With my CB125F over bumps I seem to not be able to control the throttle very well so I surge back and forth with the engine braking/accelerating etc.
Really dents my confidence on the manual geared bike when I am jerking along the road!

I'll try it, thanks!Ralph wrote:If you are gripping the twist grip with your hand try putting your hand on top of the twist grip with fingers over the brake leaver and just your thumb round the grip, you can then get very good throttle control, it may not work for you but it does for me.
What Grumpy says above! I mostly agree with this.MrGrumpy wrote:It all depends - its not so much the sort of scoot and size of wheels, but the design of the specific scoot. Large wheeled scoots are claimed to offer better ride on bad roads, but on the two I've owned, I've never found this to be so.
In theory, the bigger scoots with bike like chassis (with engines mounted to the chassis rather than the swing arm) should be much better. However, whilst many small scoots do have hideous ride quality out of town (Burgman 200, Bev 350) big scoots aren't necessarily better! I used to own a Burgman 650 - I found that it was pretty appalling on bad bumpy country roads (and as for cobbles......) - in fact, as much of my riding is on country lanes, the bad ride and general cumbersomeness was what drove me to sell it. The Burger's twin shock rear suspension really isn't that good IMHO.
What you need is something more sophisticated, and Yes, I'm a Tmax fanatic, but the suspension and chassis are well designed. I'm not saying that the Tmax is always a paragon of comfort (and they do vary between versions), but the suspension does work reasonably competently and keeps the scoot reasonably stable on bad surfaces, and saves you from the really harsh jolts and lurches that small scoots serve up.
Its also possible to play with after market shock absorbers and fork inserts, though in many cases whilst these increase the quality of the suspension, they tend to be more sporty handling focussed than on ride quality.
btw I recall reading that smaller Xmaxs do have quite a hard ride.
Tried this today, works great, thanks for the tip.Ralph wrote:If you are gripping the twist grip with your hand try putting your hand on top of the twist grip with fingers over the brake leaver and just your thumb round the grip, you can then get very good throttle control, it may not work for you but it does for me.