access, nor will you be able to post or reply to messages.

    A note to new registrants...
    All new forum registrations must be activated via email before you have full access to the forum.

    A Special Note about Email accounts!
    DO NOT SIGN UP USING hotmail, outlook, gmx, sbcglobal, att, bellsouth or email.com. They delete our forum signup emails.

    A note to old forum members...
    I receive numerous requests from people who can no longer log in because their accounts were deleted. As mentioned in the forum FAQ, user accounts are deleted if you haven't logged in for the past 6 months. If you can't log in, then create a new forum account. If you don't get an error message, then check your email account for an activation message. If you get a message stating that the email address is already in use, then your account still exists so follow the instructions in the forum FAQ for resetting your password.

    Have you forgotten your password or have a new email address? Then read the forum FAQ for details on how to reset it.

    Any email requests for "can't log in anymore" problems or "lost my password" problems will be deleted. Read the forum FAQ and follow the instructions there - that's what we have one for...

  • Returning Visitors

    If you are a returning visitor who never received your confirmation email, then odds are your email provider is blockinig emails from our server. The only thing that can be done to get around this is you will have to try creating another forum account using an email address from another domain.

    If you are a returning visitor to the forum and can't log in using your old forum name and password but used to be able to then chances are your account is deleted. Purges of the databases are done regularly. You will have to create a new forum account and you should be all set.

New Rider.

Rich82GS750TZ

Forum Guru
Super Site Supporter
Past Site Supporter
I may have missed the rally, but I wouldn’t have missed this for the world. Gave my son his first riding lesson today. He’s never used a clutch before. Big open parking lot. Started with run down of all controls and instruments. Then working the clutch to move/walk the bike forward, eventually clutch with a little throttle till he could get his feet up and let the clutch all the way out. Lots of starting, stalling, restarting, stopping, clutching, revving, braking, head /eyes up. All straight line stuff. He did well for the first outing. Didn’t drop the bike. Came close once. Made me sweat.

He’s taking the MSF in a week, but I just wanted to get him out on the bike and get a feel for it. Noah is patient and a quick learner. He’s going to do just fine. Don’t want to go too fast with him. Let the course cover the basics and build on that. May try to get out with him again this week between our work schedules. Maybe I’ll let him get out of 1st gear, maybe try turning. I did show him some tight figure eights and some tight circles, so he can see what he’ll be working toward.

When we were done, his clutch hand was beginning to cramp. Said it was all harder than he thought it would be. I remember the same about when my dad taught me to ride 40 years ago. Wish he was still around to see me and my son today. I know he was watching from where he is. :sentimental:

9zaRSJdh.jpg
 
Last edited:
Quality time with the kids. Thanks Rich for the great post!
What bikes do they use in the course? Hopefully a bit smaller and lighter.
 
Not sure what they'll have at the MSF course. Yes, will definitely be smaller and lighter. The bikes the MSF use are typically 250CC and bare bones as far as instruments, which is perfect for a beginner. When I took the course here in PA 20 years ago, it was on a Buell Blast. I could have sworn it was a 250cc, but a search of the Blast model history shows only a @500CC bike. I can't find any info that Buell ever made a 250.
 
Awesome!! I know you feel very proud and happy to have this experience. My son is 23 right now. I'm waiting for this too, a medical condition with my son is preventing it, but soon I hope. He definitely wants too, and he will be owning my bikes when I part from this world. He rides with me, leans with me, he has the "feel" down, he just needs to do it on his own. :)
 
Having an idea of what you're getting into, as he is doing, before you get to MSF is a huge PLUS... Looks like he's Headed in the right direction. Congrats
 
Sounds like you have the right drill(s). It is all about the clutch, especially true here in the U.S. where for the most part it is only the older folks who have ever even driven a car with a clutch.

I always have them start/stop, start/stop, start/stop. start/stop until they totally hate me. When the rider gets to the point they are thinking more about wringing my neck than they are about what they are doing with their hands, we have breakthrough and are ready to start moving into second gear. :lol:

In your follow up I would work on turns from a dead stop. If he can coordinate changing direction, applying the throttle, and releasing clutch simultaneously he is going to be ready for just about anything the MSF class will throw at him.
 
It's all about the clutch. I can tell from how a rider maneuvers in a parking lot how experienced he is.

When I was about 12 I came upon an instructor teaching a newbie on his Sportster. I stomped on my coaster brake and watched with rapt attention.

Newbie kept stalling. Instructor kept telling him, "more gas, less clutch." Wise words. The gas/clutch relationship is how I see if a person is riding the bike, or if the bike is riding the person.
 
Last edited:
Great start.. aside from the huge deal of learning the clutch, I've found that riding my bicycle helps maintain my skills during spells of not riding the cycle. I'll typically ride around fixed obstacles and practice looking thru turns, braking, balance, etc.
 
