Nervous 1st Timer
Good luck with this. My 54 years riding makes me think you're going to need it.
Long as there's no wetness, gravel or anything else to worry about, there's no risk in using the front brake stopping - I do it all the time. The trick is to straighten up; stopping in a turn involves unnecessary risks.
LOL, completely kidding...that took some guts. Like a few others expressed here, you SHOULD be nervous.
Though the horse is out fo the barn, I think this needs to be emphasized for any other newbies who read this thread.
A well used bike smaller as a starter for a couple of years is honestly what I think anyone should do. For one, the lack of experience will add complexity/danger to starting off with a big and relatively powerful bike. Second, you actually don't know if you are going to love it as much as you thought you would when you pulled the trigger and a new bike is a big investment. Third, on an inexpensive used bike you can dump the thing in the driveway and not care. Fourth, I don't know anyone that has lost any major ching holding a used bike for a year or two and then moving up. I started with a Yamaha Vstar that was ten years old. I put 8k on it and sold it for $200 less than I got it for, even after rashing the fender in a man/bike meets gravel incident. Yes, I paid for maintenance in the two years that I might not have paid on a new bike, but that's the cost of riding a cycle.
It is well and good for all the folks on here that said "I did it and it worked out for me", but you aren't them and, as the commercials say, your results may vary, lol. I've watched a guy climb on to his bike for the first time, rev it too hard, accidentally let go of the clutch, roar out his driveway and drive directly into a neighbors tree in the middle of their lawn across the street. He'd ridden before, too. True, he was an idiot....but it happens.
Maybe I am just too conservative...with my cash and my life, lol.
All that being said, I applaud you for rethinking the situation a bit, lol, and waiting to take the MSF course before riding is a great idea. I hope they loan you the bikes for the intro class as they do here in CT. Take the class, keep your wits about you and practice, practice, practice on the back roads and the parking lots before you go mixing it up in busy traffic. Know your limits, know when you are tired, know when to roll it back into the garage.
Please do not take a passenger on the back of the bike until you've had at least a year under your belt. You need to make sure you have the experience to handle yourself on the bike before you take someone else aboard.
Have a blast and enjoy your new scoot...i wish I had gone with an SG! Let us know how it goes for you.
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