![]() |
R1200GS alternative..Cheaper
Hello All,
Im looking for a bit of advice. I have been looking at buying a BMW R1200GSA for some time now but cannot justify the price for what I will use it for. Ideally I am looking for a bike to drag me and the girlfriend around europe a couple of times a year with luggage and tent etc! I do not want a full on conventional type touring bike as I am only 24 and not quite ready for that yet. Can anyone recommend something suitable with a bit of steet cred that will do the trick for between £5000-£6500ish? Any suggestions/recommendation with get gratefully received. Cheers Richard |
What are you going to use it for, just pavement, or some dirt roads/trails as well?
|
With that price tag you can aquire a decent R1100GS or even R1150GS. But probably you'll get better conditioned late R1100GS (1998-1999 year models, which will last a lifetime if you service them good).
For 2-up, big telelever-fronted boxer series are the best you can get in that price range IMO, unrivalled comfort and handling when loaded 2-up, especially if you intend to do bad roads time to time (Eastern Europe, the best Europe for GS :thumbup1: ). Then again you can get a V-Strom 1000 cheaper, but have to make a lot of costly modifications (stronger springed $$$ aftermarket rear suspension and you need A LOT better springs for the front, strong crashbars to protect all that fragile plastic, better bashplate for the exposed oil cooler, etc for a starter) to make it handle under load and to prepare it for the abuse. Best try different bikes (besides GS and Strom, also consider Triumph Tiger 955i, Varadero that fit that price range) on a long test drive and choose the one you and your g/f feel the best on the long distance. Happy testing! |
The BMW GS's are great two-up touring bikes. Skip the ADV model, the standard GS is better and 65 lbs. lighter weight, easier to handle.
Buy a used GS, two to four years old , low miles. Some good deals out there, especially on earlier R1100GS or R1150GS. Don't believe a word the dealer tells you (they lie). The bike won't be cheap to run but a great bike to ride two up. Also take a look at and test ride: Triumph Tiger - great bike, good prices Aprilia Capo Nord ... excellent bike, great two-up Suzuki Vstrom - DL1000 - most reliable of all, cheap and easy to maintain Suzuki Bandit 1250/1200 - good standard bike, good value. In the UK you guys get several cool bikes we don't see in the USA. One is a big Honda 1000 CBR something, forgot model. Basic Sports tourer, not the sports bike. Gets great reviews. Buy a 2nd hand one. I'd start visiting dealers, go shopping, take some test rides. Take your time, don't be pressured. See and ride everything you can. |
Quote:
|
if you're only 24 then an old BMW will (hopefully, unless you're a very sensible boy) feel incredibly dull to ride. remember, before the fashionable 1200 GS, these were for the 'pipe and slippers brigade' here in the UK.
if you've got cash, then try lots of bikes. if Albania is a while off yet, maybe pickup an interesting road bike (st2/4, multi-strada, zx9, triumph of some sort) for your euro trips, and then after a while change it for a 1200 GS (they will be dropping in price). forget the nonsense about having to make 'costly modifications' to a stock bike for euro road riding. you don't, unless you're very pernickety or an elephant. if you can't ride a stock bike 2 up with luggage, then it's probably broken or you need more lessons. a conventional tourer has more street cred than a non-1200 GS. the most important thing is that your pillion is happy, and isn't experiencing vibes through the foot-pegs (ruled out an older GS for my pillion). |
Has anyone had much to do with the Triumph Sprint ST with 2 up touring? Like the look of them and they look like they could be quite fun?
|
All depends what you want. At 24 I couldn't afford much in the way of bikes but had many a happy Euro tour on my 1981 Suzuki GS1000G, you could pick up one for about £1000-1500. Fine for two up with tent and very comfy for the long motorways in Europe.
|
I'd be looking at the Guzzi Stelvio and KTM Adventure. Guzzi importer is not far from you.
|
Quote:
KTM-Adventure-950 Or a 950 Supermoto. Bags of street cred there:funmeteryes: John |
With that budget you're spoilded for choice.
