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MXR ride review, ride #1
Tomahawk MX Park, Hedgesville, West Virginia, USA
I took my MXR out to a practice track yesterday for it's maiden voyage. 1.5 mile long track, lots of natural elevation change, a fairly 50/50 mix of loamy and and hardpack. For myself I'm a lightweight at 160-165 in street clothes, I'm 41 and would say I'm only slightly above average in my MX skills than your normal track rat. I started out in map 1 for the 1st 15 minutes, I was actually surprised map 1 did as well as it did on the track, but it is only good for "feeling the track out" IMO. Map 2 I used for the rest. I briefly did some time in 3 and 4 but quickly realized they were totally unnecessary for my ability and the track. I could see if you were on a tight supercross style track and needed that extra "shot out of a cannon" acceleration, but for a wide open outdoor track I don't see the need. Again though, I'm pretty light.
I got about 45 minutes of time and was down to 25%. I wasn't riding flat out 100% of my rides however I wasn't riding it any different than I would ride my gas bikes, which for me is what was important. I decided to throw it on the charger at 25% and took the opportunity to check spokes, bolts (check your seat bolt guys), tire pressure, sag, have a sandwich, etc. I already had a 240v generator for at home so I brought it with to charge. By the time I was done goofing around checking the bike over and making adjustments I was back up to 100%. If you have a generator and throw it on between practices you can easily ride all day long without worry.
The bike is excellent, I love the silky smooth power. You get into a groove and lay on it and it just glides. In the air it reminds me of my 125 from years ago, very responsive to throttle/brake input. I never liked how my big thumpers felt in the air compared to a 125 in that regard and this bike acts just like that little smoker. No clutch or gear selection to think about, no power curve to manage, just concentrate on throttle control and body position and have fun. I'll be doing a mix of track/trail riding this season so I'll try and keep everyone updated on my experiences. So far so good!
Tomahawk MX Park, Hedgesville, West Virginia, USA
I took my MXR out to a practice track yesterday for it's maiden voyage. 1.5 mile long track, lots of natural elevation change, a fairly 50/50 mix of loamy and and hardpack. For myself I'm a lightweight at 160-165 in street clothes, I'm 41 and would say I'm only slightly above average in my MX skills than your normal track rat. I started out in map 1 for the 1st 15 minutes, I was actually surprised map 1 did as well as it did on the track, but it is only good for "feeling the track out" IMO. Map 2 I used for the rest. I briefly did some time in 3 and 4 but quickly realized they were totally unnecessary for my ability and the track. I could see if you were on a tight supercross style track and needed that extra "shot out of a cannon" acceleration, but for a wide open outdoor track I don't see the need. Again though, I'm pretty light.
I got about 45 minutes of time and was down to 25%. I wasn't riding flat out 100% of my rides however I wasn't riding it any different than I would ride my gas bikes, which for me is what was important. I decided to throw it on the charger at 25% and took the opportunity to check spokes, bolts (check your seat bolt guys), tire pressure, sag, have a sandwich, etc. I already had a 240v generator for at home so I brought it with to charge. By the time I was done goofing around checking the bike over and making adjustments I was back up to 100%. If you have a generator and throw it on between practices you can easily ride all day long without worry.
The bike is excellent, I love the silky smooth power. You get into a groove and lay on it and it just glides. In the air it reminds me of my 125 from years ago, very responsive to throttle/brake input. I never liked how my big thumpers felt in the air compared to a 125 in that regard and this bike acts just like that little smoker. No clutch or gear selection to think about, no power curve to manage, just concentrate on throttle control and body position and have fun. I'll be doing a mix of track/trail riding this season so I'll try and keep everyone updated on my experiences. So far so good!