Chicken wrote:That's another thing..the RR bike.
I was told by a 'wise' old man that any bike with RR or simply 'R' is not a bike for a learner.
I feel to a certain extent, that you can 'learn' about what the bike is able to do, and slowly get used to it...
I mean, if you bought a ferrari, you could drive it slowly to get a feel for it first, right?
It doesn't nessaserily mean a CBR250RR is bad for a first timer....right??
That was just bad/wrong advice...
RR generally stands for "road racing"... BUT you will find that bike makers will stick it on anything..... but mostly sports bikes..
A CBR250RR is by no means a hard to ride bike... Its just a sports shaped bike, with a sports riding position...
There are plenty of bikes that are much harder to ride, but dont have RR written on them.... pretty much any cruiser style 250 (virago, CB, GS etc) are harder to ride because of the unnatural riding position (to me anyway) and if you want to ride sports bikes, they dont prepare you for larger sports bikes... Then there is the opposite direction... An Aprilia RS250 is a weapon, but hard to ride... 2 strokes have unreasonable powerbans... most definitely not a learner bike... the same goes for the other 2 stroke 250's... like the Honda NSR, Suzuki RS/RGV...
but yeah, any 4 stroke, 250 sportsbike generally has RR on them.... But they are generally easy to ride...