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Used Motorcycle
Evaluation Guide
last updated
7/10/04 --
now 26 pages (125k) of quasi-nutritious moto-info!
Copyright © 1998-2004 Adam Glass. All rights reserved.
Distribution and republication: please feel free to link to
this document, bookmark it, tell all your friends about it, etc. (The correct
link is shown above, under the title.) However, please respect my
hard work and my "intellectual property" and do not copy this document
and publish it on your own website. If you wish to republish portions
of this document, or translate it into another language, please
contact me at
clarity.net@adam. (Well, flip that
around, first -- it's anti-spam protection.)
TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USAGE --
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
The information contained in this document is provided at no cost and
without any warranty whatsoever.
The author and contributors are not responsible for any errors contained
herein, and make no claims whatsoever as to the legality, safety,
validity, or veracity of the information and advice contained in this
document. Indeed, many of the techniques described herein are extremely
dangerous and should not be performed except by factory-trained mechanics.
The information contained in this document is provided for entertainment
purposes only, and is not in any way a guarantee that the
motorcycle you buy will be functional, safe or usable, or that you (or
others) will not be seriously injured or killed by attempting to follow
said information. All riders should have a factory-trained, professional
mechanic inspect any motorcycle before purchasing or riding it. Any
use of the information contained in this document is done solely at your
own risk. Reading beyond this point constitutes an implicit acceptance
of these terms and conditions.
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A major tip o' the hat to
Erik Astrup,
Paul English,
Josh Fielek,
Scott Lilliott,
Lorin O'Brien,
Michael Roeder,
Patrick Burns,
Chris Wells,
Reto Lichtensteiger,
Larry Vickery,
and Crystal Trexel for suggestions
and Pam Zink for the
inspiration. If you have any questions
or suggestions that might make this resource more complete or more
accurate, please email them to me!
Read
this whole thing before you go to look at a bike -- it's too long to
try to scan through while you're at the seller's house!
CHECKLIST OF
WHAT'S LISTED BELOW:
(Not a substitute for reading the whole thing, but
useful for quick reference at a seller's house.)
-
FIRST THINGS FIRST
- Don't buy the first bike you see. Bring a friend & a flashlight.
- Do a couple of practice inspections on friends' bikes, discuss the results.
-
OVERALL APPEARANCE
- Is the bike clean and straight? Sight down centerline, and down forks.
-
HAS IT BEEN CRASHED?
- Check for bends or scrapes on bars, exhaust, plastic, and levers.
- Short/shallow/non-parallel scratches/chips ~= tip-over.
- Long/deep/parallel scratches and cracks ~= crash.
-
HAS IT BEEN RACED/ABUSED?
- Check for small (1/16") safety-wire holes in bolts. (Particularly
caliper mounting bolts, exhaust bolts, etc.)
-
BIKE-SPECIFIC
- Know the characteristic flaws of the models you're going to see.
-
BRAKES
- Check for smooth operation, no pulsing, pad material remaining, etc.
-
CLUTCH
- Check lever effort, and whether the clutch releases when squeezed.
-
GAS TANK
- Look for rust or a milky paint-like coating on the inside.
- Dark gas (tea colored) is an indication of old gas that needs changing.
-
SEAT
- Look for cracks/tears/etc.
-
TIRES
- Check: remaining tread depth, dry rot, profile (round? squared-off?), date code.
-
ELECTRICAL & BATTERY
- Test all lights and switches to make sure they work.
- The sound of the starter cranking is a decent meter of the battery's condition.
-
SUSPENSION
- Check forks for seal leaks, scratches/nicks/bends/twists in legs.
-
WHEELS
- Check both sides of both wheels for dents/cracks.
-
CHAIN/SPROCKETS
- Check for chain/sprocket wear (hooked teeth, stretched chain).
-
EXHAUST
- Scratches/rust/damage. Exhaust pressure equal on both sides?
-
ENGINE/FLUIDS/CARBURATORS
- Check starting and operation of engine and carbs. Check for leaks.
-
CENTERSTAND CHECKS
- Get wheels in air and check wheel bearings, brake operation, etc.
-
SERVICE
- Service records available? Proof of warranty work? Etc.
-
DIRT BIKES
- Special concerns when inspecting dirt bikes.
-
QUIZZING THE SELLER
- Questions to ask the seller to determine the condition of the bike.
-
ACCESSORIES, PRICE, and DEALING
- Are you willing to pay more for add-ons?
-
HELMETS
- Used helmets are worthless. Don't use 'em, don't pay more for 'em.
-
TITLES & PAPERWORK
- Make sure it's clean & that the VIN numbers match up.
-
TEST RIDE
- Go on one if you can -- you can learn a lot about a bike this way!
- Make sure you give it a pre-ride check to make sure it's safe to ride!
-
AFTER THE PURCHASE
- Some tips after you get your bike.
-
INFO FOR NEW RIDERS
- Not the biggest and the baddest -- start with something easy to control.
-
INSPECTION PICTURES
- To aid inspection, some pictures (and, eventually, diagrams) of what certain components look like.
-
RECOMMENDED READING
- An exceedingly incomplete list of books that'll teach you more about bikes.
-
OTHER WEB SITES
- A listing of other motorcycle-related web sites with useful tips for
bikerscum.
FIRST THINGS FIRST
- Resist the temptation to buy the first bike you see. Look at a few of
them to get a better idea of the used bike market/options before you buy
one.
- Bring a friend to help you stick to your guns, or to help you load
your new bikes onto a truck, or as ballast in case the bike has a centerstand
and you wish to inspect the front wheel. Bike-savvy friends may also
notice things that you forgot to check. Make sure they also read this guide
ahead of time.
- Bring a flashlight to aid inspection. Even in daylight.
- Request that the owner not have the bike warmed up when you get
there, but tell him/her to make sure that the bike will start. If the owner
asks why, tell them that you want to test the bike's ability to start when
cold. (It's a lot easier for engines to start when pre-warmed.)
- You needn't follow these instructions in any particular order, or even
follow them at all, but if you are going to read them, you should probably
do so before
you get to the seller's house. If you're new to motorcycling, you'll probably
find a lot of the terminology complicated. Try studying some of the "related
photos" and
RECOMMENDED READING listed below. And as noted previously,
try to bring a friend, particularly one who knows bikes.
- Bring riding gear in case the seller will let you test
ride the bike. (If you're new to motorcycling and don't have any
gear yet, perhaps the bike-savvy friend accompanying you will be kind
enough to bring his/her gear, and do a test ride for you.)
- You'll have to go through and carefully inspect used bikes being
sold by dealerships, too, since many dealerships take used bikes as
trade-ins, make minimal (if any) repairs, and
mark the bikes up way over "blue book" value. It's up to you to find
defects (and to know what the used bike's real value is!!) to get these
vultures back down to a reasonable price. Think of it as a treasure
hunt -- you're looking for the hidden secrets that will save you money.
- As a general rule of thumb, when work needs to be done to repair a
problem with the bike, most dealerships charge around $50/hour for labor,
possibly more for European marques (Ducati, BMW, Triumph, etc.)
- In the text below, "left" and "right" refer to the rider's
left and right sides when sitting on the bike.
- If you aren't really experienced with bikes, do some practice
inspections! Find a couple of friends with bikes, and, pretending
that you're at a seller's house inspecting a used bike, go over a couple
of bikes in minute detail. You'll learn a lot about how bikes are put
together, and you might even find some things that your friends missed.
Take notes while you're doing the inspections, and go over your findings
with your friends after each inspection.
- When you end up buying a bike, make sure you get everything related to
the bike: the key and any spares that the seller has, any free/included
spare parts, the owner's manual and service manual, etc. Having to go
back to the seller to get stuff you should have remembered the first
time is a pain. And you may find the seller far less accommodating
after you've paid for the thing.
OVERALL APPEARANCE
- Does the bike look nasty? Cracks and scratches all over the thing?
[1]
Appearance can be deceiving, but it should give you some indication of the
general condition beyond what you can see.
- Do fasteners look stripped or gouged? Is everything kinda loose
and ill-fitting? You don't need to be a mechanic to tell when the
person has mangled something on the bike. The bike should also be
cosmetically symmetrical. (Not "symmetrical" like "are there
brake discs on both sides of the front wheel", but "symmetrical" as in,
"are the mirrors, the plastic, the handlebars, etc. symmetrical, or do
they seem to be askew?"
[2])
Step back and sight down the centerline of the bike. If something looks
obviously wrong (the mirrors stick out a different angles, the windscreen is
tilted, the turn-signal stalks are ripped off the fairing, etc.),
the bike has probably been crashed or fell over hard.
- Basically, try to answer the question: "How does the overall
cosmetic appearance of this bike affect how much I want to pay for it?"
Related photos:
[1] Scratched up fairings
[2] Bent subframe = twisted/askew bodywork (a very extreme example)
HAS IT BEEN CRASHED?
- Look for: deep parallel scratches on engine cases and on plastic
(particularly above footpeg-level); a different/non-standard paint
job (the owner might have repainted it to hide damage); paint or metal
ground off the ends of the handlebars
[1], or off the balls
on the ends of the
clutch/brake levers; dents in the gas tank where the handlebars may have
smashed into it during a crash
[2];
dents and deep/parallel scratches in exhaust
pipes; turn-signal stalks bent or ripped off; cracks in plastic bodywork
obscured by stickers
[3].
(Aftermarket stickers are sometimes used to cover defects -- beware!)
- Sometimes brake and clutch levers will be bent in a crash and
replaced with a lever that's a different color than the other side,
or a slightly different style than the other side, or it'll be hammered
back into shape so it doesn't look obviously bent. (In the latter case,
look for thin cracks in the anodizing or clear coats of levers... it'll
look something like a spider web of hairline cracks.)
Also look for bent or cracked mirrors, or mirrors replaced
with mirrors of a different type. Both are signs that the bike has been down.
Not necessarily crashed, but at least tipped over. Check carefully.
- Sometimes a crash will twist
the front forks. Sit on the bike, sight down the forks, and see if
they're at all twisted or bent. (Twisted is pretty cheap and easy to
fix, bent is not, but either ought to be a warning sign to check
extra-carefully for other damage.) If you get a chance to
test ride the bike, get the bike going straight, and take
a quick look down at the bars to make sure they're pointed straight -- if they
aren't, the front has probably been twisted in a crash.
- Non-parallel scratches and shallow chips tend to
indicate a tip-over rather than a crash at speed. (Crashes, of course,
tend to do more damage -- tip-overs rarely do more than minor cosmetic
damage.)
- You may come across a bike that has horizontal scratches on its lower
plastic and metal parts... this isn't necessarily a crashed bike, it
could just be that the owner was an enthusiastic rider that leaned
the bike way over when turning. Ask the owner about the origin of the
scratches, but unless you see evidence of a crash, it's probably just
evidence of an enthusiastic owner. Deep/parallel scratches above footpeg-level
are something to be concerned about, though.
- Crashes can cause bodywork problems for two reasons. Besides scratching
and cracking the bodywork, crashes can bend the bodywork's mounting brackets
and break mounting tabs
[4].
Check to make sure that bodywork pieces that fit together do so easily
and have an even seam where pieces come together. And check to make sure
that the bodywork isn't loose, either because mounting tabs were broken off
or because aftermarket fairings might not mount up as well as the stock stuff.
Related photos:
[1] Crash-damaged brake lever
[2] Crash-dented gas tank
[3] Cracked bodywork behind sticker
[4] Broken off mounting tab on frame (extremely bad!)
HAS IT BEEN RACED/ABUSED?
- Racing puts tremendous stress on machinery. You may or may not want to
buy a bike that's been raced (the price ought to be way lower than it would be
otherwise), but you should definitely try to find out if it has or hasn't
been raced, so you can adjust the price accordingly if need be.
