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I've had two pairs of Gaerne oiled boots. I ride ~100 hours a season. The soles on mine looked worse than yours after a single season. The Gaerne's are very soft, and there's no way around that.
I ended up moving to Alpinestars for that reason. They're not as comfortable, but they're not bad, and your position on the pegs, and therefore the bike, is very different and will take some getting used to. You stand a lot higher as the soles don't bend anywhere near as much (or at all compared to the Gaerne's).
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My beta was the same, though to be fair my Sherco did it as well.
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Beta makes one that is plug and play. No wiring required.
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That's how all the Oset's come. All those kids growing up riding are doing it with the brake on the bars... same as a pedal bike. I think the only reason full size E bikes don't come that way is to cater to people who are just more used to the foot brake.
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If ever there was a motorsport where equipment has a relatively trivial influence on performance, trials is it...
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Whichever one gets you excited. I'd go for the Beta having had both... I just think it's better built. But you'd be happy either way.
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Erm... it's a custom frame with beta parts stuffed in it. I'll beg to differ with the the guy in the post, who seems to think it's god's gift to beautiful welding. It looks rather awful, but that's just me.
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Stoner will be testing for Ducati next year. He's not interested in a full time return.
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I kind of doubt it... it will interesting in so far as it's interesting to see Stoner back, but if he's on the pace of the guys at the front I'd be absolutely astounded. To be out of top flight competition for this long, if he's within of second of the front guys I'd be surprised.
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https://www.google.com/search?q=beta+trs35&rlz=1C6CHFA_enUS555US555&biw=1280&bih=705&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAmoVChMIr5Hk3o2LyQIVSfI-Ch33CAOP#tbm=isch&q=beta+tr35
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Someone at ossa had an interest in the bike. I still think the packaging of that motor is fantastic.
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Aside from Petrucci, who completely took evasive action, no one really waved Rossi around. They didn't make life hugely difficult for him either, but given the pace difference there wasn't much point in them trying to do so. It was a good ride from the back, all else aside.
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It would depend what mode you ran it in. Although it would of course be an 'on your honor' setting, since a flick of a switch is all i takes to dial it up. I'm pretty sure it'll make more than 10hp in top setting.
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I suspect there aren't a lot of people putting their kids on $10k USD bikes. The base consensus seems to be it's a good bike, but given the price there isn't a lot of impetus to switch.
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Interesting observation... I hadn't really equated the two, but now that you mention it, it was always after a downhill run that I noticed it on mine as well.
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It's all down to the compression of the front fork against the obstacle and good timing. He's not just riding a wheelie then magically getting airborne. You'll see right before he launches he hit the top of the cement block with the front wheel, compressing both front and rear suspension. That's where all the lift comes from.
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This is what the 2014 owner's manual specs, and what came on my 2013 (i.e. as delivered from the factory, it had a br7es fitted, not a bpr7es):
Spark plug ............................................................................ NGK BR7ES
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They're the same heat range, the P is just the protruding electrode version. My 2013 used a br7es fwiw. I wouldn't expect the 2015 is any different, but I don't know for sure.
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They're pretty similar... nothing that's going to make you any better. But if you want newer they fit the bill
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So there's a used '14 Factory Replica for sale near me. Ostensibly it has ~10 hours on it, although I haven't been to see it yet. From what I can tell, these went for something around ~$8500 new. The asking price on this one is $7k.
Aside from buying a bike built by a currently defunct manufacturer, is there anything I should be looking out for specifically on these that has proven to be a problem?
I've only got experience on an older GG 250, which I liked enough to consider buying this one. The transmission on the one I rode was a disaster (horrible dragging when trying to shift gears once the trans was warm... I'm going to chalk this up to a 'well used' bike, but if this is something more endemic, let me know).
GG's current state of affairs gives me pause, but I think there are probably enough spares to go around for the life of the bike in my hands. Maybe for $6500 or so it's worth the risk?
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This is at least as cool as Bou's dead engine vid...
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You're probably going to need to go with motocross pants of you want to fit a big brace and still be able to bend. Took me a while to find something, eventually ended up with Klim.
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If you have zero riding experience on anything (enduro, street bike, etc) and a trials bike will be the first motorcycle you'll ever throw a leg over, definitely don't get a 300. In fact, I'd probably say find a 125.
But if you have lots of other riding experience, especially if it's off road on enduro bikes, it doesn't make much difference.
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It's a token piece of plastic manufacturers feel obligated to put between your leg and the chain.
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Not really sure about the flywheel weight. It may have had a slow action throttle on it, I'll have to ask.
However, it did feel almost exactly like a 300 Beta I rode with a low compression head on it... but again, that may have had the slow action throttle on it too, I'll need to ask.
The GG definitely didn't lack power. Out on the loop once you open the throttle it certainly went, and it would lug me around in 5th at any speed without any problem. Not quite the torque of a 300 at low revs in a higher gear, but that's certainly normal. It just lacked an immediacy right off idle that felt odd.
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