Skip to content
Rider Height
<- Comparison guides

supermoto / default rider 183 cm

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD vs Rieju MRT 125 SM LC ergonomics

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD and Rieju MRT 125 SM LC land within a few ergonomic points for the default rider, so the better choice comes down to posture preference and bike category.

Fit verdict

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD

95Comfortable

All contacts reached

Rieju MRT 125 SM LC

95Comfortable

All contacts reached

The two bikes are close enough that posture preference matters more than the overall score.

Rider fit: reaching the ground

The Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD has a 870 mm seat; the Rieju MRT 125 SM LC sits at 870 mm, within a few millimetres of each other. As a rule of thumb you flat-foot a bike when your inseam roughly matches its seat height: about 87 cm for the Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD and 87 cm for the Rieju MRT 125 SM LC.

Geometry snapshot

Geometry comparison for Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD and Rieju MRT 125 SM LC
SpecKreidler Supermoto 50 DDRieju MRT 125 SM LC
Seat height870 mm870 mm
Wheelbase1,400 mm1,405 mm
Wet weight112 kg-
Displacement50 cc125 cc

Posture metrics

Knee angle

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD
Sport (58.0 deg)
Rieju MRT 125 SM LC
Sport (58.0 deg)

Hip angle

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD
Neutral (95.1 deg)
Rieju MRT 125 SM LC
Neutral (95.0 deg)

Elbow angle

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD
Relaxed (143.3 deg)
Rieju MRT 125 SM LC
Relaxed (143.3 deg)

Torso lean

Kreidler Supermoto 50 DD
Neutral (11.3 deg)
Rieju MRT 125 SM LC
Neutral (11.4 deg)