This is a re-post from another thread, but my motorbike story (ups and downs of the experience)...
Suzuki GSXR600 SRAD (Much loved and missed - nothing on 4 wheels can compete with that feeling, that I've experience anyway)...
Year 1: crashed into a brand new golf, head on. My fault. Wrote the car off. Took the bike home and rebuilt.
Year 2: crashed, car door opened in front of me. Not my fault. Took the bike home and rebuilt to give:
Add... nice thing was the modding. The fairing and tank shown above cost under £400 (IIRC). GSXR750 upside-down forks, about £75 in bits and £150 for pro rebuild. Upgraded brakes - GSXR1000 master cylinder and TL1000 calipers (front) + EBC disks, pads and braided hoses (mmm-five can tell you how many days that takes on a car!). Bolt on BlueFlame twin port exhaust.
Year 3: crashed, not my fault, but interesting... woman stopped at a junction on my side of the road, waiting to turn right. I'm 200 yards away, she nudges out then stops. Waiting for me. I slow slightly and move to the right of the lane. 5 yards away from the car, she pulls out, into me! Turns out she was watching the cars from the other direction. Bike written off
Enough. Motorbiking was clearly not for me! There is nothing close for speed and feel / feedback - I have heard a few of the former F1 drivers in interviews saying that they ride bikes as it's the only way they can get close to the F1 experience in terms of involvement. That's not speed, but feel and involvement.
If I was going to get another I'd get a BatBike... KTM Duke II:
Different, but can mix it up with the best of them on B roads.
I was not a great biker. The problem I think is that, same as cars, you need to learn the fundamentals for a year or so on <=400cc. But how do you resist =>600cc? You can't. On balance, I'd say no, don't do it. There are other things out there.
If you do get one, full leathers all year round, decent boots and CE armour in everything!