A little background... some of you know who I am, most probably do not. I have a spinal cord injury that prevents me from shifting gears with my foot. As such, I am relegated to riding scooters which is not a bad thing as I LOVE riding them. I have owned a Honda Ruckus 50cc, a Genuine Blur SS220i, a 250cc Honda Reflex and though not a scooter, a Can AM Spyder RT-S (paddle shift). I was hit by a truck on July 16, 2013 which totaled my 2012 Kymco Like 200i... and nearly totaled me. Broken collar bone, broken shoulder blade, torn tendon in my right shoulder and banged up overall. During the course of examining me for injuries from the wreck, they found out I have thyroid cancer. One surgery down, one more to go and then iodine treatments. I am healing up slowly but surely but still have a ways to go before I am back to "my normal" self.
That being said, the other guy's insurance is settling up on the scooter and all my broken equipment and I will be buying a new bike. It will be a 2014 Honda CTX700 DCT motorcycle. This is a 670cc cruiser style bike that has no foot shifter, can be ridden fully automatic where it does all the shifting on its own or I can use paddle shift. I never knew this bike existed until a few days ago. I am very excited about it.
So my scooter days are over and I will miss my Kymco Like 200i (may it R.I.P.), but I am looking forward to riding a powerful motorcycle again (haven't been able to do so for 23 years now)! I have enjoyed this forum and the kind folks that utilize it. Thank you all!
In case anyone is interested in the Honda automatic bikes, they are the CTX700 DCT (cruiser style) and the NC700X DCT (adventure style). DCT stand for Dual Clutch Transmission which is what does the shifting on the 6 speed gear box. The bikes are also chain drive and since it is a motorcycle, the maintenance schedule isn't nearly as frequent as a scooter. 8,000 mile oil changes, woohoo!
EDIT: Once all the legal stuff is over with, I will post the full video of my wreck. Your jaw will drop. No time frame for this, though.