Hi folks...been lurking for a while - nice little community going here. I'm new to scootering but not new to riding. I had a Honda Nighthawk 750 for a couple of years and enjoyed it but am looking for something different. I'm liking the idea of a scooter for occasional commuting (about 25 miles each way, 60/40 highway / back road) and weekend touring solo and two-up.
In doing a ton of internet reading, I really like what Kymco has to offer in the middleweight maxi-scoot class...the DT300i is really sweet, but the Xciting 250 looks good, too. I found a dealer (about 140miles away) that had listed on Cycletrader a brand new Downtown 300 for $4499 - $1100 off msrp! I contacted them right away, but of course, they are sold out. This dealer also happens to have a couple of left-over 2009 Xciting 250s in stock...for $3495. That's a pretty sweet price for a new scooter with full warranty. So I'm thinking this is the way to go...BUT - I've never even sat on one of these, let alone test ridden one. So I have to make my decision based on third person written and video reviews I find on the web.
So here are my questions: I am 5'8" about 160lbs with a 30" inseam. Am I going to fit comfortably on this bike? My wife is about 115lbs...so with two-up that's ~275lbs on the bike...how will the 'little' 250 perform?
In general, what do you like (or dislike) most about your xc250? As I said, if I buy it I'm doing it sight unseen, so I want to have as much info as possible before I pull the trigger.
You will have NO issue fitting the both of you on the bike. I'm 5'11", usually around 200lbs and another
one of me could fit on the back seat without a problem.
I WOULD however be concerned about performance, coming from a more powerful bike.
Bare in mind that the XC250 is a very big and heavy scooter, so it's performance is among the
slowest 250cc scooters. If you can live with this, you'll be fine, but forget about overtaking
over 55-60mph (when alone), and overtaking at ANY speed 2 up.
While the XC will do an indicated 80-82mph, what you also need to know is that it will hit the
redline around 68-69mph (at least the one I tried did) so If you want to be 'safe' your commute
might take a bit longer then expected. I wouldn't do over 65mph on it for long periods of time,
and that's rather slow for open roads.
That said, I've seen people keep the throttle pinned for years and have no issues.