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View Poll Results: On a scale of 1-10, how happy are you with your 300? | |||
1-2: I can't wait to get rid of it. Wish I hadn't purchased it. | 2 | 2.41% | |
3-4: It's alright. I'll probably sell it soon. | 0 | 0% | |
5-6: It does it's job. But I'll probably sell it eventually. | 13 | 15.66% | |
7-8: I have a lot of fun riding it. Don't plan on selling anytime soon. | 45 | 54.22% | |
9-10: In love with this bike! Will always be part of my stable. | 23 | 27.71% | |
Voters: 83. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools |
August 14th, 2015, 11:25 PM | #41 |
ninjette.org member
Name: hunter
Location: Austin, Texas
Join Date: Feb 2014 Motorcycle(s): 2014 Ninja 300 Posts: 22
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I love my 2014 Ninja 300(bought it brand new Jan 2015 though). I recently moved from California to Texas and I actually rode my 300 the whole way there. 1500 miles in 3 days and the bike worked perfect. Drove smoothly the whole way. Was cheap on gas too. Way smoother and comfortable then I expected.
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August 15th, 2015, 10:03 AM | #42 |
ninjette.org member
Name: Greg
Location: San Antonio
Join Date: Dec 2014 Motorcycle(s): Ninja 300, GSXR-750, Ducati M1100 Posts: 185
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Mine is track only, so I cannot give any street riding feedback. It's a blast on the track, but it did take quite a bit of work to get it to where I wanted it. Still needs a bit more power, maybe Kawasaki will up the game with a 350 or 400 soon.
Highly recommended for track fun! |
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August 16th, 2015, 01:00 PM | #43 | |
ninjette.org member
Name: Jason
Location: Tyler
Join Date: Jul 2015 Motorcycle(s): 2015 Ninja 300 ABS Posts: 56
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Quote:
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August 16th, 2015, 01:11 PM | #44 |
ninjette.org member
Name: hunter
Location: Austin, Texas
Join Date: Feb 2014 Motorcycle(s): 2014 Ninja 300 Posts: 22
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Well Riding to Teaxas spending two nights in hotels the way there, food, and gas was about half the price they quoted me to ship my bike alone. Part of it was me being cheap but yes a lot of dedication to do it. Thanks man.
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December 29th, 2015, 11:55 PM | #45 |
ninjette.org guru
Name: Al
Location: Orange County, CA
Join Date: Dec 2015 Motorcycle(s): Thruxton R, R6 450 triple, EX300 (sold) Posts: 263
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Very happy. I feel like it is a much better scoot around town than my 600s ever were. I also don't feel as anxious about it getting stolen (lost an R6 that way).
I'm hoping this thing helps me work on my cornering speed at the track this coming year. |
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January 4th, 2016, 09:17 AM | #46 |
Certified Troublemaker
Name: Teri
Location: Hamilton, NJ
Join Date: Oct 2012 Motorcycle(s): 2006 Ninja 250r "Pikachu", 2017 Ninja 650 "Epona" Posts: A lot.
MOTM - Aug '13, Aug '14, Feb '17
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Hmm, i guess i should change my vote... I miss my 300...
Saw they came out with red this year. My have to get one used in a coupe years.
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Raven's Rejuvenation A bruise is a lesson... and each lesson makes us better... |
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January 4th, 2016, 09:39 AM | #47 | |
ninjette.org certified postwhore
Name: Tom
Location: Northern Virginia
Join Date: Jul 2015 Motorcycle(s): 2001 Ninja 250, 2019 Harley Ultra Classic, 2001 Suzuki SV650 Posts: A lot.
MOTM - Jan '16
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Quote:
I can't comment on the 300's I'm still stuck on my stone age 250's, which I really enjoy and can't justify any other bike that would work better for me at the moment. For my uses right now of commuting and weekend fun bike the little Ninja's work just fine. Until I really start planning some long distance rides I just can't justify the cost of a bigger bike. |
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January 4th, 2016, 09:47 AM | #48 | |
Certified Troublemaker
Name: Teri
Location: Hamilton, NJ
Join Date: Oct 2012 Motorcycle(s): 2006 Ninja 250r "Pikachu", 2017 Ninja 650 "Epona" Posts: A lot.
