I am taking this opportunity in trying to get my wife to allow me to get a scooter. I think it would be fun!

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
mr.72 wrote:as for the scooter, does it really make sense financially? If you're getting it for fun that's one thing, or if you think that using less gas (regardless of price) is good for the environment...
For example I have a 25mpg car. I drive about 1K miles per month. I use 40 gallons of gas, and right now that costs $160. So let's say I get a scooter, and keep my car (it's paid for after all, and I need it at least some of the time).
Well a 150cc scooter will get maybe 60mpg. If I ride it 100% of the time instead of driving my car then it will cost me $67/month for gas instead of $160. Even if I get a Chinese scooter, it will cost $2000 for the scooter. Look for a used scooter some time. 20K miles on a scooter is a lot. Let's say 50K is the whole lifetime of the vehicle. So it's going to last me 50 months, and amortized over that 50 months the scooter alone costs me $40/month. So gas+scooter = $107/mo. Then there's the extra insurance, which brings me up even with what I am paying now for gas, if not more.
Now if you can get away with a 50cc scooter that gets 100mpg and costs $1000 then you are in good shape, but most adults will not be able to get one of these to go faster than 40 mph. Particularly if you get rid of your car so you don't have to insure two vehicles then you will be in real good shape, it's definitely a good move financially even if you have to buy an new scooter every other year but remember you have to ride it in rain and sleet and ice and all other weather if you do that. Don't even get me started about the foolishness of requiring scooter drivers to carry liability insurance which unnecessarily adds to the cost of operating the vehicle. If they drop this requirement then I will go buy a scooter tomorrow.
Anyway like I said, this is usually false economy. If you can replace your vehicle with zero additional cost with one that gets better MPG, straight across trade, inclusive of maintenance and repair costs, then it's worth it. But most people will spend more money on the replacement vehicle than they will save in fuel costs.
tell that to my friend that has one that gets just thatmr.72 wrote:There are no Buells that will get 80mpg.
Don't forget that all the miles you put on your scooter will reduce the maintenance and repair costs associated with your current car (tires/brakes/oil). And if you have a fairly new vehicle depreciation will be far less too.mr.72 wrote:as for the scooter, does it really make sense financially? If you're getting it for fun that's one thing, or if you think that using less gas (regardless of price) is good for the environment...
For example I have a 25mpg car. I drive about 1K miles per month. I use 40 gallons of gas, and right now that costs $160. So let's say I get a scooter, and keep my car (it's paid for after all, and I need it at least some of the time).
Well a 150cc scooter will get maybe 60mpg. If I ride it 100% of the time instead of driving my car then it will cost me $67/month for gas instead of $160. Even if I get a Chinese scooter, it will cost $2000 for the scooter. Look for a used scooter some time. 20K miles on a scooter is a lot. Let's say 50K is the whole lifetime of the vehicle. So it's going to last me 50 months, and amortized over that 50 months the scooter alone costs me $40/month. So gas+scooter = $107/mo. Then there's the extra insurance, which brings me up even with what I am paying now for gas, if not more.
Now if you can get away with a 50cc scooter that gets 100mpg and costs $1000 then you are in good shape, but most adults will not be able to get one of these to go faster than 40 mph. Particularly if you get rid of your car so you don't have to insure two vehicles then you will be in real good shape, it's definitely a good move financially even if you have to buy an new scooter every other year but remember you have to ride it in rain and sleet and ice and all other weather if you do that. Don't even get me started about the foolishness of requiring scooter drivers to carry liability insurance which unnecessarily adds to the cost of operating the vehicle. If they drop this requirement then I will go buy a scooter tomorrow.
Anyway like I said, this is usually false economy. If you can replace your vehicle with zero additional cost with one that gets better MPG, straight across trade, inclusive of maintenance and repair costs, then it's worth it. But most people will spend more money on the replacement vehicle than they will save in fuel costs.
The Blast is rated at 64/73 mpg. Popular Mechanics reported getting in the 70s when they tested one. With an aftermarket exhaust, different tires and careful riding, there's no reason someone can't approach 80 mpg. Especially if they don't present too large a frontal area -- I have the personal aerodynamics of a Freightliner.lunchbox wrote:tell that to my friend that has one that gets just thatmr.72 wrote:There are no Buells that will get 80mpg.
I had a scooter a few years ago and the insurance was close to $100 a year so that's only $8 to $10 a month.mr.72 wrote:Well a 150cc scooter will get maybe 60mpg. If I ride it 100% of the time instead of driving my car then it will cost me $67/month for gas instead of $160. Even if I get a Chinese scooter, it will cost $2000 for the scooter. Look for a used scooter some time. 20K miles on a scooter is a lot. Let's say 50K is the whole lifetime of the vehicle. So it's going to last me 50 months, and amortized over that 50 months the scooter alone costs me $40/month. So gas+scooter = $107/mo. Then there's the extra insurance, which brings me up even with what I am paying now for gas, if not more.
Now if you can get away with a 50cc scooter that gets 100mpg and costs $1000 then you are in good shape, but most adults will not be able to get one of these to go faster than 40 mph. Particularly if you get rid of your car so you don't have to insure two vehicles then you will be in real good shape, it's definitely a good move financially even if you have to buy an new scooter every other year but remember you have to ride it in rain and sleet and ice and all other weather if you do that. Don't even get me started about the foolishness of requiring scooter drivers to carry liability insurance which unnecessarily adds to the cost of operating the vehicle. If they drop this requirement then I will go buy a scooter tomorrow.
boss is paying $75/year for his.boomerang wrote:I had a scooter a few years ago and the insurance was close to $100 a year so that's only $8 to $10 a month.