Good.

Also important to learn to use brakes right away.

I took a MSF class, with my son, after I was riding for 20some years. THe class started by us taking turns pushing each other without engines running so could learn to stop first before learning to go.
 
Great start.. aside from the huge deal of learning the clutch, I've found that riding my bicycle helps maintain my skills during spells of not riding the cycle. I'll typically ride around fixed obstacles and practice looking thru turns, braking, balance, etc.

Totally agree, Glenn.
Done a lot of cycling the last four years since my local YMCA closed for Covid and am amazed at how many crossover skills there are.
Plus that the cars are out to kill you on a bicycle as well.
 
Good start for your son, definitely a good approach you have.

Nice of you to give him a safe start to build skills.


Hope my kids will be interested too when they're old enough:cool:.
 
Totally agree, Glenn.
Done a lot of cycling the last four years since my local YMCA closed for Covid and am amazed at how many crossover skills there are.
Plus that the cars are out to kill you on a bicycle as well.

I bought a cheap Huffy mountain bike when I got my first M/C, with sort of the same thing in mind. Hadn't ridden a bicycle in years to speak of. I don't remember it being too awful similar, but I did have a lot of fun on that too, and probably did my health some good in the process.

Awfully trusting to put a new rider on that nice old bike... : )
 
I’ve dropped it before. I let him know that if he drops it it’s ok. Won’t be worse than anything I did. Anything he breaks I can show him how to fix. ;)
 
"show him how to fix it", love it...:encouragement: ... Way better than "it can be fixed"
 
Well, my boy passed his MSF and is now a licensed rider. :emmersed::clap:

Now on the hunt for a bike for him. We were both thinking something lightweight, road legal, dual-sport. Something used and cheap that would need little to no work on my part to get him on the road. So we've been looking.

The Chinese models that flood FaceBook marketplace are getting hard to ignore at the price. Names like Lifan (actually Thailand), Tao Tao (Taotao Vehicles Company, LTD, was has been manufacturing motorsports and other products in Jinyun County, Zhejiang Province of China since 1985), CFMoto (Zhejiang Chunfeng Power Co., Ltd​)

A quick search says I should be able to get parts pretty easily, but this is my biggest worry.

We came across this ad for a Tao Tao Hawk 250. (internet claims this to be a clone of a Honda CRF - I have no delusions about how close this is to an actual Honda anything).

Yes it has a title. Street Legal, not far from my house, and $800.

https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/787659376348550/

I believe this or something similar could be a nice, cheap first bike for the boy. Lord knows my first bike wasn't anywhere near as nice.

Does anyone here have any first hand experience/opinions on this or similar Chinese bikes.

Here's a torture test "review" of the bike. This channel is mainly for entertainment purposes, so they absolutely trash the bike, on purpose. I found it amusing. But apparently some people have more money than they know what to do with.
 
Last edited:
A few yrs. back, a buddy got a little junk Chinees or Tiwan 4 wheeler (don't remember the name). It had starter clutch problems. It took a while researching the parts, but wasn't a huge deal. Got it going and rode it a yr. or so then sold it. I was more impressed than I'd have thought I would be.
 
My son took his riding course last weekend and passed. He's waiting on his certificate, so he can go to the DMV and get his license now. In the meantime...of course...he bought a bike! An MT-07 Yamaha. And since he doesn't have his license yet, guess who got to ride it 90 miles home? I was kinda nervous about it last night, riding in So Calif traffic for that long, but once we hit the road it was great fun! It's an amazing bike; lightweight, and with plenty of power. I'm jealous.

BTW, this photo is after he came home after riding at the school the first day. He didn't get enough saddle time to get comfortable, so we fired up the KZ and hit the local courthouse parking lot! He only dumped it once!! Ha ha, the bikes first scratches. Of course, I don't ride it much...if at all, so it's about time it actually got used.




20230617_174117[1] by nessism, on Flickr
 
Last edited:
Well, we went to see he bike I posted above and we brought it home. I’ll meet the guy tomorrow afternoon at a tag service to handle the paperwork.

The $800 bike has upgraded carb, suspension, front sprocket ( for a little more top end). The kid is pretty happy.
l5bwn18h.jpg


This thing is super buzzy, I had to stop an hour into the 90min ride home to shake out my hands.
UQLl2PUh.jpg


Couldn’t feel my but or my toes. That said, I was able to get it up to 65 on the highway. Just glad there wasn’t more than a few miles of that.

Too early for a full review but I think this will be a great first bike for him. He can learn while riding with me on the forest roads. And when he’s at school I’ll use it when I want to hit some trails I wouldn’t touch with the GS.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top