A quick review of my Bursig stand

MC MUSTANG

Peace Keeper or Ban Hammer-it's up to you; IDMBT#9
Staff member
Administrator
Registered
[video=facebook;3183827512671]https://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=3183827512671&oid=350032136944&saved[/video]


A quick review of my Bursig stand...
 
You made a fine video! Thank you for the review. It's an awesome stand, but my garage is just not the place for it. Just enough room for wifes eclipse and the busa. That's about it..
 
Excellent vid Shawn :thumbsup:

If you were on the stand side of the bike, pushing the bike away from you and hit a lil groove in the floor or maybe a tool ya forgot about, do you think it would tip over away from you or just stop rolling?

Smellphone via Forum Runner
 
great review! like you said, looks like a good addition to a garage that already has the basics :beerchug:
 
Very professional review. You are obviously well practiced in giving technical instruction. (Wonder where that came from... LOL!)

Ditto on Frog's question. Also, do you think there is any way for the bike to slip off the pins? Or is there some kind of ramp designed into that replacement nut/pin-receiver that makes it lock in tight when lifted?

Thanks for your work. Excellent job!
 
Excellent review.I did wince though when you said the price:laugh:
There's a company called ENVY do a similar product in the UK.I saw them demonstrating it at the Bike show last year.Looked a quality piece of kit and retailed at about £300
 
Very nicely done Shawn :bowdown: I'd never heard of that stand, thanks for sharing!!
 
Excellent vid Shawn :thumbsup:

If you were on the stand side of the bike, pushing the bike away from you and hit a lil groove in the floor or maybe a tool ya forgot about, do you think it would tip over away from you or just stop rolling?

Smellphone via Forum Runner

Actually, I think that would depend on which direction you were pushing/pulling and from which side of the bike... if you were pulling from the left side of the bike and one of the left side castors when into a seam or crack, it might be possible to pull the bike over...
 
Very professional review. You are obviously well practiced in giving technical instruction. (Wonder where that came from... LOL!)

Ditto on Frog's question. Also, do you think there is any way for the bike to slip off the pins? Or is there some kind of ramp designed into that replacement nut/pin-receiver that makes it lock in tight when lifted?

Thanks for your work. Excellent job!

LOL... the bike wouldn't slip off the pins, but it might be possible to wiggle the bike off if you were specifically trying to do that. It is much more stable off the ground than it seems.
 
Very good review, Shawn. It looks like that stand would be an ideal solution for storage and maneuvering the bike where someone is short on space. :thumbsup:
 
I've sat on my busa on my Bursig stand and hand a friend push me around on it(195lbs in leathers).
I bounced and moved around and we went back and forth over the grooves in my patio.
The bike and stand are rock solid.
My bike's been sitting on it since yesterday(got tires mounted today), and it'll probably stay there another day or two before I balance them and put them back on. No worries at all.:beerchug:
 
Back
Top