rtk11
Pattern Altitude
I had a CSC RX3 and it was a good bike. Not a lot of power, but good for under 3 AMU fully farkled and I enjoyed it while I had it. The RX4 (450cc single) is more powerful and probably worth a look, but at 5 AMU, I'd probably have you look at the BMW G310GS with the 1K discount BMW is throwing on that bike.
Problem is that with small displacement, you'll be looking for more power at some time. I went from a CBR 600 (very enjoyable, but peaky power) to a Ducati ST3 (lots of power all the time, great riding position, great tourer). Then I had a child and those toys went away. I then went to a Yamaha Vino 125 scooter thinking it would be safer. Nope - same risk, and I ended up farkling that with windshield, upgraded variator, and big bore cylinder kit to get more power out of it. I sold that for a Yamaha TMax scooter which was fun to ride, but way too heavy. Then the aforementioned CSC RX3 which was fun, good riding position, good around town, but not a lot of power for any kind of freeway/highway riding.
Here's a video of my RX3 with Akrapovic muffler:
If I had to do it all over again, a small displacement bike is fine, just know that you're not going to do a lot of highway riding with it. Especially if you have hills nearby. I'd go back to a 400 to 450 cc bike as a start (300cc+ scooter possibly, like a PIaggio BV350), and then move up from there.
As stated above and in my earlier post, All The Gear All The Time (ATGATT). Yeah, it's like pre-flighting and you'll spend 15 minutes suiting up and putting on protective footgear, head sock and helmet, but you won't regret it when you're sliding down the highway (which has the consistency of 80 grit sandpaper) on your body armor at 45 mph. Sure beats sliding down the same highway on your skin or a t-shirt which will last 0.0001 second on the tarmac. Aerostitch is the gold standard for a riding suit with body armor. Get it if you can.
Problem is that with small displacement, you'll be looking for more power at some time. I went from a CBR 600 (very enjoyable, but peaky power) to a Ducati ST3 (lots of power all the time, great riding position, great tourer). Then I had a child and those toys went away. I then went to a Yamaha Vino 125 scooter thinking it would be safer. Nope - same risk, and I ended up farkling that with windshield, upgraded variator, and big bore cylinder kit to get more power out of it. I sold that for a Yamaha TMax scooter which was fun to ride, but way too heavy. Then the aforementioned CSC RX3 which was fun, good riding position, good around town, but not a lot of power for any kind of freeway/highway riding.
Here's a video of my RX3 with Akrapovic muffler:
If I had to do it all over again, a small displacement bike is fine, just know that you're not going to do a lot of highway riding with it. Especially if you have hills nearby. I'd go back to a 400 to 450 cc bike as a start (300cc+ scooter possibly, like a PIaggio BV350), and then move up from there.
As stated above and in my earlier post, All The Gear All The Time (ATGATT). Yeah, it's like pre-flighting and you'll spend 15 minutes suiting up and putting on protective footgear, head sock and helmet, but you won't regret it when you're sliding down the highway (which has the consistency of 80 grit sandpaper) on your body armor at 45 mph. Sure beats sliding down the same highway on your skin or a t-shirt which will last 0.0001 second on the tarmac. Aerostitch is the gold standard for a riding suit with body armor. Get it if you can.