CanberraR3
Living Legend
- Joined
- May 27, 2010
- Messages
- 11,337
- Location
- Canberra, Australia
- Ride
- Triumphs, but no Rocket just now.
The real key to mastering the Rocket is to ride it often; every day if you can. Everything just becomes second nature and it will feel like any other bike you're used to. But I still say there are some basic things you need to get confidence in - and riding quickly isn't one of them. That's easy, although the last thing you want to feel, on any bike but especially on a Rocket, is that you've over-cooked a corner. You really need to develop confidence and experience to deal with that and turning a Rocket can feel a bit like turning an ocean liner until you learn to just go with it. That actually takes more than just a couple of rides to master and is a lot easier on something that doesn't weigh 800 pounds. Actually the slow stuff will give you grief too, until you're used to man-handling a bike, any bike. U-turns, pushing it around, parking, stop start traffic etc - that will give you grief before you even get going.
I still would NOT recommend a Rocket for anyone who lacks experience, regardless of what others say. I don't want that on my hands. But if you want to risk it, and if you will be able to ride her frequently, and if you can get insurance, then go for it if your heart's set on it. They are an amazing machine, very manoeuverable for their size and far less scary than they appear. But be it on your head. You just might get lucky.
I still would NOT recommend a Rocket for anyone who lacks experience, regardless of what others say. I don't want that on my hands. But if you want to risk it, and if you will be able to ride her frequently, and if you can get insurance, then go for it if your heart's set on it. They are an amazing machine, very manoeuverable for their size and far less scary than they appear. But be it on your head. You just might get lucky.