- Look for holes drilled through the heads of bolts
[1],
which racers use to safety-wire bolts in place.
Check: front brake caliper mounting bolts
[1],
exhaust pipe bolts, engine case
bolts, oil/water drain bolts
[2],
etc. The holes will be small, about 1/16",
and should not be confused with the 1/8"-3/16" holes and castellated nuts
that are often used to hold axle nuts on axles with cotter pins.
Safety-wire ends can be extremely sharp -- don't cut yourself.
- Tires with roughed up edges, covered with ragged strips of balled-up
rubber is a sure sign that the bike has been raced.
[3]
[4]
If the rear tire is
completely flat in the middle but looks practically new on the sides, the
owner may have performed a burn-out with them. (Not necessarily damaging
to anything other than the rear tire, but a possible signal that the owner
hasn't taken good care of the machine.) In rare instances,
frazzled/ragged edges may be there because the bike's owner bought
"take-offs" (used race tires) from a racer, and not because the bike
itself was raced. But be very suspicious.
- Also look for heavy-duty aftermarket engine covers
[5]
-- made by NRC,
Factory, Traksport, Yoshimura, etc. Many racing organizations require them,
so they're a decent tip-off that the bike has been raced. They tend to
be cheaper than the OEM case covers they replace, however, so sometimes
they're used to replace crash-damaged case covers. By themselves, they
aren't proof that a bike has been crashed or raced, but look around
carefully for other tell-tale signs.
- Look at the under-side of the rear fender.
(You may need a flashlight for this.) If you see a thick
streak of balled up & flung-off rubber on the inside of the
fender, that's a good sign that the owner has done a burn-out on the
bike. Burn-outs mostly damage the tire, but could be indicative of
other abuse. Be alert.
- Check the frame for cracks, usually along welds. Check around the
steering head, around the engine mounts, and, if possible, welds in
the front fairing bracket and rear subframe. ("If possible" because
these brackets may well be covered by fairings on many models.)
Related photos:
[1] Safety-wire holes in brake caliper (not currently safety-wired)
[2] Safety-wired oil drain plug
[3] Textured edge of racing tire
[4] Another race tire showing ragged edges
[5] Racing case guard
BIKE-SPECIFIC
- Some models have specific problems that you should be aware of.
Ask dealerships, bike-savvy friends, etc. Read magazine reviews.
Examples: many Kawasaki EX500's (and some other older Kawasaki
sportbikes) have problems where they'll pop out of second gear while
engine-braking. Some older SOHC (single overhead cam -- an engine
design) Hondas had lubrication problems. Learn as much as you can about
the models you're interested in. (Try old bike magazines, grizzled old
bikers, etc.)
- Here are two sites that do searches and provide reprints from magazines:
BRAKES
- Put the bike in neutral. Roll the bike forward, gently apply the front
brakes*. They should engage (and the lever should move) smoothly. (Though
you may hear a click as the brake-light switch engages.) Now release
the brake lever and roll the bike... Are the brakes off, or are they
dragging? (They should be off.) If not, the brake
calipers need work. Stand in front of the bike with the bike in neutral.
Grab the front brake lever and squeeze it hard against the handlebar. As
you're doing this, try to drag the bike forward by the handlebars. (You
may want someone behind the bike to stabilize it.) Do the brakes prevent
the front wheel from moving? They should.
- *=If you squeeze the front brake lever and it comes all the way
back to the bar without much resistance, something's very wrong.
Try adjusting the lever, if you know how (look for a little dial near the
pivot). If this doesn't fix it, or you have to pump the brakes a lot to
get them to work, the system is either empty, full of air bubbles, or
something is amiss in the master cylinder or caliper.
Check to make sure that there's adequate pad thickness, and make sure
you get a professional mechanic to inspect the brakes before you try
riding the bike. At the very least, the system needs to be bled.
About $5 of brake fluid and half an hour of labor.
- Rear brake... roll the bike forward, use the rear brake to stop the
bike. It should also engage smoothly. If the rear brake is a drum brake
(no exposed brake rotor), is the wear indicator needle inside or outside
the "usable range" indicator when the brakes are applied?
Outside, of course, means the brakes are worn out.
- Some states have a mandatory safety inspection. If yours does, they'll
probably require that both front and
back brake levers (separately and together) illuminate the brake light.
If one does and the other doesn't, you probably need a new switch (around
$25?) or a switch adjustment. If both don't, you probably just need a
new bulb (around $1.)
- Check remaining brake pad material.
There should be at least 1/8" of brake pad material on each brake pad.
For bikes with disc brakes, get in front of the bike and look into the
calipers, on either side of the rotor(s). A flashlight might help
here, even in daylight. The pads are the raised parts that directly
contact the brake disc. If the bike
has a disc brake in back, do the same type of inspection with the rear
brake pads.
- Disc brakes continued: rotors should be a certain minimum thickness
and shouldn't vary more than a certain amount when spun. This kind of
information will be in the service manual. As a general rule of thumb,
rotors should be a minimum of 4mm, and
warpage should be less than .012". (FWIW, even warpage of .020"
probably won't show up in the form of lever-pulsing at speeds below 45 mph.)
If you don't have the right tools to test this, you'll probably need
to rely on a test ride to spot a warped rotor -- unless
it's so bad that you can see it with the naked eye.
Even if you don't have the right tools, you can inspect the rotors for
cracks, deep wear grooves and other damage.
- Brake fluid should be a very light amber. Darker than honey means
it's time to replace the brake fluid. Not expensive, but possibly an
indication that the owner hasn't followed the maintenance schedule.
(Or maybe the bike has just sat for a long time.) The front brake fluid
color and level should be easy to inspect through a sight glass in the front
master cylinder or via marks on the translucent brake fluid reservoir.
(Fluid level should be roughly
in the middle of the sight glass or reservoir min/max range when the bike
is on level ground and the steering is centered.) For bikes with disc brakes
on the rear wheel, check the rear brake fluid as well -- sometimes visible
under the seat/tailsection, sometimes visible through a hole cut in the
tailsection or side fairings.
- Inspect the brake hoses for nicks, cuts, dry-rot, and leaks.
- New brake pads are around $25-30 per pair (each caliper has one
pair, so a bike with two brake rotors in front = two calipers up front =
two pairs of pads up front.) Brake rotors are usually
around $150-250 each. Brake lines are about $80-150 new, but if
you have to replace them, replace them with braided stainless-steel lines,
which cost a lot less ($70-80 new) and offer better brake feel and less
heat-induced expansion.
Related photos:
Major parts of front brake system (disc brakes)
Disc brake rear wheel
Drum brake rear wheel
CLUTCH
- Ask the owner how many miles it's been since the clutch cable was
changed*. Owners who keep close tabs on bike maintenance will know. That's
a good sign. Most owners probably don't know. If there's a little slack
in the clutch cable, and you can move the lever 5/8" or an inch or so
before the cable goes taut
(something like this),
that probably just means that the cable adjuster needs a turn or two.
- Put the bike in first gear, squeeze the clutch all the way in, roll it
forward. It should feel like neutral, with possibly a little more
resistance**. Slowly let the clutch out and feel for the friction zone.
Clutch engagement should be fairly smooth, not abrupt. Put the bike back
in neutral.
- If the bike has high miles (30k mi +) ask if the clutch has been
changed. Only about $100 + 1 hour of labor, unless you need a new
clutch basket, then maybe $300 + 2 hours of labor. (You won't know
until you get the clutch apart.)
- *=Some larger-bore bikes will have a hydraulic clutch instead of a
cable-operated clutch. If this is the case, check fluid color and level
through the master cylinder's sight glass. Fluid should be a very light
amber, like the brake fluid, but both are pretty easy to change.
The clutch master cylinder will be located on
the left grip, much the way the front brake's master cylinder is located
on the right grip. Hydraulically-actuated clutches may or may not be
"wet" clutches. A "wet" clutch is bathed in oil; a "dry" clutch is not. It's
hard to tell the difference just by looking at a bike, but as a general
rule of thumb: Ducatis, BMWs and Moto-Guzzis use dry clutches, most other
models use wet clutches.
- **=Wet clutches may tend to stick or drag a bit until the bike has
warmed up and the clutch has spun a bit. This is often the case when
the clutch hasn't been used in a while.
Wait until the bike has really warmed up before you dismiss a
potential acquisition for having an overly-sticky clutch.
GAS TANK
- Look for: dents as noted above
[1].
Open it up, look for rust and/or
loose sediment. Rust/sediment is bad -- it clogs carburators. Bikes with
rusty tanks need to have the rust removed... drop the price $150 or so.
You should open the tank up and see light-amber colored gas and bare metal.
If you see a milky paint-like coating on the insides of the tank, the bike
has had rust removed and the insides of the tank recoated. Make sure it
runs -- sometimes this recoating can clog the fuel's path out of the tank.
Many people swear by it, but I'd pay a little less for a bike with a tank
that's been recoated.
- Exceptions: Some late-model bikes (e.g., recent Triumphs) have
plastic gas tanks. It's normal for plastic gas tanks to be
milky-white on the inside. Knock on the side of the tank to see if it's
metal or plastic. Exceptions to exceptions: some bikes have metal tanks
but have plastic tank covers, so when you knock on them, they'll sound like
plastic, but they aren't. (Example: Yamaha FZR400's.) Your best bet is
to look closely at the inside of the tank -- it should be fairly easy to
tell whether or not you're looking at metal or plastic. Evaluate the
tank's condition accordingly.
- Dark (coffee or tea-colored) gas has been sitting around for a
long time. Not a good sign. Get it changed immediately, and
anticipate needing a thorough fuel-system cleaning. (Around $5 of parts
plus 2-3 hours of labor.)
- Make sure the lock in the gas cap is working. If it isn't, it'll probably
cost $100-$200 to get a genuine OEM replacement cap with a lock that matches
the ignition's.
Related photos:
[1] Crash-dented gas tank
SEAT
- Look for: tears in the vinyl cover
[1].
New upholstery will cost around
$100-150 from an auto/marine reupholstery place. (Check the yellow pages.)
Seats with cracks and tears retain water and get your butt wet many
days after the last rain. Highly annoying.
- Seats (or tailsections) typically use a locking release (like the gas
cap) to prevent vandals from messing with your bike's electrical stuff.
Make sure the release works with your key. If it doesn't, it'll probably
cost around $80 + half an hour of labor to replace.
- Check to make sure the seat is stable and latches on snugly.
Related photos:
[1] Rip in vinyl seat cover
TIRES
- Ask the owner how many years and miles the tires have. The owner
should know. (Bad sign if (s)he doesn't!) The tires should have
at least 1/8" of tread left, preferably more. Squared-off tires,
any signs of dry rot (really fine cracking -- look really
close!), bald tires (no tread), knobby tires with worn down and
rounded knobs... they all need to be changed. Tires worth using
aren't cheap, but they're your sole source of traction, your only
connection to the road -- do not cut corners here!
- Street/sport tires: $170-$300/pair
- Off-road tires: $100-$200/pair
- Make sure you read the section above called HAS IT
BEEN RACED/ABUSED?, as it has some pointers about how to identify
vehicle abuse based on tire wear.
- If you get a chance to ride the bike, seek out well-maintained (smooth)
roads so you'll be able to tell
if the tires have flat-spots or aren't balanced. (Both will cause
perfectly rhythmic thumps or shaking that goes up and down as the speed
goes up and down.)
- Tires should be changed at least every three years, though most
serious riders would probably change them at least every
other year. (That's in an ideal world; tires should be inspected
regularly and replaced if they have damage that could cause
handling problems or unexpected tire failures.)
