Buying a new motorbike
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I make her take it to the Honda Dealers shop for regular servicing - a lot of VN don't do this, just fill with petrol and ride until something breaks.
Tried riding the Honda Air Blade and the Yamaha Nuovo, must depend on what you're used to riding in the past.
Both this bikes made me feel like I was on a pedal powered bicycle, they both felt so physically small to me.(178cms/87kgs) Great bikes for slightly smaller Vietnamese, not so great for larger sized 'westerner'
(NO INSULT AGAINST ANY VIETNAMESE INTENDED !!!)
Both bikes handled well - BUT, after only riding much larger bikes for more than 30 years in the past, smallest a Honda CBR600R, simply could not get used to the nervous feeling both these bikes gave me - that there was nothing out there in front of the handle bars.
Admittedly I didn't ride either bikes for very many hours to get really used to them so probably not a really fair test.
Brought a larger V-Twin cruiser instead, Wife HATES it ! Too big, too noisy and I must admit, a total pig, too large to maneuver easily in the inner city traffic.
Worse of all, a lot of markets such as Cho Ben Thanh won't let me park it on the street/footpath outside. Takes up too much space.

Think in the end it all comes down to a personal choice of what you feel happiest riding.

Flip465.

Speaking of bikes, Im looking for a shop that sells an on-road/off-road bike, not a dirt bike but something that can be used comfortably on both surfaces.Something like the BMW Dakar but a smaller size.Anywhere in Saigon that sells such a thing
colinoscapee wrote:Im 179cm/100kg I have an Airblade and its fine and had no problems with it. You can try the Sym Shark but bad resale when you want to sell. Spend the extra and buy an SH, great bike but beware they are the bike of choice for theft.
Speaking of bikes, Im looking for a shop that sells an on-road/off-road bike, not a dirt bike but something that can be used comfortably on both surfaces.Something like the BMW Dakar but a smaller size.Anywhere in Saigon that sells such a thing
In 1976 I had a Yamaha xt 400 which I drove around remote parts of Africa. What a bike, it would be perfect for Vietnam with its on the road off the road capabliities. If Honda could put out a PCX Enduro that would be great.
colinoscapee wrote:Im 179cm/100kg I have an Airblade and its fine and had no problems with it. You can try the Sym Shark but bad resale when you want to sell. Spend the extra and buy an SH, great bike but beware they are the bike of choice for theft.
colinoscapee,
Several years ago, my wife, Vietnamese, 1.6m tall and complaining if she weighs 49 - 50kgs wringing wet, had a Sym 'Elizabeth' - different bike/scooter to the 'Shark' I know - she HATED it !
Always breaking down, electrics failing, refusing to start, etc.
MIGHT just have something to do with the fact that typically of Vietnamese lady riders, a little thing called 'MAINTENANCE' is unheard off !
Got her a very nice new Honda Air Blade 125. Now, with regular check ups and proper maintenance, she has used it daily for the past 3 years and it's perfect for her.
She's VERY happy with it and feels a lot safer riding it.
(even if sometimes she brings home enough shopping on it to fill a taxis back seats completely.
)
Flip465.
Im coming to Saigon in a few weeks and hope to get a licence! Renting is one thing but if/when i buy I will probably go straight to Sym 110 again. Cheap and simple.
You know its part of the overall adjustment we westerners have to make if we are going to live here. That distinct pain that comes when you get off the plane and go shopping for "a real bike" only to find out its a nonsense idea, that pain that comes right back HERE, shows the degree of the brain shifting you have to make. That gap between toy bike and real bike is really the best bellweather of things to come and by the time you are actually happy on a 100cc bike, youve made the shift and everything else has become easy. Youre half asian already!
Sure id like to at LEAST have a 500cc bike or a Triumph Bonneville to ride in asia but it just doesnt work. At watering holes I see groups on superbikes or Harleys or Goldwings pull in and, i used to be jealous, now i just laugh. I cant believe I said that but its true.
Need directions? Use: DiaDiem.com
I do believe wrote:I was three months away from serving in 1965 or so and got lucky and found a good position back home. Because I was Canadian they had no problem letting me go back to Toronto. Sometimes the juvenile part of me wishes I had gone but then so many didn't come back. I did get mixed up peripherally in some conflicts in Africa but nothing like what happened here. When I was growing up the war was on the front pages every day for 10 years; the war here was/is part of my psyche in a way that current generations can't quite comprehend even though I was not actively involved. On the other hand I resent people who were here in the old days and were able to see a Vietnam I can only guess at. Roads not travelled.
Resent? Hope you meant envy, but maybe not.
Jaitch wrote:For people who really enjoy a throbbing machine between their legs, there is a Harley Davidson dealership at NGUYEN VAN LINH @ NGUYEN LUONG BANG (near the Crescent Mall).
Need directions? Use: DiaDiem.com
See? Now how did i just KNOW Jaitch was going to say that?! R O F L
Budman1 wrote:I do believe wrote:I was three months away from serving in 1965 or so and got lucky and found a good position back home. Because I was Canadian they had no problem letting me go back to Toronto. Sometimes the juvenile part of me wishes I had gone but then so many didn't come back. I did get mixed up peripherally in some conflicts in Africa but nothing like what happened here. When I was growing up the war was on the front pages every day for 10 years; the war here was/is part of my psyche in a way that current generations can't quite comprehend even though I was not actively involved. On the other hand I resent people who were here in the old days and were able to see a Vietnam I can only guess at. Roads not travelled.
Resent? Hope you meant envy, but maybe not.
I was still too young to go but my older brother got drafted and he was considering fleeing to Canada. A week before he was to keep his appointment, Nixon ended the war. It was quite a scary time. I had friends who didnt come back, one on our street, and others who came back all messed up. About 15 years ago I was in a dentists office waiting for the drill. I was reading a National Geographic article about the war, with far too many pics and descriptions and at some point i put the magazine down and just started crying. However I feel about the war these days its tempered by the respect i have for active-serving and vets whom i came to understand better as an adult and with a lot of time since then to think about everything. I know that Viets prefer not to talk about the war so i wont, just to say Vietnam is special to me just the same.
