Lol send the $$$ and I will happily reconsider
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
But you get what you pay for
Those efficient Germans outsourced the manufacture of my headlight to the Italians. It broke. The replacement (under warranty thank goodness) arrived pre-broken in the exact same manner, despite excessive amounts of packaging. The 2nd replacement with minimal packaging was perfick. Really, Italians and electrics?
Dunno if I'd be buying a whole bike made of Italian stuff
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
true
BUT
if they were truly that bad, would they sell any? Companies making "better" products have gone bust before now.
Like I said before, pretty sure the "good" marques have their horror stories. I was at a ride on Sunday where a fella was riding a 1290 KTM, that was his second, the first one had so many problems that KTM couldn't sort out they had to give him a new one. The Austrians and Germans lay claim to efficiency. According to the Swiss, they are both amateurs.
When I actually have the thing for a while we shall see
Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
So, I intend to write a more in depth review later with some more kms clocked up but just by of an update.....
In my limited experience this is a heck of an enjoyable bike to ride. By far and away its the most comfortable thing I have ridden over a decent (>150kms) distance. I have to experiment with the suspension set up as its currently ex factory except s few turns of rear pre-load. That said, it felt very good on the roads I have ridden to date.
I picked the bike up on Saturday past, on Wednesday I left it back for the 1000km service. I have done my commute (140km round trip) a couple of times and at the weekend in the stellar weather Mrs UK and I headed North (the BH being on her CB500X) We did the paraparas, Raetihi, Ohakune (stopping for eclairs) then a stop over with family in Taihape. Next day was a straight run down SH1. Easy as, no sweat and fun.
The run to Whanganui got some heat in the tyres to break them in. A note about those, Dunlop Qualifiers are the OE. 180 wide on the rear. Without trying too hard I have used all the tyre. There is a 6inch rim on this baby and doing some reading around it was supposed to come with a 190 tyre OE. I think I might go that way when replacing to give myself a tad more rubber.
SH4 was excellent as always. This is a big V Twin, quite the change from my IL4 GSX. Fuelling in the low revs is not happy but keep em up and the muffler growling and everything is well in the world.
The fuel gauge is odd, seems to get low very quickly then hang around there for a long time. 350kms is pretty easy, for a 24l tank I would expect that! Fuel consumption was not a primary focus so will look at it again.
I got a California Science screen for it. For the first time in my life I have a screen working the way its supposed to. 100kmh with the visor up and its all good. I can actually hear the engine much better, love it. Plus not cleaning bug guts from my visor every stop is a nice change.
Brakes are awesome
Gear box is nicely positive
switch gear is differently laid out but falls to hand (or finger) ok, its just a matter of relearning.
I would like the clock and odo/trip stuff to be a separate display not a scrolling one but its easy to change with rocker under my left thumb so no drama.
riding modes, mostly in touring, all good. Sport, oh yes, we will have fun......
Traction control, didn't experience it, probably a good thing, means its not too intrusive.
It looks very good.
Getting some toys added, the factory heated grips, bars and lights and an ECU map update. Looking forward to a deep and meaningful relationship.
Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
Argh - stop it - I'm Jealous already...
indeed, there is some controversy as to what it translates to. The offering I like is "Big Boss"
In any event my wife has named it the Ice Wolf, not that she goes for the dramatic or anything.
And yes, the bike is very good.
I know you are not being disparaging of the bike, just querying the name choice but funnily enough there were those who were quite disparaging of my TNAB. Boring, old, underpowered, badly suspended, heavy, ugly, uninspiring, typical Suzuki recycling, shit, low quality. All these were words used to describe the bike. Yet when I decided to change, some have said "why would you change from the reliable Jappa?" I sort of don't give a shit really, it was mine and I enjoyed it. I suspect the same will be the case with the......Ice Wolf/Chicken
Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
If you have enough clearance between swingarm/hugger/anything else, consider a 190/55 tyre. You'll get contact patch from the extra width while still keeping a nice profile for cornering. Only thing is, it's quite a different sized tyre to a 180/55, hence the clearance proviso.
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
yep, understand the proviso. Consulting the Aprilia forums it seems to be a workable and very successful solution. I was very surprised to see the whole (180) tyre being used as I genuinely didn't think I was pushing that hard. Thankfully a 190/55/17 is readily available in the model tyres I would like to consider, Angel GT, T30, PR4 etc
Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
Not all 180 tyres are created equally (or any size really). Some have a very flat profile, or the edge of the tread doesn't really "wrap around". I remember buying my ZX10R, the previous owner couldn't get it close to the edge, I did it easily on the OEM tyre, went for a curvy 190 and finally got close to the edge of that...
I'm even certain for my GSA, that the PR4T rear is slightly more flat than a regular PR4 in the same size (T I was running off the edge, reg I'm just on the edge, but the front shows more lean...). Never predictable stuff
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
As a real bandit rider (Not disparaging the TNAB GSX1250FA) I can appreciate that ... I just opened the throttle to those people and dare them to keep up ..
(Don't get me wrong - I know the Bandit will not keep up with any modern litre sports bike .. but most fuckwits can't ride them that fast .. there's plenty who can tho' ...)
"So if you meet me, have some sympathy, have some courtesy, have some taste ..."
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks