CBT & Commuting..Some Questions

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Hey all,

I need some advice on a few things and just confirmation on what i believe i need to do.

I've been thinking about ways to cut the costs of travelling to London etc and parking fees. Currently i drive from home to Epping station, park then tube to Bond street.

Would it be sensible to commute all the way on bike? I dont particularly mind leaving earlier or the risky london traffic so long as i save. At the moment i drive an early Saxo VTR. I spend roughly £100 a month in petrol and thrash it quite badly. + Parking costs..

I understand at my age (18) the highest cc i could ride is a 125, which is a simple CBT test done in a day?

I like the look of the Honda NSR's, Im quite tall and id hate to look like a plank on a little hair dryer and from what im told theyre a nice bike.

So to sum up.. Is it a good idea? What sort of MPG to bikes do?

To note i wouldnt have to spend any money on the bike or gear as id cash in my annual tube ticket to cover costs. Also my work supply a garage so i wouldnt be paying to park.

Cant think of anything else to add. Apologies for a pretty badly laid out question heh :o

Anyway thanks for any info..
 
I understand at my age (18) the highest cc i could ride is a 125, which is a simple CBT test done in a day?

You can ride a 125 if you complete your CBT (valid for two years) or you can take your test. At 18 you can only take the restricted test (on a 125) which allows you to ride any bike so long as the power output is limited to 33bhp
 
well I would say yes...but...
how far is it ? would you mind getting wet?
is there place at work to change and store your bike gear?

little 125 4 strokes do about 120ish mpg.

for my first two years on bikes I commuted on a 125 chinese import doing 60 miles a day 30 each way, and I saved a packet filled up every 3 days at £4 a tank , the bike would only do 60mph tops, but if it's all town work why would you want more?
oh and I'm fairly tall at 6'1" and I proberbly did look a plank but I loved every minuit of it

I did it purely to save money at first, but got into it quite baddly now 8 years down the line it costs me lotsa money but heh!?!


bullit
 
You can ride a 125 if you complete your CBT (valid for two years) or you can take your test. At 18 you can only take the restricted test (on a 125) which allows you to ride any bike so long as the power output is limited to 33bhp

Yeah i dont mind being limited to 125cc. Im not in it to race, its purely cost saving. Spend more on things i enjoy as apposed to annoying parking costs.

well I would say yes...but...
how far is it ? would you mind getting wet?
is there place at work to change and store your bike gear?

little 125 4 strokes do about 120ish mpg.

for my first two years on bikes I commuted on a 125 chinese import doing 60 miles a day 30 each way, and I saved a packet filled up every 3 days at £4 a tank , the bike would only do 60mph tops, but if it's all town work why would you want more?
oh and I'm fairly tall at 6'1" and I proberbly did look a plank but I loved every minuit of it

I did it purely to save money at first, but got into it quite baddly now 8 years down the line it costs me lotsa money but heh!?!


bullit

Its about 40 odd miles. There are showers changing rooms etc so thats no problem.

£4 a tank, that sounds insanely cheap?

I've riden bikes in the past and been a passenger on many bikes so im fairly familiar with the whole clothes/changing situation.

Would i have to pay congestion charges?


Thanks
 
£4 a tank, that sounds insanely cheap?

little 125 4 strokes do about 120ish mpg.

...doing 60 miles a day ... filled up every 3 days at £4 a tank

180miles = 1.5 gallons

1 litre ~ 0.2 gallons and ~ 90p at todays prices

so 1.5 gallons ~ £7 at today's prices

Those are typical figures, but I'd say 120mpg a little high, perhaps nearer 100mpg costing you nearer £8 to fill up.
 
£4 a tank was 8 years ago... but to me it was cheap then....

it wasnt empty thats just what I put in to fill it up again..


40 miles aint that far... do the maths on what it could save you....and see if it worth it
I can add numbers it you get stuck

but to start
cbt
insurance
bike
kit
fuel costs for the year base this on your commuting milage only
you will still keep your car so I would imagine all this will be extra, all you'll save is

fuel, parking, tube, congestion charge ithis costs more than the lot above your on to a savings winner.


I bought my bike new so I knew what it was going to cost for the first year or two


bullit
 
Don't know about congestion charges, never been near london on a bike. If you have changing facilities then I'd definitely consider it. It's worth doing your test within the two years of passing CBT - otherwise it's another £100.
 
It's worth doing your test within the two years of passing CBT - otherwise it's another £100.

I dont understand this bit.. I could ride the bike straight away? I thought i had to do the CBT before i could ride atall.

(Forgetting the rule which allows me to ride a moped at max 30mph blah blah)
 
I dont understand this bit.. I could ride the bike straight away? I thought i had to do the CBT before i could ride atall.

(Forgetting the rule which allows me to ride a moped at max 30mph blah blah)

It means that if you don't take your test within two years of completing your CBT, then it expires and you'll have to re do it to stay on the road, which will cost another £100.

The NSR probably isn't a sensible bike for commuting on to be honest, it's a high revving 2 stroke which great for having fun but it won't be particularly economic or comfortable for 40 mile commutes. You also tend to end up smelling of two stroke smoke. If you want reliability and economy then you should be looking at four stroke bikes. Go for s/h Japanese over new cheapo Chinese ones every time.

