Kymco People GT300i, anyone?
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- babblefish
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Kymco People GT300i, anyone?
I've been looking at the Kymco People GT300i as a, gulp, third scooter. Looks pretty good to me and makes decent power. Under seat storage looks to be a little lacking athough it comes standard with a top box. Does anyone here have any real world experience with this scooter? If so, what are your thoughts?
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- babblefish
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- Point37
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seat height is higher on the bv350...i'm assuming he was too cramped although i don't know the width of the seats...
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- DeeDee
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Take a look at this thread: http://www.kymcoforum.com/index.php?topic=14576.0
Very capable scooter, but known to have fuel injection gremlins and spotty dealer support.
Very capable scooter, but known to have fuel injection gremlins and spotty dealer support.
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Whats your reason for focusing on this particular scooter? I love the flat floor. Just Gotta Scoot did a positive review on one. It does look good. If it was me, I would still pick a BV350. I've seen KYMCO come and go thru so many different dealerships around here and thats a huge warning flag for me. At least KYMCO no longer floods the market with 20 different models at the same time. Great product, and I loved my first gen. People 250, but I like solid dealer support more. If you have good dealer support and it fits you (have not even sat on any KYMCO in over 10 years) go for it!
- Syd
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Not at all. I was easily able to flat-foot the GT300i. What I couldn't do, and sorry for being unclear, was sit, comfortably, on the seat; my knees hit the dash/bars/whatever it is you call the parts that move when you turn. My knees were so close I couldn't even dip them out of the way.babblefish wrote:Are you saying that the seat was too tall for you? If so then my puny 31" inseam will certainly be too short.Syd wrote:At 6' 2", with ~33" legs, I couldn't ride it. I could barely sit on it, and that pissed me off. Ended up with a BV350.
This is true for every Kymco I've ever sat on, so I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was disappointed.
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- babblefish
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Like you, I like the flat floor, but it's not an overwhelming reason for me to want one of these. I just assume it will be reliable since Kymco is probably the biggest scooter manufacturer in Taiwan not only for their own products but for other manufacturers products as well. They're also very popular with the locals. Three out of five scooters you see there will be a Kymco. Also, being Taiwanese, I assume replacement parts would be cheaper than the Italian Paggio BV350. And having a smaller displacement, it should be lighter which makes it easier to maneuver around in tight situations (I'm not a big guy). As far as dealer support, I don't need it as I always do my own maintenance and repairs.sc00ter wrote:Whats your reason for focusing on this particular scooter? I love the flat floor. Just Gotta Scoot did a positive review on one. It does look good. If it was me, I would still pick a BV350. I've seen KYMCO come and go thru so many different dealerships around here and thats a huge warning flag for me. At least KYMCO no longer floods the market with 20 different models at the same time. Great product, and I loved my first gen. People 250, but I like solid dealer support more. If you have good dealer support and it fits you (have not even sat on any KYMCO in over 10 years) go for it!
With all that said, after doing more research, I may consider other scooters too. Seems both the under seat storage and the top box are too small to hold a full coverage helmet and the external helmet hook is not lockable(!?). Doesn't sound like much but it's kinda annoying to have to schlep my helmet around with me every time I get off the scooter.
After that long winded response, I guess my expanded list of possible candidates would be: Aprilia Sportcity 250, Kymco GT300i, Paggio BV350, and Yamaha XMAX 300. I need to do more research on the latter two.
Last edited by babblefish on Wed Jul 10, 2019 1:40 am, edited 3 times in total.
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- babblefish
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I'm small enough to do laps around the floor board of my Buddy while riding so space for me is not an issue. I have the opposite problem actually, I can't ride large bikes such as adventure bikes (my favorite bikes). When I sit on a BMW GS1200 I feel like a hamster on an elephant.Syd wrote:Not at all. I was easily able to flat-foot the GT300i. What I couldn't do, and sorry for being unclear, was sit, comfortably, on the seat; my knees hit the dash/bars/whatever it is you call the parts that move when you turn. My knees were so close I couldn't even dip them out of the way.babblefish wrote:Are you saying that the seat was too tall for you? If so then my puny 31" inseam will certainly be too short.Syd wrote:At 6' 2", with ~33" legs, I couldn't ride it. I could barely sit on it, and that pissed me off. Ended up with a BV350.
This is true for every Kymco I've ever sat on, so I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was disappointed.
Some people can break a crowbar in a sandbox.
