Quote:
Originally Posted by Outback Aussie
I put this on the wrong thread because I'm new here, and didnt get any response and was informed here might be betterThere are probably threads on this i don't want to go through the hassle of looking  but I am after peoples thoughts on Yamaha Super Tenere 1200  , those that own one, have owned one. I am looking at buying a bike for myself to travel 2 up with the wife, we plan on traveling around Queensland with maybe a few trips interstate, I am looking at Suzuki Vstrom 1000, BMW 1200, and Triumph tigers 1050 as well. We will travel on gravel roads but mainly sealed.
Thoughts please on the Yamaha, I have read reviews from other sites and forums but most seem to be too honest with no negative comments from lovers of the bikes, so honesty please on positive  and negatives  on the bike.
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We are an Israel based touring company and have had 5 Super Teneres for the past 2 years, renting them out riding them in Israel and abroad and running Motorcycle guided tours locally. from my own Opinion of 10 of thousands of km and from the feed back I am getting from clients coming from all brands and experiencing the Yam ST some time for the first here are my 2 cents.
It is heavy, and it has a rotten side stand at least on my 2013. I think in the 2015/6 its been improved but I'll let you know next week when I get my new 2017 Yam ST.
This is the bad stuff. It is a very easy bike to ride once you get going satble neautral manageable 1 and 2 up. it has decent seats although Pilion you may want to upgrade with after market we didn't and at the end of an 8 hour day my wife was complaining. Maybe yours will be tougher. Its a tall bike and hard to lower it can be made higher but if you are over 175 cm with decent skills you will be good.
My initial feeling after coming off an R1200GS was that it was a little harsh, I tell you now that once it has been run in about 10K and when running at over 4000RPM when cruising the engine is velvety and has very good sense of power. It is much more rugged and has less electronics on it so will give you a more basic riding experience in terms of gadgetry but in my opinion will run much less tech problems and if and when they do occur they will be much cheaper to deal with. however if you are riding around the world and not just round your back yard (be it as big as it is) it is my experience that the BMW dealer network is better spread so less chance for being stuck with no supplies.
In short I love this bike and it will e great for the job you have at hand - your wife will love it and if not its just a seat upgrade away for her to be satisfied. I have now opted for the ZE as I like to be accurate with the suspension setting when switching from Dual to single rider but the Z was fine and supple as long as it was set right.
When you take into account the price factor of the 2 bikes I think it has a much better value for money preposition.
Ride Safe
Eytan Magen
Last edited by Chris Scott; 2 Jan 2017 at 11:56.
Reason: commercial link removed
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