- How do you know how old the tires are? All tires have an industry-standard
dating code stamped on them. Look for digits stamped into the
mold on the rubber sidewall of the tire. The date code for tires made
prior to 2000 is: "WWY", where WW is two digits denoting the week of the
year, and Y is the last digit of the year.
A tire produced on May 30th (the 22nd week) of 1996 would be stamped
226. (A tire produced on May 30th of 1986 would
also
have a code of 226, but will probably have a ton of dry rot.)
- As of 2000, the date coding system has changed a bit. All tires are
still required to be stamped with a DOT number on at least one sidewall,
but now there's more data. Look for a code that starts with "DOT" and has
up to 12 letters and numbers. The last four numbers are the date code in
the format: "WWYY", where the WW two digits denote the week of manufacture,
and the YY denotes the last two digits of the year. So a date code of
"DOT913ACX3C2200" would have been manufactured in the 22nd week of '00.
If the three/four digit stamp you found doesn't make sense
with this scheme, you're not looking at the date code stamp. Keep in mind
that both tires will have this date marking (possibly/probably different),
and that tires should be replaced at least every third year,
or whenever they have damage that threatens their integrity.
(Punctures, cuts on the sidewall, excessive wear, dry rot, etc.)
Frequent tire inspection could very well save your life.
- Dirt bike knobbies will tend to get worn on the forward edges of
the knobs. Sharp knobs = good traction. (Nifty trick: If the leading
edges of the knobs are worn (rounded off), but otherwise there's nothing
wrong with the tires, you can unmount the tires and mount them backwards.
Braking traction will suffer, but not too much. Note that this trick is
only something that works on non-DOT off-road knobby tires;
street tires should never be mounted backwards.)
- For information on a method of changing motorcycle tires at home,
using a stand made with only $50 or so of parts, see:
Related photos:
Pre-2K date code example 1.
Pre-2K date code example 2.
Pre-2K date code example 3.
ELECTRICAL & BATTERY
- Check to make sure the headlights (high/low) work. (On some bikes,
the headlight won't come on until the engine does, so you may need to
start the engine to test this.) Make sure the turn signals work,
make very sure that the oil pressure light comes on when you turn on
the ignition, and goes out when the engine starts!
Make sure the neutral indicator light works. Make sure the starter
works. Make sure the brake levers light up the brake light. Make
sure the horn works.
- Basically, check all the switches as well as the signalling and
instrument-cluster lights. (Bulbs are pretty cheap to replace.)
- A common way to steal a motorcycle is to hammer a large flat-head
screwdriver into the ignition switch, and to start the bike by forcing
(breaking) the lock. Check to make sure that the key works, that a wrong
key (or screwdriver) doesn't work (careful not to break it yourself!), and for
any possible internal damage.
Ignition switches
[1]
can be a pain to replace, since they (obviously) match
the same key profile of the seat release and gas cap release locks.
There are some aftermarket units available, but you're better off
going to a dealer to get OEM replacement parts. Probably around $200 + 1.5
hours of labor to replace.
- If the bike has one*, you should also test to make sure that the
sidestand's engine cut-off
is working. These are designed to prevent you from riding off with the
sidestand down, taking a left turn, and getting flipped onto the ground.
They work in different ways -- some prevent the engine from starting
when the sidestand is down, some only prevent the engine from running
when the sidestand is down and the bike is in gear (i.e., not
neutral.) (Still others will let you put the bike in gear while the
sidestand is down, simply killing the ignition as soon as you release
the clutch, but these are kind of rare.)
The design where ignition is killed when the bike is put into gear is
a bit more dangerous to test than the design where it won't let the engine
start with the sidestand down.
You may want to start by putting the bike in neutral and trying
to start the engine (once you know that it actually will start!) with
the sidestand down. If it does start, we need to test to see if the safety
has been removed or if it's just the
other design... grab the clutch all the way in, hold the front brakes on
hard, make sure the sidestand is down, and click the bike
into first gear. If the engine dies, the sidestand cut-off switch works.
If it continues running, the sidestand cut-off switch has been removed from the
circuit. This might mean the bike has been raced, but it's more of a
clue to check elsewhere for evidence of racing, since by itself it
doesn't really mean anything. If the sidestand cut-off switch does
not work as designed, you must be very careful (if you
buy or test-ride the bike) not to ride off with the sidestand down!
Now that we're done with this test, put the bike back into neutral,
release the clutch, and kill the engine.
- *=Some bikes won't have such a cutoff. This includes certain Ducati
models and a wide variety of older bikes. As noted above, if you buy
a bike without a (working) sidestand cutoff, you'll need to be very careful
to avoid riding off with the sidestand down.
- Make sure the kill switch on the right handgrip stops the engine when
it's running. (Dirt bikes will have a kill button on the left handgrip.)
- Batteries are almost always located underneath the seat, though some
modern V-twin sportbikes locate it beside the engine, and many dirt bikes
and older standard bikes locate it behind a plastic side cover below (or below
and slightly behind) the seat.
- Batteries are very hard to test without the appropriate tools, and even
then they're kind of mysterious and unpredictable. For our purposes,
if the battery starts the bike, it's good. If it doesn't, $50 to replace.
Without hearing "good" batteries, it's hard to tell what "good" sounds like,
but if the starter's cranking is obviously weak, that's probably a good
indication that the battery is too. As noted
below (in ENGINE/FLUIDS/CARBURATORS), warm bikes start
much easier, so take that
into account when making a subjective evaluation of the cranking sound.
- If the bike doesn't have an electric starter (i.e., it's a kick-start),
there's no good way to test the battery without examining the lead plates
for white sulfide deposits (bad) and checking the specific gravity of
the acid with a battery hydrometer. Most auto parts places should carry
those; just make sure you get one with a long, thin tube, since most
cage ("car") battery hydrometers are too large to fit into bike batteries.
On the other hand, if your bike is a kick-start, it doesn't depend on the
battery too much, and checking it is less important.
- If the headlight gets brighter as the engine revs, the battery could
be discharged (or dead), though it's probably more likely that the voltage
regulator is toast. $80-120 for a new one, plus half an hour of labor to
install. Don't compare brightness at idle to brightness at 10,000 rpm...
compare ~2,500 rpm to ~7,000 rpm.) It's hard to diagnose this problem by
headlight brightness alone, but for starters, try charging the battery and
repeating the test, or, if that doesn't work, replacing the
battery and repeating the test. If it's still getting brighter as revs
go up, try testing voltage across the battery at ~3,000 rpm... should be
13.8v or so. Less than 13.2 (or more than 14.4) and you probably have
a bad stator (~$300 for a new one, ~$150 to get the old one rewound) or
a bad regulator (prices as noted above.) This probably sounds pretty
involved, and it probably is, if you don't know what you're doing. You
may want to look for a bike that won't require as much work...
taking the bike to a mechanic for a professional diagnosis will cost
you $50-$100 or so, but will help you make that decision. If you have
your heart set on this bike, it's probably worth it; otherwise,
it probably isn't.
Related photos:
[1] Ignition switch
SUSPENSION
- Ask the owner how long it's been since the fork seals have been changed
(miles and/or years.) They should probably be changed every 15-20k miles.
Replacing them is not necessarily a complicated fix, but it is if you don't
have the right tools, and most people don't. (Approximately $100 of parts
-- fork bushings usually get done at the same time -- and 2-3 hours of labor.)
Straddle the bike, grab the front brake, and push down
vigorously on the forks. They should go down and come back up with some
resistance. Do this a few times. Inspect the chromed fork legs.
[1]
They should a) be smoother than a baby's bottom with
absolutely no scratches,
nicks, or roughness, and b) be utterly and totally devoid of little oil
droplets. (Some nicks/scratches/gouges/surface rust can be polished off,
but if they can't, new fork legs can be expensive. Have a professional
mechanic advise you on what the prognosis is.) If, after bouncing the forks,
you see little
rings of dirt, that's probably fine, but wipe them off
with a rag and bounce the front suspension a couple more times.
Not good if you see oil left on the fork legs after you do this.
- Check the steering head bearings and swingarm bearings as mentioned
in the section on centerstand checks, below. (If the
bike doesn't have a centerstand, you might be able to use a jack or work
stand to raise the bike off the ground, but be very careful not to
damage a bike that you don't own.)
- The suspension should move up and down almost silently if you bounce
it up and down. Clunking or squeaking noises are bad. Binding is very
bad. Run away.
- Suspension fluid needs to be changed every year or two, as it tends
to break down and thin-out over time. Ask the owner how long it's been since
the fork
oil has been changed. (The suspension oil in the rear shock of most bikes
isn't generally user-serviceable, but should be changed periodically
by a professional suspension shop nevertheless.)
- Get someone to stabilize the front of the bike, you stand behind
it. Push down on the bike's grab rail (or passenger seat),
hard.
The bike should spring back up, but with a little resistance. If you don't
feel any resistance at all (like you're just pushing down on a spring), it's
time to replace the rear shock. (Reasons: either a seal has failed inside the
shock, or the oil has broken down so much that it doesn't provide useful
resistance.) Around $350 from a dealership, plus 3 hours of
labor to install it. If you're not sure if you'd know a blown rear
shock if you felt one, don't worry about this one. But do this to all
the bikes you look at (including new bikes at dealerships) and you'll
know what a rear shock should feel like.
- As noted in HAS IT BEEN CRASHED?, check to make
sure the fork tubes are straight (not bent) and parallel (not twisted).
Sight down them and pay particular attention to the chrome tubes.
- Certain premium aftermarket suspension units (Penske, Ohlins, Fox,
Race Tech) offer substantially increased suspension performance and are
fully rebuildable. Expect to be asked to pay a little more for these units
(as described in ACCESSORIES, PRICE, and DEALING, below.)
These units also tend to be able to go longer before needing service
compared to stock suspension components. Aftermarket rear shocks often
have remote reservoirs (typically a cylinder "piggybacked" to the main rear
shock body or attached to the frame and connected via a hose), though since
many late-model high-performance bikes come from the factory with
remote-reservoir shocks
[2],
it pays to do a little research to find out whether
the bike you're looking at came with one stock, or had some money put into
upgrading its suspension.
Related photos:
[1] Front wheel, including fork legs
[2] Rear wheel, including location of shock
WHEELS
- Look carefully around the circumference of both sides of both wheels
and look for dents
[1].
Around $100 (each) to get them straightened, plus labor
to get them off the bike, the tires off, the tires back on, and them back
on the bike. Ugh! It's usually easier to tell if the wheels are dented
when they're spinning. So get them up in the air and spin them, if possible.
Remember to check both sides. More on wheel damage at the end of this section.
- Check the speedometer/odometer operation... there are two common designs
of this system... if the bike has a cable that goes from the front axle
(usually on the left side) up into the instrument cluster:
- Get the front wheel off the
ground (see CENTERSTAND CHECKS, below), spin the front
wheel as fast
as you can and see if the speedometer registers anything. If the
speedo needle doesn't rise, check to see if the trip odometer's 1/10th
mile digit has moved after the wheel has spun for a while. If it hasn't,
the speedo is probably disconnected or just doesn't work.
If your bike doesn't have one of these cables off the front axle,
the bike's speedometer/odometer is probably keyed off the countershaft
(transmission output)...
- Get the rear wheel in the air, start the engine, get the bike into
second gear, and let it idle... the speedo needle should rise a bit, and
the odometer digits should scroll slowly. If it doesn't, the speedo/odo
is disconnected or just doesn't work.
If the speedo/odo doesn't work, it's hard to know how many miles are
on the bike, since you don't know how long it hasn't been counting off miles.
Run away!
