Thanks for the replies. All very informative, I'm learning a lot.
I recently spent hours reading thru many of the threads on these forums, and I'm not the first to ask initial maintenance questions (I know, I should've done that first DOH! sorry).
I learned I should use regular oil for the first several oil changes, to allow the engine to finish breaking in, then later switch to full synthetic oil. I downloaded all the service manuals to my laptop, and have been reading them. The english is pretty funny, but the illustrations are excellent, detailed enough for most people, so even though I'm a computer geek, I'm thinking of giving the whole mechanic thing a try... will probably spill oil on the cat...
I just had an idea! Since other scooter owners have learned to do it themselves, maybe I should find a local scooter group in my area, and start riding with them. There are probably several riders that offer to do the valve job at very reasonable rates... I like this idea a lot. I no longer trust the dealer. I did google for riding groups in my area, there are several motorcycle groups that welcome scooters, but no scooter groups, so I think I'll go ahead and change both oils this week, then join a group for a ride this weekend. Hopefully I'll make some new friends, and after a few rides, find somebody that does side work on scooters. I'll be careful to join for the right reason, to make friends, and not just to find a mechanic! Since I'm new to this area, I need friends anyways, so this could be good
btw the whole speedometer thing being off was annoying at first, but I've gotten used to it already. There is a permanent speed trap/radar indicator nearby, that flashes when people are speeding, the zone is 35 mph, when the scooter indicates 45 mph, the sign flashes 37 mph, so I know it's off. Since I always ride with the flow of traffic (my speed racer days are over), I'm not too worried about an accurate speedometer. There are replacements/add-ons you can get, but I don't need it.
Another thought, for the cost of a normal $200 maintenance session, I could probably buy some of the tools I need to do most maintenance on the bike. I think I'll start a new thread, to determine what tools a noob should buy...
Cheers