How about a VFR800 ? Fazer1000 Bandit 1250 GSX1400 XJR1300 Blackbird |
Quote:
Go try to ride with a fully stock 2-up loaded sports-tourer some small trails in East-Europe, endless gravel in the Baltics, dirt in Romania and Bulgaria, everything combined in the Balkans, then come and tell me about not needing any modifications for a fully loaded bike :innocent: The bike will be riding like a weak-legged cow (especially the conventional forked front with soft stock springs) that bottoms out all the time and that simply explodes its plastic and radiators into 1000 bits once you go off into the rocks wanting to chase that nice remote area with nice scenery to camp with your wife or g/f. But I guess it's pretty normal for West-Europeans to consider the word "Europe" a nice-smooth-road place where you only need a stocky (sport-) touring bike for the best ride, since less developed far East-Europe is already considered Asia for them :biggrin3: At least for me, that's the definition of East-Europe: http://i104.photobucket.com/albums/m...0GS/img131.jpg And we ride 2-up in the same mood, my wife was taking pic. True, you CAN make East-Europe on more-or-less smooth tar as well, but you don't get even a glimpse of the real experience if you don't take the small secondary roads through the atmospheric countryside. Margus |
Quote:
you're making out your riding a showroom GS, whereas a showroom DL requires 'costly work'. bmw people who spend money modifying their bmw's are always very keen to prove their credentials with tales of fast off-road riding (two-up is an extra bonus). I think, on the Internet, you have to be careful with brand evangelists. it's about 15 years since I was last over Romania/Bulgaria/Poland/etc. I think the routes down RIM/Mali are far worse. And there are more people than you might like to think about on road bikes down there. my own enfield was 2-up in Ghana for a while. I accept that you do have to ride a bit more intelligently with stock bikes, you need to preserve their bits. Off-road you have to choose your lines more carefully than you would on a mod'd GS. But gravel ? give me a break... I just don't think it's right to put the fear into people with talk of impending bike failure unless £££ is spent at TT. Credit the guy with some intelligence that he will assess the surface under his wheels and ride slower or turn back if it's too bad. |
Quote:
I've not ridden the DL, so I can't comment on the springs, but one thing that I would have been wary of, had I bought one, was the oil cooler: perfeclty placed to get a stone in the chops on a gravel road. My take on it is this: As far as protecting the bike, if either of these were to slip on gravel even at a standstill, I'd guess that, without the boxer engine to keep the bike off the ground, the DL could come off a lot worse, in terms of plastics etc, and plastics are the bane of a biker's bank account. I have embarassingly dropped a number of bike at a standstill, GS included, and it was barely noticeably on the cylinder head. Where my numerous poor Hondas and a mint Kawasaki suffered for my clumsiness... Applying the same logic, doing the trip on any of the road bikes that Ted mentioned is equally possibly, on that same understanding that they will probably suffer from any falls to a greater degree... If Richard86 can live with that possibility, then fine. Quote:
|
Quote:
http://www.blackrockits.com.au/GC%20Photos/haobon.JPG True, they don't look cool but they are absolutely necessary once you take a plastic faired road bike onto gravel I'm determined to get a proper set to fit my my next offroader - in the meantime I may even dril a few holes in the bodywork of my Burgman to make some fit ready for my next ride up to Birdsville.. :mchappy: |
Quote:
if you are on a stock bike then you ride it like a stock bike. if you spend £3000 (on mod'ing a BMW or a Honda, etc) then you are paying to ride it, essentially, faster. 30 mph over the roughest stuff rather than 10 mph. pretty much anything with 2 wheels can be ridden/got-over the roughest stuff, it just comes down to how hard you want to push it. there are people riding around on all sorts of bikes (2-up) all over the place. You can, but don't need to fully prep/upgrade. it just means that you ride accordingly. look at all the scooters riding around africa, 2-up, 3-up, etc. if you find yourself on a trip wishing you could do more/faster, then you change your bike for the next one (we're not talking RTW here). the OP is talking about gentle stuff, not RTW. and mainly roads. I think it's just a different mindset. some people just want to get on two wheels and ride around any problem/weakness. others want total piece of mind and get annoyed if something breaks. if you know motogp, then Rossi is the former and Gibernau was the latter. to say that a DL (I have one) needs lots of money spent, but a GS doesn't. Oh and here's a picture of my GS 'we ride in the same mood 2-up' (ie faster than stock). doesn't present a completely honest