- Again, if you can get the wheels in the air (see CENTERSTAND
CHECKS, below), see if the wheels spin freely. Wheels that drag could
be either blown wheel bearings or dragging brakes. Some brake drag is
normal, so examine this on a number of bikes and you'll know when
something is out of the ordinary. (In general, though, wheels spun fairly
hard should spin for a couple of seconds before stopping. Rear wheels won't
spin as long, since they'll be giving up some of their energy towards
overcoming chain/belt/shaft friction.)
- If the bike doesn't have a centerstand, and you're feeling physically up
to it, put the bike's sidestand down and pull sideways on the handlebars or
the rear sub-frame to get the bike to pivot on the sidestand and lever a wheel
up into the air. This is a little dangerous -- it's very easy to drop the
bike! -- but not too hard if
you've had some practice. It's the only good way to get wheels in the air
without a swingarm/front-end stand or a centerstand. It is highly
recommended that you have a friend on-hand to help with this.
- If the bike has spoked (rather than cast aluminum "mag") wheels, check to
make sure that the spokes are all there and wiggle them to make sure
they aren't loose. Loose spokes are a sign of neglect.
- If you can get the wheels into the air, spin them, and hold something
rigid against the spokes as they turn -- the handle of a screwdriver
works well for this. (Careful not to scratch the spokes -- you don't own
the bike yet!) The pinging sounds that the spokes make as they strike this
object should sound roughly the same, since, ideally, they're all under the
same tension. A change in pitch indicates spokes of different tightness.
Easily fixed, but a sign that regular maintenance hasn't been performed.
- Magnesium or carbon-fiber wheels require excruciatingly
careful inspection. (And their presence may be a good indication that
the bike has been raced.) These types of wheels are extremely
lightweight, but they tend to crack rather than bend, and cracks can lead
to sudden and catastrophic failure. If you're buying a bike with magnesium
or carbon-fiber wheels, spend some extra time examining the wheels to make
sure there are no cracks. (Unless the seller tells you that the wheels are
magnesium, it'll be hard to tell, since magnesium and aluminum wheels both
look the same when they're covered with paint.) Wheels made by
"Technomagnesio" or "Marchesini" are likely to be magnesium.
Carbon-fiber rims are usually unpainted, as the first law of aftermarket
motorcycle parts is, "Thou shalt show off thy pretty carbon fibers whenever
possible."
Related photos:
[1] Side of bike showing bent front wheel
CHAIN/SPROCKETS (and belts)
- Grab the chain at the rearmost point on the rear sprocket (warning:
greasy!) and pull backwards. If you can pull it off the sprocket enough to
expose half of a sprocket tooth (or more), it's time for a new chain. $100
+ an hour of
labor to install. Some rust on the side plates of the chain is fine, but the
rollers (the round middle part) should be shiny and smooth.
- Sprocket teeth should be absolutely symmetrical -- they'll tend to
get hooked as they wear. Look at some of the exposed teeth from the
side to check the individual teeth for hooking.
[1]
Don't forget to check the front sprocket, too, if visible. (It's
often covered.) Hooked teeth = new sprockets. $60 total for two new
sprockets, plus an hour or so to install.
- If the chain uses a clip-type masterlink, make sure the clip is still
present. (The clip slides over the pins that extend through the sideplate
of the masterlink, and is designed to prevent the sideplate from sliding
off the pins. They're extremely common in aftermarket chains.) Make sure
the closed end of the clip faces toward the direction that the chain rotates
(otherwise it's installed improperly and more likely to fall off.)
- If the bike has a centerstand, put the bike in neutral, raise the rear
wheel in the air, and you can check the chain condition. By spinning the
rear wheel slowly (by hand, never with the engine), you
can feel for tight spots and other problems.
- Except, please, for goodness sake, don't stick anything you care
about (e.g., your fingers) near a moving chain -- plenty of people can't
count to ten anymore because their fingers got mangled when they got pulled
into a moving chain and sprockets. Same goes for belts and pulleys (discussed
below): fingers and moving parts do not mix -- keep
them apart!
Spin the wheel a bit, stop it, check the chain for kinking or tight
spots. Spin the wheel a bit more, repeat. Tight spots and kinked/frozen
links probably indicate the need for a new chain.
If the bike doesn't have a centerstand and you're feeling brave, put
the side stand down and have someone lean the bike over so that the
sidestand is holding the rear wheel
off the ground. (See WHEELS, above.) Then do the
aforementioned test of chain smoothness.
- Most riders tend to have their chain set too tightly, massively
accelerating chain wear and adversely affecting suspension action. With
your friend putting all his/her weight on the seat, the chain should have
at LEAST an inch of play at the middle of the bottom of the loop.
- In response to asking this page's readers how to properly check and
adjust drive belt tension (if the bike uses a belt for its final drive, as
many Harley-Davidsons and Buells do), it seems that belt drive bikes
should come with tension gagues in their toolkit, and that the owners
manual for the bike will explain how to check the belt tension.
(Thank you for that assistance, readers.)
Related photos:
[1] Worn front sprocket
EXHAUST
- Look for holes (from a crash or from advanced rust.) Sometimes
you can hear exhaust leaks, usually as a sort of staccato "chuffing"
sound made as exhaust pulses escape through the rust hole.
- Rust on the exhaust is usually on the surface only, and thus merely
cosmetic, but advanced rust (older bikes?)
may have caused holes in the exhaust pipes, requiring replacement.
It is possible to patch holes in exhaust pipes, but it rarely looks good,
and it also rarely makes sense -- often the pipes rust in
a number of places, not just one. It probably isn't worth it to patch them
all, but that's up to you and your local exhaust shop.
- Exhaust pipes are a common aftermarket accessory... see
ACCESSORIES, PRICE, and DEALING, below.
Loud pipes don't "save lives" (a common motorcycle aphorism),
they attract cops. But they also sound nice.
: )
- If the bike has more than one exhaust cannister, start the engine
and, holding a piece of paper (not your hand) a few inches
back from the exhaust tips, feel to see if the pressure coming from each
cannister is roughly equal. It
should be -- if it isn't, one of the cylinders probably isn't firing.
(You don't want to use your hand for this because if the bike backfires,
anything behind the exhaust pipes is going to get badly burned.)
- This next step is optional and should only be performed if you have
easy and unrestricted access to the exhaust pipes. If you want to try this,
rehearse it with a "dry run" when the engine and the exhaust pipes are cold
-- having your arm halfway trapped in a confined space next to thousand-degree
pipes is not a good situation to get into. (For example, there is definitely
not enough room to reach in and test the exhaust pipes in
photo [1], below.) So:
Be extremely careful with this step, and only do it if you're
confident that you can do this without burning yourself!
Cover your fingers in a folded-up & thoroughly water-soaked paper towel,
and very briefly touch each individual exhaust header pipe
[1],
about 7-9" from where it comes out of the engine. (The header pipes will
potentially be over a thousand degrees, so you don't want to touch the paper
towel to them for long at all! Try to do this shortly after the engine has
been started.) Hissing indicates a hot pipe; a cold pipe (when others
are hot) indicates a cylinder that isn't firing. A variety of things
could cause this -- no spark, clogged carburators, vacuum leak, etc.,
so it's hard to give you an idea of how much it would cost to repair.
Probably between $5 and $200, once the specific problem is identified.
If you're hearing a hissing sound from where you touched the pipes,
and you're not using the wet paper towel trick (mentioned above),
that's your skin that's hissing as it burns -- you're giving yourself
third degree burns, and you should stop immediately.
Related photos:
[1] Header pipes visible
through fairing
ENGINE/FLUIDS/CARBURATORS
- Did the seller warm up the bike before you got there? (See if the engine
cases are warm, but they might be hot, so be careful and don't get burned.
Engines will stay warm for a couple of hours; exhaust pipes get MUCH
hotter much faster but cool quickly.)
A pre-warmed engine might have been started & warmed-up to mask
cold-starting problems, so this might be a good thing to check first...
then you can let the engine cool down as you test other things, and get
back to checking the engine after it's had a little more time to cool. In
particular, if the bike you're going to look as is a kick-start, make sure
you can kick-start the engine when it's cold.
- You'll probably be able to sense heat radiating from a surface before
you actually have to touch it, but when touching potentially hot
surfaces, use the back of your hand. Your body's reflex reaction to
dangerous heat is more likely to pull your hand away if you use the back
of your hand. (But don't get into this situation in the first place! Be
careful around hot surfaces, or surfaces that might possibly be hot. Use
common sense.)
- The engine should start uneventfully (with some choke*, if it's cold)
and sound reasonably good. If you hear obviously bad sound like loud
clacking sounds or sounds like shaking a coffee can full of marbles, run
away and don't look back. The engine should rev smoothly off idle. Don't
redline the thing, but after it's fully warmed up, twist the throttle and
see what happens. Hesitation & stumbling = carburation problems.* A
test ride
will help you gague whether or not these will be easy to live with.
The throttle grip, when released, should snap closed sharply, no
matter how the handlebars are turned. Try turning the bars full-lock left
and right, and test cable action at both extremes as well as in the middle.
Resistance at the extremes but not in the middle is probably just a cable
routing issue. Half an hour of labor -- if that -- to fix. If the cable moves
with resistance everywhere, the problem is probably the carbs, not
the cables themselves. See below. While the bike is running, and in neutral,
turn the bars -- does the engine rev without even twisting the throttle?
Cable routing problem. When you give the throttle a little blip with the
bars turned all the way, does the engine rev and keep revving? Cable
routing problem.
- *=These comments refer to carburated bikes. Some more modern bikes
are fuel-injected: instead of carburators, the
bike is equipped with throttle bodies and fuel injectors. Fuel-injected
bikes sometimes have a "fast idle" lever instead of a choke lever, but some
detect the need for an enriched (choked) mixture by computer, and
automatically adjust the fuel-injection accordingly. You should not
experience any "carburation" problems with a fuel-injected bike, and
if you do, they may be harder to correct than on a bike equipped with
carburators.
- Some bikes use a fuel pump which may need to build pressure before
the bike will start. If you flip the ignition switch to "on" and hear
a whirring sound from the gas tank, wait for it to finish before thumbing
the start button. (If you don't, and you know the bike has a fuel pump,
they're about $100 + 1-2 hours of labor to replace.)
- If the bike has a centerstand, put the rear wheel in the air and try
shifting throught the gears to make sure they all engage properly.
Don't spin the elevated rear wheel too fast -- if the bike
slips off the cenerstand, it'll launch you into next week. Letting the bike
idle and clicking through the gears is fine. Always keep the front brake
applied when doing this, just in case.
- The oil level should be visible through a sight glass or dip-stick,
typically
on the right side of the engine. Make sure the level is between the
upper and lower edges of the glass (or marks on the stick) when the
engine has been off for at least a few minutes and the bike is on level ground.
Way too low or too high is very bad, but just outside the range probably
hasn't caused any damage. The surface level doesn't
have to be right in the middle, but it should be visible through the
glass. See below for color analysis.
Ask the owner when the oil was last
changed. The owner better know. As far as
frequency goes, at least every 5k miles or 6 months is fine, and always
before storing the bike for a while (e.g., before the winter). (As noted
in the section on QUIZZING THE SELLER, this interval only
applies for street bikes -- dirt bikes should get oil changes much more
frequently.)
- Checking oil color... look through the sight glass. If your bike doesn't
have one, you'll need to dip something down into the oil fill-up spot. Either
use a dowel or popsicle stick, or roll up a paper towel. Pull it out and
look at what color you've got:
- honey-colored: very recently changed (fades to black with time/use)
- black: old oil -- ask owner when it was last changed
- white milky streaks: water is leaking into the oil (see below)
- grey oil: lots of aluminum particles in oil (semi-OK on dirt bike, not OK
on street bike)
- shiny metal flecks: run away -- major abnormal engine wear
- If the throttle cable twists with a lot
of resistance (and then won't snap closed), there are a couple of
possibilities, none of which is really good news:
- The carbs may be hopelessly gunked up with gas and varnish.
