I would just like to say

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Was following a motor bicyclist yesdi. Stoppin and startin frew traffic. Feet were moving about as if e were dancin. How does yer change gear? Does it slot in and have a spring back to neutral. Ow many gears? Answers. Eye need answers.
Lever on the right side of the engine is foot controlled. Usually it is 1 down and 5 up but depends on how many gears. My bike had 6. You use the clutch lever on the right handle bar as you would in a car.
The foot lever always returns to centre.
 
Lever on the right side of the engine is foot controlled. Usually it is 1 down and 5 up but depends on how many gears. My bike had 6. You use the clutch lever on the right handle bar as you would in a car.
The foot lever always returns to centre.
British bikes usually had the gear lever operated by the right foot. This changed in the 1970's to the left foot due to most of the rest of world using this arrangement. Changing up to a higher gear could be by moving the foot upwards or downwards depending on the manufacturer.
Until recently I had four bikes. (now only two). The modern bike had six gears, up for up, left foot change. Late 70's bike had five gears, up for up, also left foot. Mid sixties bike, still have this one, right foot change, four gears, up for up. Fifties / sixties hybrid, with reversed gear lever, right foot change, four gears, down for up. Just had to remember which bike I was on, so's I didn't use the wrong foot or go the wrong way.
 
British bikes usually had the gear lever operated by the right foot. This changed in the 1970's to the left foot due to most of the rest of world using this arrangement. Changing up to a higher gear could be by moving the foot upwards or downwards depending on the manufacturer.
Until recently I had four bikes. (now only two). The modern bike had six gears, up for up, left foot change. Late 70's bike had five gears, up for up, also left foot. Mid sixties bike, still have this one, right foot change, four gears, up for up. Fifties / sixties hybrid, with reversed gear lever, right foot change, four gears, down for up. Just had to remember which bike I was on, so's I didn't use the wrong foot or go the wrong way.


On my Hondas it’s reverse down then five up 🤪
 
So, question, am I right in thinking that you don't go down the gears?
You need to go down the gears sequentially. Normally. I say normally because I had a 1959 Royal Enfield Constellation when I were a yoof, it had a second lever on the gear box and whichever gear I was in, pressing the second lever put it in neutral.
 
Just found a piccy of one - the second "neutral" lever is the short one behind the kick starter.

Royal-Enfield-Constellation-8-1024x770-640x480.jpeg
 
You int lived old boy
Nivver too late.
. View attachment 346493
Having a mother who was a doc who spent her time as she put it "cross matching blood by the bucketful" and telling us stories about a bikist coming in in one ambulance and his leg in another, she made it quite clear that I would never be able to get a bike.
Funnily my mate's mum was a district nurse but she didn't seem bothered one bit!
This, combined with my desire to have a car with a back seat for fun and frolics, meant that I went for crs as soon as poss.
My mate, by the way, looked like a young Marlon Brando and women just fainted wherever he went, so bike or car didn't matter to him!
 
You int lived old boy
Nivver too late.
. View attachment 346493
I love the "old boy". Am I that much older than you at 70?🤣🤣
Where we are over here here are lots of forest tracks that I could go on if I had a dirt bike and my mad Landy neighbour is also a bikist. Who knows? It might happen one day!!
 
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