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I enjoyed the video Steven, thanks for posting it!It sure brought back memories, back when I wasn't even old enough to ride, of a friend Grant who had a little motorcycle shop selling dirt and trail bikes (Herb Uhl reminded me of him). The brands he sold were Maico, Hodaka, and I believe Bultaco. I used to love stopping in and he always took time to talk to me about motorcycles even though I wasn't a customer. A couple years later after I had just purchased my first motorcycle, a 1972 Honda XL250, I stopped in to show Grant my new motorcycle. I told him I was looking forward to trail riding. He said "that's pretty heavy for a trail bike but take it out the trail that starts behind the shop. It ends about 1/2 mile out at a gate so just turn around and come back". I took off on that trail and quickly realized I was in over my head, but riding slowly in 1st gear, slipping the clutch and paddling my feet, dismounting and manhandling it over and around obstacles, I made it to the gate where the trail had narrowed to not much wider than the width of my bike. With effort I was able to get the bike turned around. When I got back I was exhausted but proud of having made it. Grant was standing there beside a Hodako Ace 100 trail bike. He started it and said now do that again on this. When I straddled it, it was so narrow and light it felt like a bicycle! First gear was so low I was going at a crawl with the little engine spinning well up in its rev range. I ended up riding the whole trail in 2nd and 3rd, easily bumping over the same ledges and logs that I struggled paddling over on my 250. I was having a blast on that little bike!When I got back grinning ear to ear he pointed out what makes a great trail bike; "you want low gearing, light weight, good ground clearance, low seat, knobby tires, and plenty of steering lock. Lots of power and suspension travel isn't necessary unless you want to race".Fast forward to now I have a CT125 Trail which I picked up used last year. It's a fun little bike to ride around but what prevents it from being a great trail bike is its 4-speed box is geared too tall. 4th is geared right for going 35-45 mph on the road but 1st and 2nd are too tall for riding challenging trails. The 4-speed transmission could really use a high/low range, or give it a WR 5-speed with a low 1st gear and 2nd through 5th being the same as 1-4 is now.
From reading this, i take it that the new Honda trail 125's do not have the automatice clutch of the older versions. Is that true?