MOTM - Aug '13, Aug '14, Feb '17
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Quote:
The sporty is better for my commuting and longer rides for now.
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Raven's Rejuvenation A bruise is a lesson... and each lesson makes us better... |
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January 26th, 2016, 01:16 PM | #49 |
ninjette.org newbie
Name: Bill
Location: fla
Join Date: Jan 2016 Motorcycle(s): 2013 Ninja 300, 2001 Suzuki LS 650 Savage Posts: 1
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New to this forum, might as well start here....
Purchased my 2013 in jan of 2013...... it will be with me for MANY years.... have ridden since I was 10, 50+ now. I have owned numerous bikes and this one takes me back to my younger years without letting me ruin my driving record or killing myself It is also a long distance bike if needed and a great short ride around town gas saver, that cost little for full coverage insurance. Like most of us old farts.... I'd rather ride a low power bike and use all of its cc's, rather than ride a powerful bike and only use a quarter of it's capabilities. Got some shopping to do... time to ride.... north florida at 65 degrees today...cloudy with a chance of meatballs. |
1 out of 1 members found this post helpful. |
January 26th, 2016, 01:25 PM | #50 | |
n00bie to wannabie
Name: Bill
Location: St Ives, BC (Shuswap Lake)
Join Date: Sep 2015 Motorcycle(s): 2012 250R (Red), 2005 VFR800A (Red), CRF450X (Red), 2012 F800GS (Wants to be Red!) Posts: A lot.
MOTM - Nov '15
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Quote:
(It's a riding skills & attitude trick question, kiddies! )
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The Smart Money: #1 - ATGATT, #2 - Training (machine skills and survival skills), #3 - The bike; whatever floats yer boat with the money you have left over |
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January 26th, 2016, 09:59 PM | #51 | |
cadd cadd cadd
Name: Cadd
Location: 41°21'13.1"N, 74°41'37.4"W
Join Date: Jan 2014 Motorcycle(s): 300 Posts: A lot.
MOTM - May '15
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Quote:
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Riding it like I financed it. |
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January 28th, 2016, 09:23 AM | #52 |
ninjette.org member
Name: Dante
Location: Salem, OR
Join Date: Aug 2014 Motorcycle(s): 2016 Ninja 300 ABS, R.I.P 1986 Ninja EX250 Posts: 94
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After about. Week of having it, I love it. I didn't think that riding a 300 would be that big of a difference over the 250, but its been a phenomenal change! Riding my old 250 ( '86 Ex250) felt like the bike was cooperating with me. Riding my '16 300 feels like the bike is more in sync with me.
The only complaints so far: Left rearset is positioned badly for my body, planning on replacing. The OEM oil filter took me forever to get off. Ratchet straps, hands, pipe wrench, oil filter tool, nothing worked. Had to pop through with a screwdriver, and even then it bent the screwdriver before it finally came off! (K&N filter installed) Once I modify a few more things on it, I'm sure it'll be above and beyond all I hoped for. ^_^ |
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January 29th, 2016, 11:45 AM | #53 |
Slower than you.
Name: toEleven
Location: NoVA
Join Date: Oct 2015 Motorcycle(s): CBR600RR, CB750, EX300 (半蔵) Posts: 667
MOTM - May '16
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Wait...only the left one? That's intriguing.
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DISCLAIMERv1.0: There may be more info on the topic than this forum post. Conduct your own research. If another thread is linked or quoted, go read it yourself. |
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January 29th, 2016, 03:48 PM | #54 | |
cadd cadd cadd
Name: Cadd
Location: 41°21'13.1"N, 74°41'37.4"W
Join Date: Jan 2014 Motorcycle(s): 300 Posts: A lot.
