Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
- hdgh29
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Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
The type of bike doesnt matter, its "the size of the fight in the dog" as they say. I know a guy who has been around most of Cambodia on a Honda Click, and another mate who regularly goes from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh on a Scoopy. Just buy one that you are comfortable on, if you are going to be sitting on it for a few hours at a time, and make sure its a Honda for easy service and repairs in distant villages.
"I tried being reasonable. Didn't like it" (Clint Eastwood)
Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
For some reason it is possible to take a Vietnamese plated moto into Cambodia, but if you take a Cambodian plated bike into Vietnam you will only be allowed to use it in the border area and will get stopped by police when traveling more in-land. The number will be noted when crossing the border. At least when you pass the Ha Tien border but have been told it is the same at Moc Bai etc.TRO wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 2:09 am Most of the long distance trips would be to Bangkok from Siem Reap, with some trips to Lao thrown in and maybe Vietnam.
This would be my first purchased bike in Asia. I've been searching the Thai classifieds too. It seems like a Cambodian plated bike wouldn't be too limiting compared to other countries, but I don't know too much about all that.
Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
I agree. I was initially going to get a Honda Airblade, same 125cc engine as the PCX. Running around Phnom Penh the Airblade is ideal. But I still like walking so I don't even take the PCX out every day. But hands down the PCX is the more comfortable of the two.hdgh29 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 10, 2023 2:15 pm The type of bike doesnt matter, its "the size of the fight in the dog" as they say. I know a guy who has been around most of Cambodia on a Honda Click, and another mate who regularly goes from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh on a Scoopy. Just buy one that you are comfortable on, if you are going to be sitting on it for a few hours at a time, and make sure its a Honda for easy service and repairs in distant villages.
Me and my girl will be taking a road trip out to Kirirom National Park on Saturday, weather permitting, and camping out. I guess I'll see then if the PCX was worth the extra $2,000 than it would have cost for the Airblade.
Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
The type of bike matters a lot, depending on what you want to accomplish on it.hdgh29 wrote: ↑Thu Aug 10, 2023 2:15 pm The type of bike doesnt matter, its "the size of the fight in the dog" as they say. I know a guy who has been around most of Cambodia on a Honda Click, and another mate who regularly goes from Siem Reap to Phnom Penh on a Scoopy. Just buy one that you are comfortable on, if you are going to be sitting on it for a few hours at a time, and make sure its a Honda for easy service and repairs in distant villages.
I rode a rental Honda Blade 110 from Can Tho to Ha Long bay in Vietnam so I get the sentiment lol. It can go ALMOST anywhere...rode it on the beach in Danang, up to Hamburger Hill and Khe Sanh. But I wouldn't take it on serious enduro tracks or want to go that slow across a country again.
I'd classify it more as a scooter than a motorcycle. Sit in scooters like the scoopy/click feel almost dangerous to me handling-wise.
Scooters are nimble, easy to park anywhere and super efficient. Great for the city, but can barely get out of their own way on the hwy. I prefer speed to get away from trucks/lexus.
I'll be looking for motorcycles.
- Ghostwriter
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Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
...but if looking for safety, the best motorcycle is actually a car.
- MarkArmstrong
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Re: Ideal Motorcycle for Cambodia
Something simple single cylinder
Yam XT
Kawa KLR
Royal Enfield
If you can fix it roadside using the OEM toolkit you've made a good choice.
Yam XT
Kawa KLR
Royal Enfield
If you can fix it roadside using the OEM toolkit you've made a good choice.
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