Sorry Brooks, can't agree with that. For like capacity, twins have far greater torque than inline fours, develop their power lower in the rev range, are more lumpy low down and have a narrower spread of revs with with to use it all.......... All of which make them more difficult to manage than inline fours. Any riding instructor will tell a novice to go for a 4 before a v-twin.
Even Ducati acknowledge this* but, when all's said and done, there's no substitute for experience:
Depends on how much you value safety. If you see these comments as simply being 'negative', then you're missing the point. There is a wealth of experience amongst many of the posters here, you'd do well to listen to some of it.
jdw
* On the Ducati factory tour, they made a big point of how 'Ducati's aren't for everybody' and of how they are 'far more difficult to master than any jap 4'....yadda yadda yadda....pretty close to the truth really....
Even Ducati acknowledge this* but, when all's said and done, there's no substitute for experience:
Depends on how much you value safety. If you see these comments as simply being 'negative', then you're missing the point. There is a wealth of experience amongst many of the posters here, you'd do well to listen to some of it.
jdw
* On the Ducati factory tour, they made a big point of how 'Ducati's aren't for everybody' and of how they are 'far more difficult to master than any jap 4'....yadda yadda yadda....pretty close to the truth really....