Having both scoots in my garage, my seat-of-the-pants accelerometer made me pretty sure that the Blur had the edge, but people here on the forum were saying otherwise. So as I threatened last week, the wife and I took her '07 Buddy 125 and my '06 Blur out to do some time trials this afternoon. We found a huge parking lot and set up basically a 100-yard dash for the scoots. We had just enough space to get each scooter up to right around 40 mph before we had to brake. We each took turns on the respective scooters in a one-rider drag race from a standing start. We started from the same point each time while the other held the stopwatch standing at an orange cone about 100-yards away.
If you've ever ridden a Buddy and a Blur back to back, it's quite an experience. The Buddy is a fantastic scooter and certainly beats its big brother on looks and storage. But the Blur is just that little extra step above in handling, ride quality, and definitely braking. But did it have the guts to outrun the Buddy? With only 25cc's difference between them and a hefty weight difference, the numbers are very interesting.
HP/weight of the Blur 150: 10.33 hp / 291 lbs = power-to-weight of .035 hp/lb
HP/weight of the Buddy 125: 9.52 hp / 223 lbs = power-to-weight of .043 hp/lb
Which means that the bigger engine in the Blur is not producing enough power to overcome its weight disadvantage when compared with the lighter Buddy 125. The Buddy feels that much lighter too when I ride it. It certainly feels quick and featherweight, where the Blur feels very chunky and solid on its 13" wheels and sport bike suspension. The general consensus (and Genuine/PGO's numbers) say that the Blur has 5-10 mph more on the top end. I'm not really out to prove that here. What it does suggest, however, is a possible difference in gearing. That difference in ratios could make or break the power/weight difference between the two scooters and possibly make the heavier Blur quicker in spite of its greater weight. If the Buddy is geared for economy and the Blur for performance, then the Blur could indeed be faster off-the-line despite the power-to-weight disadvantage.
So enough jaw, we all know this stuff. Here are the numbers. Both scooters are unmodified.
My wife's runs show a little bit of a time spread. She was letting off the throttle just a split second before she reached the cone on some of her runs. Having done the same runs myself, I don't blame her. It's kind of an intimidating thing with the far end of the parking lot advancing toward you at an ever quickening rate. Even still, she did a great set of runs. Her times were:
Buddy:
9.4 sec <----- best time
9.9 sec
9.9 sec
10.4 sec
9.6 sec
----------------------
Avg time: 9.84 sec
Blur:
10.5
10.3
9.8
9.6 <----- best time
9.8
----------------------
Avg time: 10.0 sec
Now all you Buddy folk don't get too excited just yet. She'd basically never ridden the Blur before. And her fastest time on the Blur still landed within the low half of her time spread on the Buddy. But hey, I don't need to make excuses. My numbers were:
Buddy:
11.1 sec
10.9 sec <----- best time
10.9 sec <----- best time
11.2 sec
11.0 sec
------------------
Avg time: 11.02 sec
Blur:
10.3 sec
10.3 sec
10.4 sec
10.2 sec <----- best time
10.5 sec
------------------
Avg time: 10.34 seconds!!!!
My slowest time on the Blur was half a second faster than my fastest time on the Buddy. I rode both scoots as hard as I could and made sure not to release the throttle or brake until after I'd passed the cone, which was scary fun! It's a nice tight set of times so I've got to give props to the Blur for shaving more than half a second off such a short drag race. But I've also got to hand it to the Buddy for being way faster than it really ought to be.
So the verdict? The two of them are pretty much dead even. Seriously, even if it did edge out, what's half a second in the real world? The Blur has a little more off-the-line grunt than the Buddy, but the Buddy is lighter and makes up for most of it down the stretch. So if the myth is that the Buddy 125 is significantly quicker than the Blur, I'd call that myth "busted." But the Blur isn't truly quicker either. It's a sibling rivalry that surely won't end here, but I think this is a pretty strong case against this notion that the Blur is slow. It's not. Believe me.
P.S. And yes, this probably does mean that the Buddy 150 is a hair quicker than the Blur. Duh. It's got a major power-to-weight advantage. If I had one, I'd test it. But the Blur is still amazing, just for the brakes and the handling alone. All I wanted to dispel here was this notion that the Buddy 125 is running speedy circles around the Blur like people are claiming. Nope. Especially once the road takes to curvin'
