mdisher
formerly Renegade, get used to it.
If you honestly have "little to no" riding experience, then yes, you need to start out on something smaller.
I don't think it's the power, as much as the weight (literally), and the cost when to drop that full faired beast. The FJR is easy to ride, very tractable power too.
My first street bike was my ZX-11, and that most people would say isn't a good choice. However, I've been riding dirt bikes and two wheel'd things all my life. And the ZX for as powerful as it is, is a very easy to ride bike. A little top heavy when full of fuel but loads of power down low, you can lug around on it all day if you want.
My first "Oh ****" happened less than two weeks after I got it when I rounded a corner behind a flat bed truck that had no brake lights on a cool fall day. Just slowly getting on the back brakes to slow down turned into "Getting on the brakes HARD, when I realized this truck was stopping. On top of leaves, that brought the rear end around. Any newbie would have grabbed even more brakes and been down in a second.
Not saying I'm any better than anyone else, but having been sideways about a zillion times before, I just knew more brakes wasn't going to help and since I was headed where I wanted to go (which wasn't into the back of that truck) I got off the brakes and went around.
I pulled over, gave my heart a rest and thought, yeah, a noob woud have died today.
Getting that kind of experience on a big bike to start isn't easy or a good thing. You can't flick it like a dirt bike, or even a smaller 650. Like other said, start with an SV. They are easy to find and cheap used. Ride it a year or a summer and sell it. You'll get most of your money back if you don't wreck it.
I dropped the ZX-11 in my drive way putting it on the center stand. $900 worth of plastic later I was wishing I had a naked bike.
I don't think it's the power, as much as the weight (literally), and the cost when to drop that full faired beast. The FJR is easy to ride, very tractable power too.
My first street bike was my ZX-11, and that most people would say isn't a good choice. However, I've been riding dirt bikes and two wheel'd things all my life. And the ZX for as powerful as it is, is a very easy to ride bike. A little top heavy when full of fuel but loads of power down low, you can lug around on it all day if you want.
My first "Oh ****" happened less than two weeks after I got it when I rounded a corner behind a flat bed truck that had no brake lights on a cool fall day. Just slowly getting on the back brakes to slow down turned into "Getting on the brakes HARD, when I realized this truck was stopping. On top of leaves, that brought the rear end around. Any newbie would have grabbed even more brakes and been down in a second.
Not saying I'm any better than anyone else, but having been sideways about a zillion times before, I just knew more brakes wasn't going to help and since I was headed where I wanted to go (which wasn't into the back of that truck) I got off the brakes and went around.
I pulled over, gave my heart a rest and thought, yeah, a noob woud have died today.
Getting that kind of experience on a big bike to start isn't easy or a good thing. You can't flick it like a dirt bike, or even a smaller 650. Like other said, start with an SV. They are easy to find and cheap used. Ride it a year or a summer and sell it. You'll get most of your money back if you don't wreck it.
I dropped the ZX-11 in my drive way putting it on the center stand. $900 worth of plastic later I was wishing I had a naked bike.