If you don't fancy the sensible, uber reliable CG125 commuter, then how about something like an XL 125 Varadero? Reasonably large for a 125 and upright riding position means you can easily see over cars etc. which makes riding in traffic easier.
 
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I dont understand this bit.. I could ride the bike straight away? I thought i had to do the CBT before i could ride atall.

(Forgetting the rule which allows me to ride a moped at max 30mph blah blah)

You're 18. You take a CBT first. This allows you to ride any bike up to 125 as long as you have L-Plates and as long as it's under 15bhp (which almost every 125 that isn't aprilla satisfies)

You cannot ride on the road without a CBT at all. Having taken the CBT, the certificate is valid for 2 years, unless you pass your motorbike licence in the meantime, in which case CBT is irrelevant as you have an actual licence.

The rule about mopeds is only for 16 year olds. You're >16 so you are concerned with the rules about bikes. Of course, once you've done your CBT you could choose to ride a moped, but that's not the impression you're giving, you seem to want a 125 bike.
 
It means that if you don't take your test within two years of completing your CBT, then it expires and you'll have to re do it to stay on the road, which will cost another £100.

The NSR probably isn't a sensible bike for commuting on to be honest, it's a high revving 2 stroke which great for having fun but it won't be particularly economic or comfortable for 40 mile commutes. You also tend to end up smelling of two stroke smoke. If you want reliability and economy then you should be looking at four stroke bikes. Go for s/h Japanese over new cheapo Chinese ones every time.

I see, i was looking at the CBT as if that was THE test. Ill take on board the comments about 2 stroke..although im used to a thrashy revy engine driving a saxo ha.

Ill have a look around. Need to write down costs atm then compare with bike commuting. My season ticket alone is £1800 and that was before the price rise..
 
It means that if you don't take your test within two years of completing your CBT, then it expires and you'll have to re do it to stay on the road, which will cost another £100.

Yup

The NSR probably isn't a sensible bike for commuting on to be honest, it's a high revving 2 stroke which great for having fun but it won't be particularly economic or comfortable for 40 mile commutes. You also tend to end up smelling of two stroke smoke. If you want reliability and economy then you should be looking at four stroke bikes. Go for s/h Japanese over new cheapo Chinese ones every time.

I did my test on a yamaha YBR and that was a nice bike. I'd recommend looking at ones like it.

The main problem with 125s is they are disproportionately expensive. You'll definitely want a second hand one (far too expensive new), and in a couple of months/years you'll want more power. I skipped out the step of buying a 125, and went straight to a 650 (restricted to 33bhp, but 80-odd when derestricted) as i think it's better value for money
 
Dont get a nsr for a commute . My son has one and although a great bike i would hate to try and ride in london on one. Economy aint great and the lock is terrible . Look at summit 4 stroke and preferably trial/supermoto style as will fit you better if yer a big lad and will enable you to see over traffic .

Persil
 
An NSR is not what i'd consider to be my first choice, finding a good unthrashed one will be hard and like the Mito's they need to be run quite hard on occasions. The Varadero on the other hand is a fantastic 125 if you're a normal sized person, nice high seating position, very comfortable and easily mistaken for a 500, the V twin is reliable with the only real complaint being the carb's freezing on extended full throttle run's with high airborne cmoisture. Honda released a heater mod (dealers should have sorted it out, if not they were still doing it free out of warranty). The inspection window can show a thin mayo like layer on the oil due to condensation forming then dripping back into the oil, run it for a decent distance to egt the oil fully up to temp and this will not cause you any problems. Regular oil changes also help :)

Feed it V Power, it's one of the few 125's that does benefit from it and keep an eye on the exhaust and shock for rust.

Nice bikes :)
 
my CBR125 used to do 200miles on £7 petrol, pretty cheap motoring! £15 a year tax

but a good condition CG125 would do ya and is bomb proof
 
Firstly,

Thanks to everyone for all their input. Very helpful, i think its confirmed where i want to go.

An NSR is not what i'd consider to be my first choice, finding a good unthrashed one will be hard and like the Mito's they need to be run quite hard on occasions. The Varadero on the other hand is a fantastic 125 if you're a normal sized person, nice high seating position, very comfortable and easily mistaken for a 500, the V twin is reliable with the only real complaint being the carb's freezing on extended full throttle run's with high airborne cmoisture. Honda released a heater mod (dealers should have sorted it out, if not they were still doing it free out of warranty). The inspection window can show a thin mayo like layer on the oil due to condensation forming then dripping back into the oil, run it for a decent distance to egt the oil fully up to temp and this will not cause you any problems. Regular oil changes also help :)

Feed it V Power, it's one of the few 125's that does benefit from it and keep an eye on the exhaust and shock for rust.

Nice bikes :)

Varadero looks like a very nice bike, especially that riding position. Are their similar bikes anyone could suggest for me to look at? I despise the looks of the CG125. I know its only a commuter but i dont want to ride something im embaressed to be seen on :p

Thanks
 
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40 miles through London before and after work on a bike doesn't really sound like fun. :o

I'd definitely advocate a bike/scooter for <10 miles, but 40 miles is going to be pretty knackering each day. I enjoy a good ride on my little 125 to london every now and then (from Maidenhead) but it's not something I would ever consider doing every day.
 
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