J ULY 2 0 19 MOTORCYCLE MOJO 41
expensive to buy and insure. In terms of
maintenance, tires are usually cheaper
and last longer. As well, a lighter-
weight bike usually equates to being
more economical on fuel. If you drop a
lightweight bike, you can manage to lift
it easily on your own. Lightweight bikes
are usually less prone to theft compared
with their chrome-covered big brother
cruisers. Riding a lightweight bike for a
couple of years is great training before
moving up to a heavier and faster
class. A smaller bike offers you great
manoeuvrability. Finally, a lighter bike
also means you are less likely to get a
speeding ticket.
Buying a big bike to keep up with
your friends may get you in trouble
faster if you are new to riding. Buy
what you need, and not what your ego
needs. I went out riding last summer
in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis Valley with
two friends on their 1200 cc and 1600 cc
Harleys. I easily kept up all day while
getting twice the fuel economy. I cannot
think of any downsides to starting off
with a lightweight bike. You will have a
lot of fun without the stress of handling
a big beast.
Buying a lightweight bike to build
up experience will allow a new rider to
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that a lightweight bike is all you need.
My wife and I toured Europe for three
years out of Belgium on a Kawasaki
Vulcan EN500. A lightweight bike is
also easy to sell.
For those experienced riders with
a shiny 360 to 400 kg cruiser in their
garage, having a spare 135 kg dual-
sport, for example, is a nice option.
Motorcycle Mojo editor Glenn Roberts
discovered during his research for
a previous article that 60 per cent of
Canadian roads are gravel. The light-
weight dual-sport allows more dirty
fun minus all the worries!
What more incentive do you need?
“S
o, let me understand
this better,” I said
to my student. “You
and your 6’2” [then]
boyfriend, bought a 1983 Honda CM250
Custom in Vancouver and rode it
6,000 km two-up across Canada to
Kentville, Nova Scotia?”
“Yes,” said Justine Sturgeon, one
of my students on the motorcycling
basic course in New Minas, N.S., in
the spring of 2012. They were out in
B.C. planting trees in 2011 and decided
to load up their camping gear and
belongings on a trusty, small (17 hp)
Honda and ride it across Canada.
Justine and Nathan Mentink’s fun
10-day adventure crossing Canada on
a small-bore bike made me think that
maybe many North American motorcy-
clists are missing out on a fun segment
of riding. Often, over the eight years
that I taught as a motorcycle instructor
with Nova Scotia Safety Services, I was
surprised and concerned about the
large number of beginners going to big
bikes right out of the course.
What is a Small-Bore Bike?
For the sake of this article, I will use
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of small-bore bikes. Today’s technology
combines lighter materials with amaz-
ingly powerful fuel-injected engines.
I look back on my own motorcycling
since 1982, and note that the 250 kg,
air-cooled 1981 Yamaha 750 cc Virago I
rode for 14 years had almost the same
power-to-weight ratio as my 175 kg,
liquid-cooled 2017 Kawasaki Versys-X
300, with the same top end speed of 170
km/h.
British motorcyclist Ted Simon, who
wrote Jupiter’s Travels, went around the
world for four years beginning in 1973
with a 500 cc Triumph Tiger 100, which
has the same 40 horsepower as my
Versys-X 300. He wrote that the smaller
bike allowed him to get through tight
areas easily and most of his riding was
at 80 km/h anyway, so the smaller bike
was all he needed.
Small Bikes’ Advantages
Let’s look at some of the advantages
of a lightweight bike. They are
easier to ride and handle. They are less
BUY WHAT YOU NEED,
AND NOT WHAT
YOUR EGO NEEDS
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Author Dave Alder stands
beside his Kawasaki
Versys-X 300.