If the bike won't start, that definitely points to this possibility (rather
than either of the next two.) A good carb cleaning will
either cost around $200 of shop labor or $5 + 1-3 hours of your time,
depending on whether you
have a shop do the work or you do the work yourself. (Warning: not
for the inexperienced or mechanically faint of heart -- there are lots of
small and easily-confused parts -- but if you've done it before, it's not
too bad.)
- The handlebar itself may be slightly bent, preventing the
twistgrip's throttle tube from sliding well. Look very closely --
sometimes it's hard to tell unless you really scrutinize it (or remove
the throttle tube.) Bent handlebars can cost $75 or more to fix, and
are a good indication that the bike was crashed and may have other crash
damage. Be on the lookout.
- The throttle cables may partially seized, or simply routed
improperly. This may mean that the carbs are fine.
It's very hard to check while you're visiting a prospective
acquisition, but try straightening cables or untwisting them and see if
the behavior changes substantially. If straightening them or untwisting them
makes them slide a little easier, they're probably routed around the frame
the wrong way (hamfisted home mechanic alert!), and they can be fixed fairly
easily. If not, new cables will probably run you about $20 each, plus about
half an hour of labor to install.
- Some engines use air and oil for cooling, some are water cooled.
The comments below about checking the coolant or worrying about
coolant in the oil apply only to liquid-cooled models,
not to air- or air/oil-cooled models.
- If the oil has a white streaks in it (look at the sight glass)
that's water -- beware! Water in the oil could be two things --
condensation from the air in the engine, or a leak in the coolant
system that's letting water escape into the lubrication system.
(Guess which one isn't so bad and which one is really bad.)
Condensation will burn off... let the bike run for a while (20-30
minutes?) and see if the white streaks in the oil are gone.
If not, you're probably looking at major engine work to replace
gaskets (or worse.) Side note: two-stroke with milky white oil
can be repaired much easier than four-stroke engines. ("Two stroke"
is an engine configuration, and has nothing to do with how many
cylinders the machine has. Two stroke bikes sound just like chainsaws,
because chainsaws use two-stroke engines.)
- Check coolant level. Find the radiator overflow bottle, and see
if the coolant is between the "high" and "low" lines on the bottle.
If you can't find the coolant overflow bottle, trace the thin coolant
tube back from the radiator cap assembly -- it almost always goes to
the coolant overflow bottle. If the coolant is clear (i.e.,
it's water) or is a light pink, it may be an indication that
the bike has been raced. (Roadracing organizations don't allow the use of
antifreeze, so race bikes run with plain water or plain water with a
product called WaterWetter that makes the water pink.) This does not
apply to dirt racebikes, which will probably have green coolant.
- The coolant itself should be a neon green, not brown or even a
murky green-brown. You'll need to remove the radiator cap to check
the coolant color, something you never want to
do when the engine is still hot. If the radiator cap is hot (be
careful!), do not open it -- come back to this step
later, when the engine's had time to cool down. If you can
safely open it:
- Pure, clear water is bad -- it's at least an indication that the
coolant system has been run without corrosion inhibitors, and also
an indication that the bike may have been raced.
- Pinkish-tinted water is also a possible indication that the bike
has been raced.
- Bright green coolant is good.
- Brown-colored coolant either has rust in it (bad!) or oil in it
(bad!). The former indicates that the insides of the engine have
started rusting -- run away! Oil in the coolant probably
means trouble with the head gasket or the O-rings on the oil cooler
(if the bike has one.) Bad head gaskets is Very Bad, failed O-rings
is only a little Bad. I'd have a professional mechanic look at the
bike so you know which it is. And/or consider giving up and looking at
other bikes.
- Finally, no coolant in the radiator is extremely bad -- run away!
- One other head gasket check... You won't notice this unless you
spend a fair amount of time with the bike, but a partially blown head
gasket will allow the bike to consume coolant over time, which will
gradually lower the coolant level in the overflow bottle. It's OK
for the bike to emit white smoke out the exhaust pipes as it's warming
up, but after it's been running for a while and it's nice & hot,
the exhaust gasses should be invisible. White smoke coming from a hot
bike is a sign that the head gasket is leaking badly.
- Bikes should not emit blue smoke. White smoke (as mentioned
above) is water burning off, blue smoke is oil burning. Why's the oil
burning? Either because the bike is a Harley or because its rings
and/or valve stem steals are worn out. If the bike emits blue smoke,
have a mechanic do a compression test or a leakdown test (see below.)
Or give up and look for other bikes.
- Side note: it is very normal for two-strokes to burn oil and thus
emit blue smoke, since they're designed to be lubricated by oil mixed
into the gasoline. This smoke tends to go away as the two-stroke engine
heats up, but they're often called two-smokes for a reason.
As noted above, two-strokes will sound like chainsaws.
- Needless to say, I should think, fluids leaking from the engine
are a Bad Thing. Probably just new gaskets, but possibly worse. If
you don't feel qualified to decide, I'd recommend having a mechanic
give you his/her opinion, or simply giving up on the leaker.
- Engine compression: engines are basically air pumps, and must seal
tightly to work well. Engines that don't seal well will be hard to start,
will burn oil (blue smoke), and will have reduced power and fuel economy.
Old engines will tend to exhibit this more than low-mileage ones, but
young engines that have been abused may also have low compression numbers.
Unless you know what you're doing, have a shop do a compression test on
the bike. It's not a critical test, but it might give you some
evidence one way or the other if you suspect that the bike may have
been abused.
- Dirt bikes and some older street bikes have kick-starters that enable
you to spin the engine directly. So even if you don't have a compression
tester, you can at least test to see if you can feel some compression.
If you spin the engine with the kick-starter and feel it get substantially
harder to spin at certain points (almost like there there's a "tight spot")
-- that's good: what you're feeling is compression. If you spin the
engine with the kick-start lever and it doesn't really feel like there's
a tight spot, the engine is probably suffering from a serious lack of
compression. Run away, or, if you have your heart set on it, have the bike
checked out by a shop!
CENTERSTAND CHECKS
- If the bike has a centerstand, you can test some other stuff. Put
the bike up on the centerstand, have someone sit (or push down hard)
on the passenger seat so the front wheel lifts in the air, then grab
the sides of the front axle and try to move the front wheel forward
and back (not twisting.) It shouldn't be able to move in this
direction. The front wheel should rotate from full-lock left to
full-lock right without binding (improper cable routing?) or feeling
notchy (worn-out steering-head bearings ... see below.)
- Bad steering head bearings will feel faintly notchy, typically when
the handlebars are centered. Potholes and hard landings (from jumps or
wheelies) can cause little dents in the steering-head bearing races.
These little dents will make the bearing feel notchy as you (slowly) rotate
the bars past the notched point. With the front wheel in the air, move the
bars back and forth slowly, feeling for notches. (Make sure that cables and
control wires aren't causing any irregularities that you may feel.)
If the steering head bearings are notchy, they need to be replaced -- figure
on $60-80 of parts and 2 hours of labor.
- Spin the front wheel and apply the brakes ever so gently.
There shouldn't be a pulsating feeling from the pads. A pulsating
feeling at the lever means new brake rotor(s); a pulsating sound (by itself)
is probably nothing, but it could be an indication that the rotors are
warped, and you should make an effort to test them at speed. Checking the
rotors by spinning the wheel is pretty hard to test reliably, but do your
best. Spin the wheel hard and apply the brakes gently so they
slow down rather than just *stop*. As noted in the section on
brakes, brake rotors are around $150-250 each.)
- Next... put the front wheel back on the ground and grab the rear axle.
Try to move the axle side to side. (You're checking for wear at the
swingarm's pivot.) If things just feel loose back there, figure on
$150 of parts (bearings, seals, etc.) and ~3-4 hours of labor. You
shouldn't be able to move the swingarm side-to-side independent of the
whole chassis. If you can, the swingarm bearings are badly worn.
- Check axle alignment. Hard to do 100% properly without a pair of 8'
straight-edges, but look at the axle alignment marks on the sides of the
swingarm and/or sight down the rear wheel to see if it's in line with the
front one. Not something that's easy to detect, and it'd probably suffice
to just look at the axle adjustment marks on each side (look for hash marks
on the swingarm, right near the axle.) There's a way to
check axle alignment with 10-15' of string, but it's a little hard to
explain. Fortunately, Motorcycle
Online has published a pretty good article on how to do it.
SERVICE
- Ask the owner if the bike has been serviced according the
manufacturer's specifications, and, if so, for service receipts as
verification.
- If you feel uncertain about the bike's condition, it's not unreasonable
to request that the seller take the bike to a mechanic of your choosing for
inspection -- at your expense. It's also not unreasonable to expect that
the seller might to try to sell
to someone who won't make him go through the added hassle of doing this.
- As noted in the FIRST THINGS FIRST section, labor rates
are typically around $50/hour, though factory-trained mechanics for
European marques (BMW, Ducati, Triumph, etc.) might charge a little more.
DIRT BIKES
- Look for cracks and dents on the frame, near the engine mounts. These
can get cracked on bikes that have experienced a lot of hard landings.
- Pay particular attention to bearings (wheel bearings, swingarm
bearings, steering head bearings) -- dirt riding and frequent
post-dirt pressure-washing are a bearing's worst nightmare. Check
them for notchiness, looseness, etc.
- Many dirt bikes will have been raced in local motocross races, so
while the standard caveat about bikes that have been raced still applies,
you may have more trouble finding a bike that has led an easy life.
- Particularly with smaller dirt bikes, you should ask the seller
who the main rider has been -- adults tend to be more gentle with
bikes than kids.
- Ask the seller where the bike was ridden -- sandy/dusty areas may
cause more wear on chains/sprockets/bearings and will require
more frequent air-filter cleanings than an equivalent amount of time
spent riding trails.
- It's usually easy to remove the flywheel cover on two-stroke dirt
bikes (typically on the left side on recent models) -- the rubber
gasket won't be damaged by removing the cover. Pull the cover off
and, grabbing the flywheel, try to move it off its axis. If you can
feel movement, either the flywheel is loose, or the crankshaft bearings
are badly worn. In other words, you may just need to tighten the
flywheel mounting bolt(s), or you may need to have the cases split and
have the lower end bearings replaced. ($40-$70 of parts a couple of
hours of labor.)
- If you take this flywheel cover off and see oil dribbling out, the
crank seal has failed and the engine will need to be disassembled to
fix it. ($30 or so of parts and a couple of hours of labor.)
QUIZZING THE SELLER
- When the seller is going over the bike, giving you his sales pitch,
try to ascertain whether or not this person really cares about
the bike's condition. When you come across something wrong -- say, a
handlebar that got slightly bent in a parking lot tip-over, does the owner
seem to think that it's no big deal and doesn't need to be replaced, or
did the owner point it out himself, and acknowledge the fact that it
needs fixing?
Try to figure out if the owner seems like the kind of bike-savvy person who
maintains his bikes well, or someone that doesn't keep up with scheduled
maintenance and just gets a different bike when he's worn one out.
You can often tell a lot about someone through intuition alone.
Ask the owner:
- Has the bike ever been down?
- If the seller says, "no," but you see evidence of crash damage,
ask the seller to explain.
- Has the bike ever been raced?
- If the seller says, "no," but you see safety wire, tires with
ragged edges, aftermarket case guards, etc., there better be a good
explanation.
- When was the oil last changed?
- Street bike oil should be changed at least every 5000 miles or
six months, whichever comes first.
- Dirt bike oil should be changed after every couple rides, or at least
every couple hundred miles. For dual-sports (on/off road), whether the oil
change interval should be more like a dirt bike or more like a street bike
depends entirely on what percentage of their use was in the dirt.