By the way I think much of the region is still intact in the 1969 sense. I was in tiny town in north Malaysia and thought I had woken up in current newsreel about the war, it looks just like that.
I was reading this thread about scooters. Here in Malaysia the PCX, which i like, isnt popular because the Sym is cheaper and larger. The Sym 200 scooter is not a good bike but the 250cc is. Its large and has plenty of power. It dwarfs the PCX when you see them side by side. The Sym 400 is also around but im told it has (or had) lots of problems. I would take a chance on the Sym 250 if I were in the market, its solid and popular. If I had tons more money id take the Suzuki or Yamaha large scooters.
cvco wrote:I do believe-- i veered off the thread. Did you get a new bike after all?
I was reading this thread about scooters. Here in Malaysia the PCX, which i like, isnt popular because the Sym is cheaper and larger. The Sym 200 scooter is not a good bike but the 250cc is. Its large and has plenty of power. It dwarfs the PCX when you see them side by side. The Sym 400 is also around but im told it has (or had) lots of problems. I would take a chance on the Sym 250 if I were in the market, its solid and popular. If I had tons more money id take the Suzuki or Yamaha large scooters.
In my post about the war in Vietnam, I stand corrected; envy is the correct word. In regards to the mortorbike, I still have the four year old PCX because I like the wide handlebars. The SH has a good reputation but the looks of it don't do anything for me. Honda has come out with a 150 PCX and that's where I'll probably end up going. I worry about parts for some of the less mainstream bikes.
But who cares? We're not talking about fine machines here, just "disposable transport appliances (DTA)." Personally, since these are all pretty crappy when you get right down to it, I say buy new and dump them in 2-3 years. In that sense, any of the bikes are OK, even the worst ones like Sym. Buy cheap, ride right, change the oil, dump in a couple years, thats it. Parts availability is fine during that time for any brand, too.
And I am being generous here. In Malaysia, they buy new, never change the oil or any maintenance at all, only (duct tape) fix whats seriously broken, run them right into the ground, and leave them bruised and battered right on the side of the road and go buy another one. I think they have the right idea, frankly.
For that reason I dont want to spend a lot for a DTA. Half of Honda's price is its name. All the MFRs are sourcing parts all over the world, whichever is the cheapest. My Yamaha.... very few, if any, parts are Japanese. The bike is a stew of Indian, Indonesian, Thai and Chinese parts. Yet there is the Japanese badge, itself most likely not made in Japan, either. And why cant I get parts for this 2009 bike? Because if the Indians stop making the supply, then Yamaha cant stock the parts. This is what Im facing right now. This caused Indonesian street guys to start making their own parts for this bike. There are more Indonesian cottage-industry parts available for the FZ150i than Yamaha has. Imagine that. This is why I cal them all DTA and i want to pay little, ride hard, dump soon. I wont give any more respect to these DTAs than I would a toaster because thats all they deserve.
Jaitch wrote:For people who really enjoy a throbbing machine between their legs, there is a Harley Davidson dealership at NGUYEN VAN LINH @ NGUYEN LUONG BANG (near the Crescent Mall).
Need directions? Use: DiaDiem.com
Not sure why anyone would want a HD in Viet Nam,apart from the status and look at me. I owned two HD before coming to VN and for the life of me can't see anywhere in VN they could be used to their full potential,plus the fact that so many people pull out in front of youas we know Harley's don't pull up too quickly.But too each his own and if people feel like spending 1 billion on a bike,it's their choice.
colinoscapee wrote:Jaitch wrote:For people who really enjoy a throbbing machine between their legs, there is a Harley Davidson dealership at NGUYEN VAN LINH @ NGUYEN LUONG BANG (near the Crescent Mall).
Need directions? Use: DiaDiem.com
Not sure why anyone would want a HD in Viet Nam,apart from the status and look at me. I owned two HD before coming to VN and for the life of me can't see anywhere in VN they could be used to their full potential,plus the fact that so many people pull out in front of youas we know Harley's don't pull up too quickly.But too each his own and if people feel like spending 1 billion on a bike,it's their choice.
Thats why i was laughing, we just got through saying dont buy a big bike and here come Jaitch with heres a big bike...
On odd place is in Betong, Thailand. After Saigon fell in 1975, the communists didnt stop there. They planned to convert Malaysia next and used Betong as their launching point. Thousands congregated in the jungles at Betong where they built a vast cave network to work and hide while they recruited Malaysians into the cause. In 1978, while on the verge of overthrowing Malaysia, they were found and crushed at Betong (and then the city was born). The caves and all seized equipment and jungle, its all still there and intact. The Viets had everything in the caves, including dentists, hospital, kitchens, dorms. They invented a system of cooking which prevented cooking smoke from going out the top of the caves because opposing forces would find them. Even today, 40 years later Malaysia still lives in fear that communism could rise again and authorities remain vigilant.
Sorry to digress. Thats all.
I cant even hardly believe how they carved out the complex, how they did all that. The tunnels are about 5ft8in tall, about that, and im taller and had to tilt my head the whole way in there. After about an hour i had to get out, neck hurt from tilting! Point is that you are right back in 1975 and it was COOL! ID like to go again sometime.
Left to their own devices and weak opposition, its possible that HCM would have conquered the region all the way to Singapore and today Vietnam would be 5X as big. US was gone, who was going to stop them? They were THAT close.
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