Or, what a photoshopped artist's impression might assume it could possibly look like, if Honda are actually making it.
Or, what a photoshopped artist's impression might assume it could possibly look like, if Honda are actually making it.
looks convincing enough cep for the muffler looks too small. We live in hope that the big 4 will produce some updates of the classics, AT,XR,DR, KLR they already updated the tenere didn't they?
Is that an under seat rear fuel tank on the AT?
....wherezz that track go
Any idea of the engine size? I wonder if it uses Honda's 500cc twin, or may be it uses their current 700cc v twin? Anyone got any ideas?
I think the market has been waiting for something like this. How many people would buy a KTM690 if it had a bigger tank and proper seat? Just check out the rally raid kits for the ktm 690. I'd have one if it wasn't so expensive to make it usable. If Honda can produce something like that from factory it will be really popular. Hell they might finally produce something I'd consider buying!![]()
I'm not fat, i'm pregnant with icecreams baby.
It will use a 1000cc Parrellel twin.
http://www.adventureridingnz.co.nz/t...015/#post-3653
www.AdventureRidingNZ.co.nz NZ's dedicated Adventure Riding Community
Forums, free GPS track downloads and much more. Now over 5700 members, are you one of them?
Sticking to the back roads
I could be really tempted as I've had fantastic reliability and service from my Honda local and wish there was a GS equivalent (no, don't mention the fat Crosstourer) however... I can't help but think they'll do something really stupid with it...
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
Oh, sorry. That's probably me. Happens every time I see a leviathan terrain crusher rumbling through Countdown car park.
Dear Honda/Santa/Yamahaha
For Christmas I want a sub 180kg bike which is comfortable, well sprung, has about 80/90 horsepowers and 300km range, minimum, on a tank full. Oh, I want to be able to maintain it myself & fall off without writing it off.
Can't be that hard, Shirley?
Manopausal.
Not sure about that seat for anything longer than a trip to the shop.......
Its weird they were game changers with the Fireblade but things seemed to stop there.
Those crossrunner things had potential but even the 700 version is morbidly obese. Even for more tarmac orientation they have missed the mark there.
Well my dear Santa/Honda/Yamaha letter:
Sub 600cc for weight loss and cheaper rego
Maximum weight of 160kg.
Anywhere from 50-80HP fine
Fuel injected with max torque mode and a jesus I forgot to fill up limp home maximum economy mode.
Single front brake disc fine but make it large.
Some type of factory installed scottoiler setup for chain.
Factory bashplate/engine gaurds/barkbusters.
Sealed waterproof electrics/loom-drownproof bike with auto intake seal of some kind.
Factory heated grips and touring style seat.
20L composite/plastic tank
Landing lights of a 747 for headlight but LED equivlant etc
Integral anitheft/gps tracking of some kind, RFID embedded parts so you can just scan any bike for parts stolen.
Factory tubeless rim/tyre setup
Or a 690 Adv, or even betterer, a 450Adv from Brand Orange.
This pretty much sums up where I think Adv Bikes are going:
http://www.advpulse.com/adv-bikes/ar...g-soccer-moms/
The author of the story claims Adventure Bikes have too many compromises and don’t excel at anything, and that owners overpay for features just to get the “Adventure” look. He even says that Adventure bikes are for people that want to “feel” adventurous.We’ve heard similar generalizations from motorcycle manufacturer reps as well. When asked “Why don’t you build a more off-road capable adventure bike?” many times the response has been, “Most Adventure Bike owners don’t take their bikes off-road.”
We've had this discussion before. I don't think most big ADV machines are bought as dirt bikes, I think they're bought as naked touring bikes. A task most do better than a lot of bikes built for touring.
I've trundled the Buell down many a gravel road, but more than that is simply beyond my skills, which like a lot of riders I know are limited to chucking bikes around on actual dirt to machines that weigh not much more than I do.
So that wee survey at the bottom of that article is going to miss the point as well...
Go soothingly on the grease mud, as there lurks the skid demon
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