account given the context of this discussion. that GS, ridden in that 'mood' has been mod'd to allow him to ride 2-up in that 'mood'. the completely stock 1150 GS I rode from Mali to London was fine (not my cuppa, and too expensive to fix though). it was ridden down there 2-up. But going back onto the DL, after 1 month on the GS, felt weird. The DL felt like it was very flimsy and about to break in half. but that's just relative to the weight/bulk of a GS. Many people take the DL650 because the 1000 is deemed too heavy, so what they'd make of a GS I don't know. I understand why GS owners think Jap bikes are flimsy, even the big ones like DL or Varadero. But, in my experience, it says more about the GS than the DL. part of the appeal of the GS is its stability, and that's largely down to its weight. it is incredible difficult to upset its course once set, either by wind or road surface. |
Quote:
I've never heard of a broken oil cooler on a Vstrom. Have you? Added a "Fenda' Extenda' thingy to keep mud off the rad and oil cooler, maybe that helped? It cost $10. No issues for me with rocks breaking anything. 70K miles. Also, the cooler has a screen over it. Still, it does LOOK vulnerable, I agree. But somehow no damage ever seems to happen, even riding 70 mph on dirt roads over thousands of miles. Go figure Suspension is not bad stock (ride one and find out), does benefit from firming up, especially going two up RTW, off road. (I go mostly solo) Spent a whooping $80 on fork springs & $15 for heavier fork oil. I had the stock KYB shock revalved (Race Tech) for $150. Is this a lot of money? Shock never leaked, worked great! Most of the GS guys I know took off brand new WP shocks and bought $1400 (each) Ohlins, front and back. They are very nice, but I thought the R12GS rode great stock? Local BMW dealer had a sale of left over cast away parts. He had about 20 sets of stock GS WP shocks, selling very very cheap. Some showroom new. Guess what? No one bought them. But they sell lots of Ohlins stickers! Some Vstrom owners put on Wilbers, Elka, Ohlins or other aftermarket shock. The Wilbers perform good but some blew out the seals riding on wash board roads. This was known since 2003 or so. The Vstrom rides lighter than a GS in the dirt. With right tires of course. It's pretty handy if you're careful! The 650 V is about 100 lbs. lighter than an 1150GS, about 40 lbs. lighter than a R1200GS. (wet weights) Quote:
The Vstrom is extremely strong. Frame, sub frame, engine, all very strong. You DO have to watch the lower engine case if going in Rock Gardens. Bash plate a good idea. Suzuki Germany designed the V-Strom ... so maybe they added in more off road toughness than is obvious? Here in California we see more V-Strom's riding around than Harley-Davidson's! They seem to be more popular than ever. Why is that? :innocent: http://lh3.ggpht.com/_pXs6Z_85Tj8/TB...that_Strom.jpg Vstrom meet - Germany Some history: History of V-Strom - Stromtrooper.com |
Regarding prejudice, I was talking in generalities, not about you in particular
Quote:
If Richard86 is comfortable with that, I'm sure the Suzuki, or any number of other models would do famously, as my own 17 year old Transalp is doing.... Quote:
If I were to consider buying a DL, I'd research it, or buy/make additional protection for that part of the bike. I look at a Vstrom and that is something I perceive as a weakness. Whether it is or not is for the OP, or any other potential buyer to assess for themselves... It was as simple a statement as that. As far as your other points are concerned, I think you addressed them to the wrong person. Quote:
|
Quote:
Sure they will last a lifetime- just like any other bike - that is if you dont ride very much or are counting a lifetime in dog's years and consider servicing them right as in replacing every broken bit each time it happens. Reminds one of the story of the aged limberjack who claimed that he used the same axe for his entire 60 year carreer chopping trees"Yep , used the same axe all them years, only changed the handle five times and put two new heads on" Regardless of what make of bike- they are all machines and they all will wear out.This side of the Atlantic any BMW with more than 1000 00km is virtually considered used up, dealerswill not want them as trades. If a GS1100 falls over the plastic front turn signals are trash Just buy whatever you like and can afford, ride it and see what you find out and go from there. |
I think everyones forgetting that the lad is 24 and said he wants to keep some street cred...
A BMW is not street cred until you're in you're at least in your 50's ! :rolleyes2: Especially an old GS. Either are most of the bikes suggested here. I did my first trip at 23 on an Africa Twin.. I couldnt wait to get home and sell it so I could buy a blade ! Now, im the other way round. |
I really shouldn't get sucked into these "which bike is best threads" but on this occassion we seem to be getting way off what the original poster was asking about.
