Tom Forde;269037 wrote: Australia has compulsary training and limited horse power ratings for learner riders and new riders.
A loophole is that in certain states you can get a full riding licence if you are over a certain age and possess a driving licence.
Slowly but surely, big sports bikes are being heavily taxed and with high insurance fees. Most people who buy them either sell them after a short period or use them on track days, if they are fortunate to live near one.
Cheers
Tom
Actually Tom, most of this has changed;
If you were over 30, and held a licence for 5 years, you used to be able to do 2 days training, as little as 1 week as a learner on a small capacity/low power bike with 70km/h speed limit, do a 1 day course and riding test, then straight onto a full lincence and any bike you wanted, but no pillion for 1 year...
Now if you are over 25, 5 years licenced, you do 2 days training, as little as 1 week learner on a small capacity/low power bike, 1 day course and riding test, then 1 year on a small capacity/low horsepower bike with 80km/h speed limit, then onto a full licence....
So it is a little more restrictive, but starts earlier.
As to the second statement, because all of the learners are on small capacity bikes, and the learners have more crashes, statistically, small bikes are more risky than big bikes... no one in Government could figure out the falicy of the arguement, so ALL small bike regos went up a lot, and most bike bike regos went down a little...
My 84 XR250 went up 250%, my KLR650 went up 50%, and my FZ1-S went down 10%... so they are encouraging everyone onto big bikes for safety
As above, Harold Scruby is a mental case...
This guy is writting for the Nan Weekly, not any newspaper of concern.
Australia is a Nanny State, no doubt about it...
Cheers,
Daewoo