? 883C bad first bike? Am I missing something
#11
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Colonial Beach, Virginia
Posts: 1,599
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Liz, ironically I hauled a bike identical to yours home for a friend yesterday in all that horrible weather. His wife won it in a raffle, he has no motorcycle endorsement so I took him to Colonial Harley in Chester, Va and brought it back to Tappahannock, Va in my trailer. It was snowing by the time I got back home. A Sportster is an excellent first bike. Here is mine that my friends have dubbed the "75% sized Bagger."
#12
I agree with you, Liz. I haven't had a bike in 45 years, so the new '09 Sportster Custom that i bought in August might as well have been my first bike. I love it and I too managed to put the Buel down, unfortunately it was during my drivers test for the state. I got irritated in the weave when I missed a cone, gave it too much gas, then hit the brake a little too hard in the turn. I went back in two weeks and aced the test on my 883C! I now have over 1200 miles on the bike and have loved every one of them. Glad you like yours as much as I do mine.
Ride safe!
Ride safe!
#14
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: MD just outside DC
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I do hope that some people who were reading all the threads telling them not to get a sportster as a first bike hear that isn't the case for everyone.
I would go as far as to say if I can drive that most can too.
I also don't think that everyone will want a bigger bike in a year. I would be surprised if I wanted a bigger bike in a year. I think the sportster is plenty bike for me. I am not a fan of big cars always. In fact I think the sportster might be bigger than my car which is a 2009 yaris 5 door aka hatchback (size of a mini but cheaper) which is referred to as my wind up toy by biker friend of mine (feel free to laugh- but I live next to DC and I can park the thing anywhere).
But I think the sportster for me is a great first bike. She handles like a dream. Plus she sure is pretty and if you can fall in love with a bike I am there.
I have seen many of you joking that your wives/ girlfriends get jealous of your bike. Well good thing I am single or I would have a grumpy jealous guy. Already hearing it from my 7 year old son. Who loves the bike but realizes mommy really loves the bike. He ask me if we should get a xmas stocking for it. I said the bike will get presents but the bike was mommies xmas present to herself. Best thing about being single I didn't have to "discuss" aka get permission to buy the thing I have lusted over since I was 13.
I would go as far as to say if I can drive that most can too.
I also don't think that everyone will want a bigger bike in a year. I would be surprised if I wanted a bigger bike in a year. I think the sportster is plenty bike for me. I am not a fan of big cars always. In fact I think the sportster might be bigger than my car which is a 2009 yaris 5 door aka hatchback (size of a mini but cheaper) which is referred to as my wind up toy by biker friend of mine (feel free to laugh- but I live next to DC and I can park the thing anywhere).
But I think the sportster for me is a great first bike. She handles like a dream. Plus she sure is pretty and if you can fall in love with a bike I am there.
I have seen many of you joking that your wives/ girlfriends get jealous of your bike. Well good thing I am single or I would have a grumpy jealous guy. Already hearing it from my 7 year old son. Who loves the bike but realizes mommy really loves the bike. He ask me if we should get a xmas stocking for it. I said the bike will get presents but the bike was mommies xmas present to herself. Best thing about being single I didn't have to "discuss" aka get permission to buy the thing I have lusted over since I was 13.
#15
#18
#19
Some people are smart, skilled, or careful enough that a Sportster is a fine choice for a first bike. Once you get up to speed, there's nothing wrong with a Sportster as a starter bike.
The advantage to a smaller bike is at low speeds, where a novice rider can let a bike get off balance and try to muscle it back up after instinctively putting a foot down. I'd rather do that with a 250 pound trainer instad of a 650 pound Sportster. You learn not to do that after the first couple of suprises, so I'd even go so far as to say you'd outgrow the starter bike after your first summer unless you NEVER get on the highway.
As far as wanting something bigger than the Sportster in a year, it depends on what kind of riding you will be doing. Most of my riding is daily commuting or just wandering around for the evening, and the Sportster was perfect for that. It wouldn't have been nearly so much fun on the back roads or in town on a Road King.
I rode my 883 Sportster on a couple of +1000 mile weekends too, stuffing my overnight gear in duffel bags stacked on the seat behind me. I wished for another gear and lower RPM, but not so much that I wanted to trade up. If my wife had wanted to go too, the Sporty wouldn't have worked.
The advantage to a smaller bike is at low speeds, where a novice rider can let a bike get off balance and try to muscle it back up after instinctively putting a foot down. I'd rather do that with a 250 pound trainer instad of a 650 pound Sportster. You learn not to do that after the first couple of suprises, so I'd even go so far as to say you'd outgrow the starter bike after your first summer unless you NEVER get on the highway.
As far as wanting something bigger than the Sportster in a year, it depends on what kind of riding you will be doing. Most of my riding is daily commuting or just wandering around for the evening, and the Sportster was perfect for that. It wouldn't have been nearly so much fun on the back roads or in town on a Road King.
I rode my 883 Sportster on a couple of +1000 mile weekends too, stuffing my overnight gear in duffel bags stacked on the seat behind me. I wished for another gear and lower RPM, but not so much that I wanted to trade up. If my wife had wanted to go too, the Sporty wouldn't have worked.
#20
Congratulations on your Sportster. They are great bikes. I am certainly not one of those people who would recommend something like a Vulcan 500 (because I think it is much too fast for most beginners). Nor would I recommend a Sportster to beginners. But, if it works for you then nothing succeeds like success.
Ride on and smile.
Ride on and smile.