He said he was looking for a cheaper alternative to a 1200GSA with street cred for mostly road but a little bit of backroads stuff 2 up. I assume he was talking about a new bike and expecting it to do what he needs straight out of the showroom. Street cred is hard to pin down as it usually depends on who's looking and where you are. In my opinion a fully kitted Airhead GS would have more street cred than anything if you're in a campsite in Botswana amongst a group of overland travellers. The 1200GS has street cred from Tescos to Timbuktu almost independant of the onlooker as a result of LWR/LWD publicity. There aren't many other bikes out there with anywhere near the same status but I still think that the KTM adventure is the next best (but hardly any cheaper). If it were me I'd go for a 2 year old GSA. There are plenty of low mileage ones out there and they are probably a better bet than a new one as some of the teething troubles will have been fixed. |
Quote:
That's not far off! The Cruiser crowd has been pretty hard hit here in California. Garage Jewelery is going on the auction block for a lot of these riders. Great deals for anyone in the market for a Harley now, but you still see hundreds of daily riders commuting to work and such. Any bike you get for doing longer tours will need some up grading and additions. Vstrom, GS, Africa Twin, Gold Wing, XR400. They all can benefit from improvements. They all get varying degrees of crash damage and they all have maintenance issues. Like Sjoerd said, get a bike and starting riding. Over time and miles it all well become clear what works and what does not. Starting on something cheap, light and reliable is not a bad way to begin ... or end. |
This is the bike you need....
http://i396.photobucket.com/albums/p...LLASSIETTA.jpg 60000 faultless, comfortable miles. Once you've ridden the Triumph triple you'll be hooked. |
Tiger: Undiscovered ADV bike
http://lh5.ggpht.com/_pXs6Z_85Tj8/TB...00_iT5r7-L.jpg
Tigers good at a lot of things ... herding Sheep ... http://lh5.ggpht.com/_pXs6Z_85Tj8/TB...54_dAkb3-L.jpg Going to watch a Western Shootout in a Nevada Ghost town ... http://lh6.ggpht.com/_pXs6Z_85Tj8/TB...20_3K2zm-L.jpg or exploring our best California roads. |
I promised myself not to take part in "Which Bike" threads, but somehow I did and now I see it's opened a can of worms by just giving a personal opinions, since this thread has already gone "into bananas" like someone ingeniously said on HUBB once. :)
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
And oh yes, on most big trailies the turn signals are trash once you've gone down in a proper way. Made in China $10 turn signals made for offroad bikes with rubber arms are the first mod you should do with 10 minute installation. But at least you haven't broken well over $300 worth of side plastics and other bits with that off… Quote:
I guess it all goes under "your mileage may vary" case, where everybody has its own opinion about it and nothing can be classified as true or false. It's all up to the rider who has to choose/set up the bike for the personal needs. My personal opinion was just to be on the safe side rather than put all tour hopes on your own precautions and be constantly stressed with your own concerns that you may break something any time. At the same time this doesn't neccesarily mean you have to install full Touratech catalogue of reinforcement/protection parts on your bike for that weekend ride to the pub. Quote:
I guess horizontally mounted engine (gyroscopic forces?) has something to do with the impression of very good stability on the road (and ditto to all other "grand-tourers" with the same engine mounting, Pan European, Goldwing, Guzzis that just feel bloody well planted on the road when you ride them). Maybe also telelever or frame geometry plays some part with the big GS, but I think it's negligible or even non-existant at steady speeds. Telelever starts to play its part only if your throttle and braking operation becomes "irratic" (curvy roads, traffic, avoiding potholes etc) and in terms of those conditions, so far I think with 2-up full gear setting the telelever front suspension is really a God-sent system and I find it pityful that others haven't aquired the simple (excluding the expensive side-steered Benellis, Yamaha GTS and other handbuilt $$$-experimental bikes) non-diving suspension technology to stabilize that huge load-transfer of heavy bikes (Hossack's patents BMW-licensed only?) that would make 2-up RTW-ers selection of well handling bikes a lot wider than limited to that one GS. While we've also seen 50cc two-up "doable", we wanted the best bike affordable to us before going on our own RTW, so we tested different bikes to be sure of our choice (yes, times do change, so while on RTW we've tested other bikes as we had a chance just to keep our minds open) and IMHO telelever is a superior system to the regular forks and I haven't found even radically modified forks that give the same steady feeling on a pig-heavy 2-up loaded bike once you start playing around with that weight of the bike. Now before you start knocking, that being said, with a light bike, solo and with a lot less gear, I'd probably prefer well set-up conventional forks since I don't find any really noticable advantage on telelever when riding a light bike solo. Again, I must stress those are my personal opinions and my personal observations. There is no universal truth out there anyway, so the original poster should make up his own truth from this thread that's already utterly off topic. Margus |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:14. |