- What is the maintenance history of the bike?
- Is the bike overdue for regular servicing, like a valve adjustment,
a carb sync, etc? (If the owner hasn't lost the bike's owner's manual, open
it up and look at the maintenance schedule to see if it was followed properly.)
- How old (years & miles) are the tires? Ask the seller if he thinks
the tires are good.
- See the section on tires, above to evaluate their
condition for yourself.
- What modifications were made to the bike?
- Off-road bikes: How often is the air filter cleaned? Replaced?
- Dirt bike air filters should be cleaned or changed frequently, and
fairly proportional to how frequently the bike sees sandy & dusty conditions.
Unless you're looking at a dual-sport (street + dirt) bike, the air filter
should be cleaned or replaced after every couple of rides. Ditto for the
transmission oil.
- Off-road two-strokes: When's the last time the bike got a fresh top end?
- Believe it or not, manufacturers typically recommend that off-road
two-strokes should get a new top-end after every ten hours of use. That's
pretty conservative -- I change everything (pistons/rings/wrist pin/etc)
every 30-40 hours of use, and just the rings somewhere in the middle.
- See the section on dirt bikes, above, for more
questions specific to dirt bikes.
- Come right out and ask the seller:
- Why are you selling the bike?
- Is there anything wrong with this bike?
- Is there anything wrong with it that you haven't pointed out?
- Are there any maintenance/safety issues that I should be aware of if I buy this bike?
- What work would you do on the bike if you were going to keep it for
another year or two?
- Is there any reason I shouldn't buy this bike?
Sometimes the simple act of asking these questions in a very blunt
manner will get the seller to reveal things that they didn't think of --
or didn't plan on mentioning.
- Warning sign: if the seller's main selling point is that the bike is
"really fast", there's a better-than-average chance that you're talking
to someone who abused the bike. Beware.
- Paranoia department: How do you know that the bike actually parts that
the seller claims it has? Be careful, especially if the seller seems
unscrupulous. Just because the seller claims that the bike has MegaPowerBlast
cams (or some other internal part that you're not going to see) doesn't mean
that it does. Ask to see a sales receipt. (Putting an aftermarket
manufacturer's sticker on a stock component is a lot cheaper than buying
the aftermarket upgrade.)
ACCESSORIES, PRICE, and DEALING
- If the owner has lost the owner's manual and/or tool kit, drop a
little money off the price of the bike. They're usually around $15-20
each to replace, and they're definitely nice things to have, particularly
if you're new to riding.
- Similarly, even if you don't plan to do work on the bike yourself,
it's nice to have a service (or "shop") manual, and I'd recommend picking
one up even if the owner isn't selling one with the bike. You can learn
a lot about your bike this way. Factory service manuals are usually the
best, but Clymer and Haynes sell
manuals for most models. Honda publishes
a "Common Service Manual" for all their bikes (excellent and applicable to
other makes too!), and a separate, smaller
publication with specifics for each model. (You'll probably want both.)
- Often times the owner will have added accessories to the bike and
will use them to justify an inflated price at sale time. (This
includes helmets, but see below for those.)
Exhaust pipes are another
common example. The important issue is, would you pay extra for the
accessories? If you don't really care about the accessories, they have no
value to you, and you shouldn't pay more for them. If you want them
(if you value them), only then are they worth paying more for. Note that
"more" doesn't mean "more than the seller is asking", but "more than a
base-line bike without these accessories." If the
seller isn't willing to deal, find a bike that doesn't have said
accessories, and you won't have to pay more for stuff you don't want.
- Some accessories are very nice to have, but you need to make that
decision for yourself. Here are some examples:
- Exhaust: Aftermarket exhausts are generally lighter
and louder than stock. If this is something that interests you (something
you're willing to pay a little more for), find or figure out whether the
aftermarket exhaust is a "full system" (replacement of all the pipes back
from the engine) or a "slip-on" (replaces only the exhaust cannister, not any
of the pipes.) Depending on condition (and whether the jetting is right --
see the section on carburation, above) full systems are
probably worth $100-300, slip-ons are probably worth $50-200.
- Tank "Bra":
Without a tank bra, metal zippers, buckles, buttons, and rivets on pants will
scratch the back-side of the tank. Probably worth around $20.
- Centerstands let you perform some
road-side maintenance that would otherwise be impossible -- but know
ahead of time whether the centerstand is a standard or optional item,
since it'll affect whether the "blue book" price of the bike includes
the centerstand. (Same goes for all these accessories, really.) Probably
worth around $30-50.
- Suspension components are a frequent upgrade. Units from
Penske, Ohlins, Fox (and others) typically perform better than stock
equipment, giving the bike better handling and comfort. Expect
the seller to want a little more for such units. Typically $200-300
more or thereabouts. (Fox shocks are typically $550 new, Ohlins/Penske
units start around $750.) Race Tech sells (among other things) fork
tuning components -- their hardware is likely to be inside the forks,
out of sight. Prices vary substantially -- figure on an extra $50 to $100.
- Extra Storage: Tank
bags are also nice, since they let you carry more cargo.
On the other hand, if that's something you never plan on using, who cares?
Also potentially very nice: "hard" (plastic) or "soft" (nylon/leather)
luggage. Cost will vary with condition, quality, and manufacturer...
tank bags $30-60, soft luggage $80-120, and hard luggage $200-600.
- Modifications: generally, you'd be very wise to stay away from
heavily-modified bikes. Even when done by a competent professional,
high-compression pistons, overbores, high-performance cams, porting,
etc. all lead to reduced engine longevity (or increased maintenance, or
both) in the name of increased performance. When done by
amateurs, these mods are instant engine killers. Make sure you ask the
seller what modifications were made to the bike.
- On price... know what the bike is worth!
Motorcycle Consumer News
publishes a used bike
prices list a couple of times a year. (Or visit the
Kelley Blue Book web site's
Motorcycle
blue book values section, or
NADAguides.com.)
The author has found the Motorcycle Consumer
News/AMA prices to be far more accurate when purchasing from private sellers.
(Regarding the KBB site: used bikes being
purchased from private sellers should be around half-way between the
trade-in/wholesale price and the retail price. Used bikes being sold by
dealers will probably be very close to the retail price.)
Finally, you can also call the American
Motorcyclist Association
(1-800-AMA-JOIN) and purchase their used bike pricing guide. (Cost:
around $9 or $10, I think.)
After you get your bike, consider becoming an AMA member.
- Most used bikes are sold "OBO" ... or best offer. Offer
a little less than how you value the bike (see above), and see if you can
come to an agreement somewhere close to where you value the bike. And
remember, $50 or $100 means very little in the long run. Be flexible.
But don't be afraid to walk away and look at other bikes -- there
are plenty of other bikes out there, and chances are this one will still
be available if you want to come back later. The longer a bike has been
for sale, the more price-flexible the owner is likely to be.
- Bike prices follow the laws of supply and demand like any other good...
in the winter, when no one wants to ride and everyone needs to pay off
Christmas-induced credit-card headaches, bikes are cheaper. In the spring,
"when a young (wo)man's fancy turns to motorbikes," bikes are more expensive.
- You may have your own preferred method for arriving at a number to
offer for the bike, but here's how I do it: take the "blue book" value of
the bike (see above), and deduct the cost of repairs for each problem with
the bike. The used bike buying guides assume a clean, completely functional
vehicle, with appropriate wear and tear for its age. So it makes sense
to deduct the cost of repairs to bring a used bike up to that standard.
If the owner is asking less, great, if the owner is asking more, see if you
can work them down a bit. If need be, explain how you arrived at your
number -- sometimes the owner won't know about problems you've found! (Or
wasn't including them in the price because (s)he was hoping you wouldn't
notice.)
- As noted previously, beware used bike prices at dealerships, and prepare
for sticker shock. A popular dealership local to the author frequently
purchases used bikes for under "blue book" value, and marks them up to
thousands of dollars over that value. When confronted with the fact that
their used bike prices are wildly inflated, they reply, (paraphrased -- barely)
"Eventually someone will give me what I'm asking for it, so why should I
sell it to you for less?" They're not all like this, but dealerships of
this kind are definitely out there: they know that there are plenty of
uninformed buyers out there who just want a bike and don't know what an
appropriate price is. (Shop around and figure out what the going price
is!) The potential plusses that you get from buying from a dealership
are that: 1) at least in theory, the bike has been tuned up prior to
sale; 2) dealerships are typically more willing to fix any
problems that you discover with the thing (inspect bikes thoroughly!);
3) if you're a new rider,
you'll probably need to buy gear, and you can usually get a break on
the price of gear if you also buy a bike from a dealership; and 4) related
to #3, buying a bike from a dealership is a good way to start a long-term
relationship with a them -- just make sure that if you decide to go this
route, that you buy the bike from a good and reputable dealership with
whom you'll want to have a long-term relationship. And now,
the potential downsides: 1) scummy dealerships may not do work
on the bike between buying it and reselling it (yet another reason for
a close and thorough inspection); and 2) many times used
bikes come only with an "as is" (or extremely limited) warranty -- not
any better than what you'd get from an individual, particularly because
your state may have "lemon laws" that give you recourse if the buyer
sells you a bike that doesn't work. (Check with your local DMV or
insurance agent.) The bottom line is that there may be benefits to
buying a used bike from a good dealership, but many dealerships won't
be any better than a private buyer -- and almost all of them (good
dealerships included) will be more expensive. Still, it may pay to ask
around, find the good shops, and see what they have. Just make sure to
give bikes at dealers the same close inspection that you'd give to
bikes being sold by individuals. If you know what you're doing (and
this guide tries to arm you with the requisite knowledge), you have
nothing to fear from going the route of buying a used bike from a
private seller.
HELMETS
- Used helmets are worthless.
Regardless of whether it fits you or
not, do not count the price of a used helmet as part of the value of the
bike. The owner may want to sell the helmet, either because it matches
the bike or because (s)he is quitting motorcycling, but since you'll
be throwing the helmet out (or, at absolute worst, keeping it as a
pillion helmet), don't count its value towards the sale price of the bike.
- Used helmets are worthless because you cannot tell if they are damaged
or not, and in many cases you don't know when they were made.
(Snell-certified helmets should have a date-of-manufacture stamp -- look
for one. It might be under the padded lining.) Even if they
look good, used helmets might well be junk. Motorcycle helmets work
by allowing a layer of expanded polystyrene (EPS) to
crush, absorbing much of the force of an impact. Unless the hard outer shell
is damaged, you cannot tell if the EPS inside is compressed or not.
And even then, sometimes you can't -- covering damage with stickers is
just as common with helmets as it is with plastic fairings.
- Furthermore, EPS becomes more brittle as it ages, and old/brittle EPS
has only a small fraction of the original
impact absorption abilities. And since you may not know when the helmet
was made (who cares when the previous owner bought the thing), you
don't know how "fresh" the EPS is. The EPS layer in helmets is also
highly vulnerable to ultraviolet and chemical damage -- if, for example,
the helmet's owner was in the habit of resting the helmet on the bike's gas
tank, gas vapors from the fill cap have attacked and compromised
the EPS lining. Or if the
helmet was left out in the sun a lot, it could also be damaged from
the ultraviolet component of sunlight. Arai (a leading helmet manufacturer)
cites acidic sweat as a leading cause of premature EPS degradation.
The EPS can also be compressed if the helmet is habitually rested on pointy
objects like mirror-stalks or handlebars. The bottom line is, despite what
the owner says, you do not know what condition the EPS liner is in, and
the EPS liner is the vast majority of the helmet's crash
protection.