MOTM - May '15
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Quote:
I have no idea why they used a gorilla to install the filter in the factory! Just doesn't make sense. While on this topic, can anyone explain how (or why) oil filters normally get tighter as time goes by? Once I hand tighten my new oil filter on, I can still (with a bit of a struggle) loosen it by hand. However, once I ride it around for a few hundred miles, there's absolutely no way to remove it by hand.
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Riding it like I financed it. |
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January 29th, 2016, 05:30 PM | #55 | |
ninjette.org member
Name: Dante
Location: Salem, OR
Join Date: Aug 2014 Motorcycle(s): 2016 Ninja 300 ABS, R.I.P 1986 Ninja EX250 Posts: 94
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Yeah, the way I ride, my right rests fine over the break, but my left is just a hair too close to the shifter to comfortable rest my foot and still shift quickly. As I've been riding more on this bike it's become a little easier to deal with, but it's still something I'm looking forward to modifying. =P
Quote:
As far as oil filters tightening themselves, my understanding of it is that the pressure of the filter creates a type of pressure seal/lock on the threads, almost like a vacuum, on top of the gasket expanding a bit with the heat (thus creating a better seal, and putting more pressure against the threads) which is why "hand tight" is almost always enough. |
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February 6th, 2016, 09:41 PM | #56 | |
ninjette.org dude
Name: 1 guess :-)
Location: SF Bay Area
Join Date: Jun 2008 Motorcycle(s): '13 Ninja 300 (white, the fastest color!), '13 R1200RT, '14 CRF250L, '12 TT-R125LE Posts: Too much.
Blog Entries: 7
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Quote:
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Montgomery Street Motorcycle Club / cal24.com / crf250l.org / ninjette.org ninjette.org Terms of Service Shopping for motorcycle parts or equipment? Come here first. The friendliest Ninja 250R/300/400 forum on the internet! (especially Unregistered) |
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February 29th, 2016, 11:56 AM | #57 |
ninjette.org member
Name: Raygan
Location: North East Texas
Join Date: Oct 2012 Motorcycle(s): White 2013 Ninja 300(Storm), Silver 2003 Fjr1300 Posts: 173
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After owning the 300 since October of 2012 I still love it. My only complaint is power at highway speeds. I don't have any problems with passing on the interstate but I do wish there was a bit more on tap. I fixed my complaint about the hard saddle by upgrading to a Corbin.
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ATGATT For all I know, women who ride motorcycles are all man-hating dominatrix's. It was like a mild panic attack! |
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March 1st, 2016, 11:53 AM | #58 | |
Vintage Screwball
Name: B
Location: Washington
Join Date: Feb 2016 Motorcycle(s): 2011 Ninja 250, 2008 Ninja 250, 2019 KTM 1290SDR, 2017 FZ10 Posts: A lot.
MOTM - Mar '16
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Quote:
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Goin' fast on slow bikes! |
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May 1st, 2016, 06:48 PM | #59 |
ninjette.org member
Name: Peter
Location: Mexico
Join Date: Feb 2016 Motorcycle(s): 300 Ninja Posts: 19
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The only things it's missing is something Kawasaki puts on its other bikes: an emergency flasher.
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May 1st, 2016, 08:45 PM | #60 |
cadd cadd cadd
Name: Cadd
Location: 41°21'13.1"N, 74°41'37.4"W
Join Date: Jan 2014 Motorcycle(s): 300 Posts: A lot.
MOTM - May '15
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Very true! Is it because of cost savings?!?! Most bikes have 4 way flashers. I just don't understand why the 300 don't have that. I mean, the hardware is already there. Just add a button with a wire!!!
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Riding it like I financed it. |
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May 1st, 2016, 09:38 PM | #61 |
ninjette.org dude
Name: 1 guess :-)
Location: SF Bay Area
Join Date: Jun 2008 Motorcycle(s): '13 Ninja 300 (white, the fastest color!), '13 R1200RT, '14 CRF250L, '12 TT-R125LE Posts: Too much.
