Drum Pro wrote:The manual is easy to learn and you should get it down in a hour or less.
I dunno. I bought an '09 Stella about a month ago. I've been riding it nearly exclusively since then. In fact, I've only ridden my GTS250 once in that time. I've put nearly 400 miles on the odometer of the Stella and I still don't think I have the manual transmission mastered.
Maybe I'm just a slow learner, but it's a rare ride that I don't have a shifting issue. Most commonly, I either don't quite get it into 2nd before releasing the clutch. Sometimes I end up unintentionally skipping 2nd and going from 1st to 3rd. Every once in a while I have to stop before I've had time to clutch in and downshift to neutral and then I have to roll forward a bit to be able to shift from 4th back to 1st. BTW- I think this is one of the most dangerous aspects of the design of this manual transmission. Compared to a car where if I have the clutch in, I can put the stick shift in any gear 1 - 5, this old school scooter transmission is a bit trickier.
But, beyond those issues, even when I started to feel competent at going from a stop and getting from 1st to 4th and getting really good at clutching in and downshifting (not releasing the clutch just moving the handle to the appropriate position) as I'm stopping (so that I will be ready with the appropriate gear to start again), I've run into situations where I'm braking and expecting to stop but then it becomes time to go again before I need to come to a complete stop and I haven't yet gotten in the right gear, or I think I'm in 3rd or 2nd but I'm not really...
For instance, imagine you're coasting to a stop in the left hand turn lane. You've got the clutch in and you shift to 3d as you're slowing, then to 2nd. Clutch is still in. Due to oncoming traffic, you're expecting to stop out in the intersection before making your turn so you go ahead and move to neutral but then the situation changes, a car that was approaching turns right into a parking lot and is no longer approaching from the other direction, you see that you now have time to proceed through the intersection so you move back to 2nd, start to execute your left hand turn and let off the clutch and give it some throttle only to discover that you're not quite in 2nd and therefore still in neutral and now you're in the kill zone with oncoming traffic approaching. You have to wait a sec for the engine to return to idle and force it into gear and then accelerate. If you force it into gear while the RPMs are up it will lurch forward on you. This is where I realize that I still don't have the zen mastery of Stella shifting yet.
Maybe I'm a slow learner? Like I said, I don't know. Maybe it is me. However, I can't help but wonder if there's a reason why the dealers in my area have told me they don't expect to see the Stella manual return now that the Stella autos are out. I can't help but wonder if Genuine doesn't realize that there's enough to think about when riding around on 2 wheels that if you don't have to think about shifting that's just one more way to make you safe.
As a side note, when I've explained the ins and outs of Stella shifting to some of my friends that ride motorcycles with foot shifters, they can't believe that you have to have the rear wheel rolling in order to be able to move through the full range of gears.
TL/DR: I think learning to shift a manual scooter takes a lot longer than an hour to learn and be competent at.