- It's not worth the risk. Yes, in some cases, you can
send the helmet back to the manufacturer to have it X-rayed. But that will
only tell you if the EPS liner has been compressed, not if it has been
chemically damaged. Since you'll never know for sure, buy yourself a good
quality new helmet from a good quality manufacturer, and
stay away from used helmets.
- And if you're still thinking of using a used helmet, realize
that helmet fit is one of the most important criteria in selecting a
helmet, and it's highly unlikely that a used helmet will fit you
as well as one you get from a shop, where you actually get to try different
sizes and brands. (Shapes vary subtly by manufacturer; some manufacturers'
helmets will fit you better than others.) And if that isn't enough,
helmets tend to break in as the padded liner conforms to the unique shape
of the wearer's head. You have a different-shaped head than the seller.
Get your head its very own new helmet.
TITLES & PAPERWORK
- Make sure that the VIN number on the bike matches the VIN on
the title. To do this, you'll need to make sure that the seller has the
title on hand when you go to see the bike. If (s)he doesn't, make
sure you check this before you hand over the money.
The VIN is usually marked near the steering head of the bike,
one one of the frame spars, or on the steering head itself.
If the VIN is damaged or appears to have been altered, the bike might
be stolen -- write down the VIN, and see if the DMV or the police can
verify that the bike has not been reported stolen and is registered to
the same person trying to sell it.
- Make sure the bike has a good, clean title. Make sure that the
owner signs the title over to you (on the back). Make sure that the
owner is the seller ... check the name on the title. Make sure there
are no liens on the bike, or if there were, that they've been released
(look for release signatures on the front.) Do not buy a bike with
un-released liens. Bikes with invalid odometer readings are worth
significantly less than the blue book value -- look for a
"999,999 miles - odometer discrepency" (or something similar) on the title.
Same goes for a "salvage" title (it'll be
clearly marked as a "salvage" or "total loss" title.) For a tip-off
that the bike has been painted (possibly to hide damage -- see
HAS IT BEEN CRASHED?, above),
check the bike's color as listed on the title vs what it looks like now.
- Sometimes (not always?!) the DMV will want a "bill of sale" from the
seller to you, indicating the price paid for the bike, the VIN, the date,
the buyer's and seller's names, and the seller's signature. It's far
easier to get this when you're exchanging money than to have to track the
seller down later, so bring some blank paper and write something up. Make
sure it says "bill of sale" and has the date and the seller's signature.
- Sometimes, you'll be tempted to have the bill of sale written up
for a small amount of money ($100?) so the state won't assess you as much
sales tax. Nifty trick, eh? Not so fast... there are two problems with
this. Well, two problems aside from the fact that it's considered
fraud. (In other words, illegal.)
Problem #1 -- if the bike is stolen or totalled, your insurance company
may only have to reimburse you for what you paid for the bike. If you
claim that you bought the bike for $100, and your stolen bike was worth
$5000, guess who's out $4900? (Hint: not your insurance company.) Problem
#2 -- sometimes the state will ignore the stated sale price if it seems too
low, and they'll just go off the blue book value. So you potentially screw
yourself if the bike gets stolen AND you have to pay the full sales tax
anyway. Don't waste your time with this. Be honest.
- Your state's maddening bureaucracy will probably vary a bit --
check with your local registry of motor vehicles and/or insurance.
For example, vehicles in California must stay registered, and the
penalty for not keeping current on the registration can be hefty.
Californian buyers of Californian bikes should make sure that the
registration is current, and if it isn't, have the seller pay to get
the registration current before buying! (The
California DMV can check this for you.)
This was just an example -- even if you don't live in California, it
really pays to know your state DMV's idiosyncrasies.
- Call the local DMV or police department, give them the VIN, and have
them check the vehicle's
title status. Depending on what your DMV will disclose, you may be able
to get the vehicle's whole title history: a record of each time the
bike changed hands, including the date and current mileage at each point.
Or if it's stolen.
You may also be able to find out if this is the original owner or the
fourth person to own the thing. If you're dealing with the
original owner, all you need to worry about is how honest he is and
how well you can inspect the bike. When you're dealing with subsequent
owners, you have no way of questioning them to determine what they
did to it, why they sold it, etc. Buying a used bike is always something
of a gamble, but you'll tend to make better choices the more information
you have. Maybe buying from the second, third, or fourth owners is OK
with you -- maybe you don't trust your bike inspection skills quite so
much and would prefer to buy a bike that hasn't gone through so many hands.
Maybe you'll even decide that you'd feel more comfortable buying a new
bike. That's fine. It's your money, so the decision is entirely up to you
and what you feel comfortable with. (See the section on
QUIZZING THE SELLER, above, for more questions to
ask the seller.)
- The seller may very well insist on keeping the license plate if, for
example, it needs to be turned in to officially cancel the insurance on
the bike. This is not an unreasonable request.
- Laws vary a bit from country to country -- for example, in some countries,
liens are not listed on the title. (Canada is one example.) Check
with the government's motor vehicle registration authority, your bank,
your insurance agent, etc., to find out how to do a search for
existing liens. This may cost extra money, and you may just want to
have the seller certify (on the bill of sale, perhaps, but definitely
in writing) that the bike is free and clear of liens.
TEST RIDE
- Most sellers probably won't give you a test ride for liability
reasons, but bring riding gear just in case. You can learn a lot
about a bike from a quick test ride, things you'd never notice by even
the most thorough inspection. Sometimes sellers that won't give you a
test ride will let you ride the bike once you've purchased it, with a
money-back guarantee if you don't like it. In Massachusetts, riding a
bike that you just purchased is illegal (unless somehow you already
have insurance & plates for the thing), but if you're willing to break
the law, you can learn a lot from a quick, clandestine spin around
the block.
- Different areas will have different laws. For example, it may
be possible to get single-day insurance and plates for a bike for the
purposes of test-riding it. Ask your insurance agent and/or local
government motor vehicle department to find out whether or not something
like this is possible.
- It's a good idea to do the test ride last, after you've had a chance
to go over the whole bike, since you won't want to ride a bike with
safety problems. Don't ride the bike until you're satisfied that it's
safe to ride.
- Plus, if you look the bike over, like what you see, the price is right,
and you plan to buy the bike, you might be able to convince the seller that
you plan to purchase the bike if you can test ride it, and that (s)he may
lose a sale if you aren't allowed to. Unless you're really serious about
not buying the bike unless you can go on a test ride, don't give the seller
an ultimatum, since many sellers won't be flexible on the issue of test rides.
If you've spent a long time going over the bike and the seller thinks you're
serious, you stand a better chance of the seller letting you test ride the
bike. In short, the time to ask for a test ride is after you've looked it over.
- But just because you've looked it over, that doesn't mean it's safe.
Give it another check, this time from the mindset of checking something
that you're about to ride. Any screws loose? How's the chain? Are the
tires inflated properly? There are many more things to check than can
possibly be listed here -- the point is, do a thorough pre-ride
inspection on this vehicle and make sure it's safe to ride before you
trust it with your life.
- Ok, so you've done a pre-ride inspection. But you're still
going to be riding an unfamiliar bike, so take it easy and
don't do anything stupid. The brakes, for example, might be poorly
adjusted and extremely abrupt. (And crashing a test bike is a virtual
guarantee that you're going to buy the thing.) This guide cannot possibly
warn you about all the dangers that you might face riding someone else's
motorcycle. Be extremely careful, and don't test ride a bike if you aren't
comfortable with its mechanical condition or behavior. Test rides are done
at your own risk.
- What you're looking for on a test ride:
- Engine/Clutch/Brake Operation: see how it revs, how the clutch
feels, how well the brakes work, etc. It's very difficult to detect warped
brake rotors unless you can get the bike up to speed, so here's your chance:
Find a place where it's safe and legal to get the bike to highway speeds
(55-65 mph) and and do a gradual (but firm) stop using the front brake only.
If you felt a pulsing at the brake lever when you tried this, the rotors are
probably warped. Repeat the test using only the rear brake. Be extremely
careful not to lock it up -- allow for a much longer stopping distance, and
stop much more gradually.
- Strangeness... strange wobbles or thumping, having to hold the
bars a little bit to one side to get the bike to go straight (a sign of
crash damage!), etc... Some shaking is to be expected, but look for shaking
that goes up and down with road speed (problems with tires/wheels?), rather
than shaking that goes up or down with engine speed. It's usually very hard
to detect this stuff without very smooth pavement, so go find some.
- Do you want it? It can take a while to get comfortable
with a bike. Nevertheless, to the extent possible in the
short time that you're getting to ride this machine, try to answer some
very important questions: "Is this the bike that I want to buy?" "Do I
feel comfortable with this bike?"
- Another thing you can test is transmission operation...
- When testing the transmission, realize that problems often
manifest themselves as an inability to shift or as "false neutrals,"
where power delivery through the transmission will be cut, just like the
transmission doesn't output power when it's in the real neutral that
usually lies between first and second. False neutrals can be
dangerous, because the transmission can re-engage without warning,
possibly locking the rear wheel and sending you flying off the bike.
Forewarned is forearmed. Be careful.
- Does the bike shift well through the gears? Make sure you go up
and down through all of them to make sure they all work. The hardest gear
change is 1->2, since the change in gear ratio is the largest. If the
bike won't shift well from first to second, the transmission could
need some work, and that's pretty major. (Tip: don't be accelerating
really hard when you try the 1->2 shift, since that's how it gets
damaged in the first place.)
- Does the bike pop out of gear under moderate to hard acceleration?
Don't accelerate abruptly on a test ride until you're very comfortable
with the bike's power delivery -- you don't want to crash the thing.
If possible, take the bike somewhere where you can go highway speeds,
and try accelerating with medium throttle in each gear. If the bike
slips out of gear (into neutral or a "false neutral") on hard
acceleration, the transmission's dogs or shift forks are badly worn
and the engine will need to be disassembled to fix the problem. In
the vast majority of cases, transmission repair is a very expensive
and time-consuming fix. Unless you have a very good reason to need
this bike, go find another one.
- Does the bike pop out of gear under engine braking? Pay particular
attention to second and third gears, but start in the bike's top gear.
While travelling in a straight line, and at approximately half-redline
in top gear (but not in excess of local speed limits) close the throttle
quickly (but smoothly) and see if the bike pops into neutral. Downshift
quickly (but smoothly) and try in the next gear down. Repeat in each
gear until you're just putting along in first gear.
- If the owner won't let you test ride the bike but it has a centerstand,
you can get the rear wheel off the ground with the centerstand, start the
bike, get it into second gear, rev it up to half redline,
lightly apply the rear brake to load the engine a bit, give
it enough gas to maintain half-redline engine RPM, release the
throttle, and firmly apply the rear brake to stop the rear wheel and stall
the engine. If, in addition to stalling, it pops into neutral, BAD SIGN --
the gear dogs are badly worn. (Major transmission work.) Feel free to
repeat this test with a little more rear brake if you went a little too
light on the rear brake the first time.
- Side note one: this test relies on a functional rear brake, and is
going to get said rear brake HOT. Don't touch any exposed brake parts after
you try this.
- Side note two: two-strokes have essentially no engine braking due
to the way their engines are designed. Don't expect any.
- Is it easy to find neutral when coming to a stop? If not, you could
have a frustrating time approaching stop lights, and the problem might
cost a lot to fix.
AFTER THE PURCHASE
- Have a professional mechanic do a full tune-up on the machine.
- Why? Well, since you're probably not a professional, trained mechanic,
there are probably people out there more qualified than you to make sure
the bike is in top condition and safe to ride. Don't be offended; the author
isn't a professional mechanic either. Spend a little money and let a
professional certify that the bike is safe to ride.
- Ask friends, other bikers, and/or Internet forums for recommendations
on dealerships with good/honest service departments.
- Get the bike insured and registered. Never ride without health insurance
and vehicle insurance.