Blog Entries: 7
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As far as I know, I've never had that feature on any of the kawis I've owned (3 generations of ninjettes, a 10R, and a 12R. Not sure if they've started including it on their newer sportbikes.
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Montgomery Street Motorcycle Club / cal24.com / crf250l.org / ninjette.org ninjette.org Terms of Service Shopping for motorcycle parts or equipment? Come here first. The friendliest Ninja 250R/300/400 forum on the internet! (especially Unregistered) |
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May 2nd, 2016, 10:41 AM | #62 |
EX500 full of EX250 parts
Name: Bill
Location: Grand Rapids-ish, MI
Join Date: Jul 2012 Motorcycle(s): '18 Ninja 400 • '09 Ninja 500R (selling) • '98 VFR800 (project) • '85 Vulcan VN700 (sold) Posts: A lot.
Blog Entries: 1
MOTM - Aug '15
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Check other bikes for similar controls. Some of the more "race replica" bikes have a lap timer button there instead.
They removed the hazard flasher from the 500 a few years into Gen2. The early control was a direct swap, but was labelled with words rather than pictograms. I found that some of the bigger bikes used a version with the pics instead. Admittedly, it pissed me off a little more finding out that Kawasaki didn't just remove the hazard flasher from the 500, they removed it while still using that part on other bikes. Talk about penny pinching... https://www.ninjette.org/forums/show...301#post989301 is a post from Ghostt with some of my info on it. FYI, the link seems to be going to the wrong page for me - #6398 is the post where you want to start. http://www.ex-500.com/index.php/topic,69130.0.html is my original thread, but you have to be logged in over there to see it.
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*** Unregistered, I'm not your mom and I'm not paying for your parts, so do whatever you want with your own bike. *** |
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May 17th, 2016, 09:15 PM | #63 |
green stig
Name: V
Location: California
Join Date: May 2016 Motorcycle(s): '15 Ninja 300 ABS (Hurricane) Posts: 140
Blog Entries: 2
MOTM - May '16
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Same! She's my first bike so I don't have many points of comparison, other than the tiny 150s I rode on the MSF course and the H-D Road King I took a course on recently. But I think she's just perfect. (The Road King convinced me I'd never buy a Harley, if I wasn't convinced already. Loud and heavy as hell, and trying to keep the clutch in was like squeezing one of those hand exerciser things...)
The seat is a lot more comfortable than I'd been led to believe - I don't get sore on it at all, and I've ridden a lot of bicycles so I know "bike butt". From all I can tell she's a well-made, powerful, yet easy-going machine - I've given her some hard knocks but she's toughed them out with little hassle. For all I'd heard about how bikes can be fickle and fussy, she's a dream. Didn't even complain when I left her in the garage for two weeks at a time (sorry babe) when I was first learning to ride and struggling a lot... I always expected the battery to be run down, but she'd start up straight away, no fuss. I love her and I'm keeping her forever. I don't need more power than she has - I mean, before riding motorcycles I drove a 2008 Hyundai Accent with 100k miles on the clock that barely makes it to 80 uphill. I'm not in it to go faster than everyone, I'm in it to see the world, to have the experience, to be free. Besides, there's something cute about a tiny scoot! |
2 out of 2 members found this post helpful. |
May 28th, 2016, 02:38 PM | #64 |
ninjette.org newbie
Name: Prashant
Location: Saratoga ca
Join Date: May 2016 Motorcycle(s): Ninja 300 Posts: 1
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I love my pearl white 2014. Perfect for the twisty roads here in the Bay Area. I am 6'1" and was told it might be too small to be comfortable but I find it fits me fine.
Added a zero gravity windshield and mirror extenders from RevZilla. The mirror extenders are a boon as before I could only see my elbows. I have a Givi 52 liter top case which I need to commute as it easily takes my laptop bag and gym bag however it does detract from the looks. I do understand when people complain about wanting more power but am happy so far. Thoug an SV650 is a bike I lust after sometimes. Would like to fit side cases to get rid of the ugly top case. Maybe a shorty exhaust slip on. |
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