- easy
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I got one 20,000 miles no trouble with the engine, brakes are great. It's not being sold stateside anymore. The bad is the dealer network and scooter related small gas tank under the seat, cvt belt slips in heavy rain. The bv350 is a better scooter or maybe a gently used vespa.
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- babblefish
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Good to know, thanks. I wasn't aware that it was no longer imported. My local dealer does have a 2017 in stock though. I wonder why the CVT belt would slip in the rain since it's enclosed within the transmission case. It should stay dry in there. Strange.easy wrote:I got one 20,000 miles no trouble with the engine, brakes are great. It's not being sold stateside anymore. The bad is the dealer network and scooter related small gas tank under the seat, cvt belt slips in heavy rain. The bv350 is a better scooter or maybe a gently used vespa.
Some people can break a crowbar in a sandbox.
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I rode the People and DT 300's and the BV350, back to back to back. I purchased the BV350. In retrospect, the Kymco is a better value. I had a People 250 and it ran beautifully and was very reliable. The BV does not fall into my definition of reliable. It's fantastic to ride but has a fairly constant flow of niggling issues.
You won't go wrong with the People 300.
You won't go wrong with the People 300.
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- OBX Dan
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- Dooglas
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In its last couple of years in their US lineup, the Aprilia Sport City was sold with the same 300 engine as the Vespa GTS 300. Same flat floorboard and identical body to the SC 250. They are somewhat rarer on the market than the previous 250, but a great scooter if you find one for sale. I had one for several years and should never have sold it.babblefish wrote:After that long winded response, I guess my expanded list of possible candidates would be: Aprilia Sportcity 250, Kymco GT300i, Paggio BV350, and Yamaha XMAX 300. I need to do more research on the latter two.
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babblefish wrote:Back when I could ride bigger scooters, my favorite was an '08 Aprilia Sport City 250. It could easily handle Interstate Hwy traffic and it was so perfectly balanced. it felt like I was on a smaller, lighter 125cc scooter. The only negative was an erratic fuel gauge which showed "Full" for a hundred miles or more and then started dropping rapidly. I carried a wood measuring stick just to be on the safe side. The scooter is long gone but I still have the stick!sc00ter wrote: After that long winded response, I guess my expanded list of possible candidates would be: Aprilia Sportcity 250, Kymco GT300i, Paggio BV350, and Yamaha XMAX 300. I need to do more research on the latter two.
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- babblefish
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Thanks for all the input folks. I really wanted a Sportcity 250 but since they've been discontinued, they're a little hard to find on Craigslist. I used to see them quite often there but I guess the word is out.
If all else fails, I'll just bite the bullet and spend the extra money to get a Triumph Scrambler.
If all else fails, I'll just bite the bullet and spend the extra money to get a Triumph Scrambler.
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- babblefish
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So there was a Sportcity 300? I've never seen one.Dooglas wrote:In its last couple of years in their US lineup, the Aprilia Sport City was sold with the same 300 engine as the Vespa GTS 300. Same flat floorboard and identical body to the SC 250. They are somewhat rarer on the market than the previous 250, but a great scooter if you find one for sale. I had one for several years and should never have sold it.babblefish wrote:After that long winded response, I guess my expanded list of possible candidates would be: Aprilia Sportcity 250, Kymco GT300i, Paggio BV350, and Yamaha XMAX 300. I need to do more research on the latter two.
Some people can break a crowbar in a sandbox.
- OBX Dan
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Check out the BMW R nine T Pure...weird name but an oldschool opposed twin, air-cooled.babblefish wrote:Thanks for all the input folks. I really wanted a Sportcity 250 but since they've been discontinued, they're a little hard to find on Craigslist. I used to see them quite often there but I guess the word is out.
If all else fails, I'll just bite the bullet and spend the extra money to get a Triumph Scrambler.
- babblefish
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Thanks for the suggestion. While I like BMW boxers, I really wanted an old school looking scrambler, like the ones I grew up with in the sixties. I remember drooling over sales brochures of bikes like the Triumph TR6 Trophy and Tiger, BSA 441, B25, B40, etc.OBX Dan wrote:Check out the BMW R nine T Pure...weird name but an oldschool opposed twin, air-cooled.babblefish wrote:Thanks for all the input folks. I really wanted a Sportcity 250 but since they've been discontinued, they're a little hard to find on Craigslist. I used to see them quite often there but I guess the word is out.
If all else fails, I'll just bite the bullet and spend the extra money to get a Triumph Scrambler.
Of course, if a BMW R90S or R100S ever came up for a reasonable price...
Some people can break a crowbar in a sandbox.
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