- Take it easy as you get used to a new machine. Respect your
bike's power and abilities and get used to it slowly.
The Hurt Report shows that the majority
of motorcycle accidents happen within the first 5 months of ownership.
- Congratulations! Enjoy your new bike!
INFO FOR NEW RIDERS
("The preachy part.")
- Go to a dealership and sit on a lot of bikes to feel what sort of
riding position you like. Think about the kinds of bikes that are
available, what you're interested in, and what you're willing to pay.
- A series of free brochures is available from an industry-sponsored
council called "Discover Today's Motorcycling"... call 1-800-833-3995
to get them. The brochures cover types of bikes, financing, safety, etc.
- Generally speaking, it's good to start out with a smaller,
lighter-weight used bike rather than buying the latest, coolest,
fastest, sexiest bike new. Motorcycling is a passion you can
pursue for many, many
years -- don't scare yourself silly with a bike that's not meant for
beginners. New riders should probably start with a four-cylinder bike
of less than 600cc's, or a twin-cylinder bike of less than 750cc's.
New riders should probably stay away from two-stroke bikes (a
different engine technology, typically not found on street bikes after
the 1985 model year.) Sportbikes tend to have a lot of expensive plastic, and
plastic tends to break when bikes fall over. Almost everyone drops
their first bike, usually more than once. This can get very expensive if
your bike is covered in breakable plastic bits. (Don't get depressed if you
drop your new bike -- think of it as joining the club of experienced
bikers.)
- Long diatribe on what's wrong with many (not all!) dealerships:
Not many people seem to stick around in the motorcycle industry -- on
either side of the counter -- and this will probably have an enormous
impact on your experience with
dealerships. Even if the salesmen you encounter at dealerships aren't
working on commission, the only reason they're willing to work for slave
wages is that they're young guys who are into bikes -- and they don't plan
to be salesmen
forever. As a result, they don't even think about building relationships
with customers -- they just want to sell bikes. Which is only fair, because
a lot of their customers don't care about the relationship either; they just
want the latest fastest prettiest bike with the hot accessories. The bigger
and more powerful bikes tend to have a higher profit-margin (difference
between what the dealer buys them for and sells them for.) So dealerships
will not look kindly on employees who try to talk novice riders out of
bikes that will be dangerous for them (the big, powerful ones) in favor of
good beginner bikes, because even if the salesman isn't making more money
(in commissions) selling the higher profit-margin bikes, the dealership
definitely is.
And so many salesmen at scummy dealerships will tend to push you towards
more powerful, expensive bikes. (Or, at the very least, not dissuade
customers who -- for whatever reason -- want the most powerful thing
available.) The dealerships need high margins to stay in business in an
industry with low volume, and a lot of them need that high profit margin
that comes from the bigger bikes. When you never see most of your customers
again, it's easy to justify trying to maximize profit-per-interaction rather
than trying to build a long-term relationship that might be safer for the
customer or potentially generate a greater total profit.
The bottom line is, their idea of a good bike for you is probably
based on a different set of priorities than yours. Don't let them
dictate your choice or talk you into something you don't want. Do your
own research and make your own informed decision. As far as new
vs used goes, it's probably wise for first-time riders to start with a
used bike anyway, so when -- er, I mean if -- your bike tips over,
there's less heartbreak.
- The counterpoint to this is the following: they're not all like this.
find a good dealership and form a relationship with them. Talk to
other bikers or folks on the 'net and get recommendations.
Unless you've been doing this this for a long time and have a lot of
money to spend on very specialized tools, you will almost certainly
want to have a local shop that you can turn to when the bike isn't
running right. It's true that you will pay a little more for stuff at
a dealership, but in return, you're sure to get
the right stuff, you don't pay "shipping & handling", and you foster
good relations with the shop -- you'll have somewhere to go when you
need help. Bike shops are run by people and generally
act like people -- the nicer you are to them, the nicer they'll be to you.
Just find one that you like, one that's honest and fair, and treat them
the same in return. Don't support dealerships that are dishonest, take
advantage of inexperienced riders, etc. Vote with your wallet. Let the
scumbags go out of business.
- Get (and wear) good gear! Statistically speaking, you're most likely to
crash in your first five months of riding. That's the time when you
need the best safety gear!! Don't blow all your cash on a bike and
only have enough money left to buy the minimum safety gear required by
law. Wear pants, jacket, helmet, and gloves that were designed for
motorcycling. Plenty of gear looks the part but doesn't act the part
-- avoid "fashion weight" leather. Windbreakers offer zero
protection in a crash. And don't think that just because
you're taking a short trip to the store, that you don't need your
safety gear. Most motorcycle accidents happen during short
trips! Don't let your guard down just because the gear seems
inconvenient.
- Take safety seriously. An oft-repeated motorcycle-industry aphorism is:
- "There are two kinds of riders in the world ... those who have
gone down, and those who are going to go down."
If (when?) it happens to you, make sure you're wearing good gear. On a
related note, here's a summer-oriented aphorism:
- "If it's too hot to wear your safety gear, it's too hot to ride."
- Don't ride without a valid motorcycle operator's license -- in most
cases this will allow your insurance company to weasel out of covering you
for any damage you cause in an accident. No insurance coverage means the
other guy's lawyers come after you directly. Got $300,000 to spare on
litigation? Not fun. Get your license!
- US riders: if you haven't already, take a Motorcycle Safety Foundation
(MSF) course. Call 1-800-446-9227 or visit
http://www.msf-usa.org/.
In many states, taking the MSF class counts as an approved "driver's ed"
class, dropping insurance for your bike (and your car) by 10% or more!
- If you don't live in the US, make an effort to track down
a local organization that trains motorcyclists. (For example, in Canada,
this is handled either by local colleges or the
Canadian Safety Council.)
- US motorcyclists: join the American Motorcyclist Association. They're
the only organization that monitors legislative efforts nationwide and
alerts us to pending laws that threaten our riding freedom.
Call 1-800-AMA-JOIN or visit
http://www.ama-cycle.org/.
- Ride like the cages ("cars") are trying to kill you.
You never know when some idiot will pull out in front of you, claiming
that they never saw you. Ride like you're invisible, because the cage drivers
are blind. It's up to you to keep yourself out of accidents, so keep
your skills sharp and always be alert.
- A very partial listing of good starter street bikes... (See Beginner Bikes magazine for a bunch of other good suggestions.)
- Honda Nighthawks and the CB series (but not the CBR series), Rebel 250 (cruiser, low seat-height), Hawk GT, XL and XR-L series
- Suzuki GS series (particularly the GS500) (but not the GSX or GSX-R series), Bandit 400, SV650, DR series, LS650 Savage
- Kawasaki EX500 or EX250
(slightly sporty; called the Ninja 500R and Ninja 250R in recent
years), LTD250 (cruiser, low seat height), KLR series
- Yamaha XS/XT series, Seca, Seca II
- Buell Blast
(Model codes will vary from country to country -- these are US model codes.)
- Military pilots don't start flying on the latest fighter jets,
they spend years training on equipment that's easier to control.
Don't end up a smear on the pavement because you wanted to skip ahead
to the advanced part. Focus on building your skills and honing
your reactions and you'll survive long enough to be a fighter pilot.
- "All the enthusiasm, intelligence, and good intentions in the world
don't qualify you to fly an F-16 without training." Anon
- Example: the author of this page rides a CBR900RR these days:
a very fast and very plastic-covered sportbike. But it is also his
8th motorcycle -- his first one was an 250cc cruiser. And the CBR900 was
purchased after he'd been riding for 6 years. There's nothing stupid about
learning to ride on a relatively nonthreatening bike. There's everything
stupid about buying something that you don't know how to control, wadding it,
and hurting or killing yourself in the process.
- Stop to help other bikers that look like they need
help, even if you're in your cage. Cagers definitely don't look
out for bikers, so it's up to us to look out for each other.
- And by the same token, wave to your fellow riders. Camraderie is
one of the things that makes riding fun.
INSPECTION PICTURES
Some miscellaneous pictures of where things are & what
they look like...
(diagrams coming soon!)
- FRONT WHEEL:
one
two
three
- Pictures of the front wheel area -- the lower fork leg, brake caliper,
brake rotors, caliper mounting bolts, front axle, rim, tire, etc.
- REAR WHEEL:
one
two
three
- Pictures of the rear wheel and swingarm -- brakes, chain/sprocket,
exhaust pipe and cannister, rear shock, etc.
- TIRE DATE CODES:
one
two
three
- Pictures of what tire date code stamps look like, and how to
read them.
- SIDES:
one
two
three
four
five
six
- Pictures of the sides of the bike -- the clutch cover, oil sight
glass, rear brake lever, exhaust pipe, clutch cable, frame, engine, etc.
- TOP:
one
two
three
- The pilot's view -- the instrument cluster, triple clamps, ignition
lock, levers, etc.
- MISC:
worn sprockets /
race tire #1 /
race tire #2
- Miscellaneous pictures of stuff.
RECOMMENDED READING
- OEM Factory Publications (get these from your motorcycle dealer)
- the owner's manual -- lots of useful information contained
herein -- if the previous owner lost it, get a new one!
- the service/repair manual -- even if you don't plan to rebuild
your engine, this book shows how to take everything apart -- and,
when you can't figure it out yourself -- how it all goes back
together. Highly recommended! (You can also get the Clymer or
Haynes
manuals if you can't afford the factory manual, but, in my opinion, the
factory service manuals are the best.)
- Motorcycle Owner's Manual by Hugo Wilson (ISBN: 0789416158)
- A wonderful little paperback for new riders -- everything
they didn't tell you in the factory owner's manual. Complete with diagrams
and useful service tips. Published by the same company as (and kind of with the same feel as) The (New) Way Things Work. Very highly recommended!
- The Complete Idiot's Guide To Motorcycles by Motorcyclist Magazine, Darwin Holmstrom, and Jay Leno (ISBN: 0028642589)
- (Darwin, indeed...) I'll avoid commenting on the title, but
only because this is a surprisingly good book. If
you could only buy one book on this list, this would probably be the one
I'd recommend. The Motorcycle Owner's Manual (above) is much
better guide to maintenance -- The Complete Idiot's Guide is a little
phobic about maintenance. Still, I'd consider it an essential book
for anyone new to motorcycling. (Seasoned veterans will find the material
in this book a bit remedial.)
Highly recommended!
- The Motorcycle Safety Foundation's Guide to Motorcycling Excellence
edited by Nate Rauba and by the Motorcycle Safety Foundation (ISBN: 1884313019)
- Not a substitute for taking an MSF class, but a guide to gaining
the skills required to save your hide in the insanity of today's roadways.
- Sportbike Performance Handbook by Kevin Cameron (ISBN: 0760302294)
- Highly technical, but Kevin will tell you how it all goes together.
Not recommended as initial reading, but if you really want to know the
technical details of how it all works, buy this book. Very highly recommended!
- Motorcycles: Fundamentals, Service, Repair by Bruce A. Johns and David D. Edmundson (ISBN: 0132258897)
- A textbook for a course on how to repair bikes. A good book for
advanced-beginner mechanics looking to become more competent.
- The Complete Guide To Motorcycle Mechanics (ISBN: 0132258897)
- Also highly technical, but useful for those who want to get
really good.
- How to Set Up Your Motorcycle Workshop by Charlie Masi (ISBN: 1884313043)
- Useful for the do-it-yourselfer looking for tips on how to best
set up a home bike-repair workshop
- The Complete Motorcycle Book: A Consumer's Guide by Jim and James
Bennett (ISBN: 0816031819)
- Proficient Motorcycling by David Hough (ISBN: 1889540536)
- Even experienced riders can benefit from this book.
OTHER WEB SITES
Good luck, and "keep the shiny side up!"
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