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Thread: Best Type of Bike for NZ?

  1. #16
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    26th February 2005 - 15:10
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    Depends on whether you need to use it as a communter , and how far you think a "long trip" is. And whether you plan on seeing a lot of gravel.

    Agreed with the top speed, but for touring you need the *possibility* of more, so as to be able to maintain that speed uphill aginst a headwind after slowing for a cage etc.

    If a "long trip" is 200km , then the 636 is reckoned good. If a "long trip" is 1000km non stop and you don't need to prove anything to people, then BMW can't be beaten for effortlessly eating up the miles. And they can take luggage, which saves having to have to trot along behind on hundreds of little legs.

    If you want long distance and gravel is important, the Triumph Tiger or Buell are well thought of.

    Incidentally, the Titan is STILL damn good for touring !
    Quote Originally Posted by skidmark
    This world has lost it's drive, everybody just wants to fit in the be the norm as it were.
    Quote Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
    The manufacturers go to a lot of trouble to find out what the average rider prefers, because the maker who guesses closest to the average preference gets the largest sales. But the average rider is mainly interested in silly (as opposed to useful) “goodies” to try to kid the public that he is riding a racer

  2. #17
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    8th July 2004 - 14:56
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    Quote Originally Posted by Motu
    If you want to ride all the roads and conditions this country offers and aren't too concerned about mega high speed,then an adventure bike is perfect.They can take any road surface in their stride,are well set up for lugage...and can show a clean pair of heels to a sportsbike in the real tight twisties.
    Yup. If you want 1 bike to rule them all it's gotta be gravel capable in my book. Just 'cos it's not a 1000cc sportbike don't mean they're not fun to ride on the tar neither.

    Really 3 bikes are required, A sportbike/tourer/cruiser depending on your inclination, a middleweight adventure bike & a lightweight trailbike. Ah well, 1/3 of the way there...

    Cheers
    Clint

  3. #18
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    3rd November 2005 - 18:04
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    Damn it!

    Quote Originally Posted by VasalineWarrior
    An rg 150 will do 140km/hr mate, and go round a corner just as fast or faster than a 1000cc superbike.
    I should have bought an RG 150. Would have saved me a whole pile of folding.

    I agree with your v-twin recomendation and there's alot a variety around now.

    But as someone else said there is no such thing as the perfect all rounder or the "best" bike for NZ. You have to go for what you will spend most of your time doing. I have a full on dirt bike and sports bike but there's a huge gap in between...

  4. #19
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    25th October 2002 - 12:00
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    up to about 140 kph.....hmmm......top gear roll on......90 - 140 in about 3 secs.........hmmmmmm.........effortless touring, Auckland to Welly and back............wheelies till the cows come home..............GSXR1000 I'd say!
    “- He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it.”

  5. #20
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    12th September 2003 - 12:00
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    Take your pic:

    BMW F650GS
    Ducati Multistrada (if you can handle the looks)
    Buell XB12S Ulysses
    Yamaha XT660

    and a few other types of bikes I'm sure I could find if I had the time.

    Definitely an adventure bike.
    And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.

    - James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.

  6. #21
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    9th December 2005 - 18:50
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    Quote Originally Posted by What?
    Whaddyamean IF????
    well how fast do you want to spend?

  7. #22
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    20th September 2004 - 22:25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Troll
    well how fast do you want to spend?
    How about $13995

  8. #23
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    27th November 2003 - 12:00
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    The best bike for most New Zealand riding conditions? No contest. It would have to be the "Forgotten Suzuki" -- the DL1000K6 V-Strom.
    "Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]

  9. #24
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    3rd March 2004 - 22:43
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    I looked into this. You need to know what style of riding you want to do. Sports or cruising. If it's sports I can't help but cruising I have one opinion. The Harleys do have some finer points. There's no doubt they hold their price and there are more Harleys on the road than any other cruiser so when I first started looking 'them' is what I started looking at. But the simple fact is that they are not made for NZ roads and as such I rejected the brand for this reason. The Jap Harley clones in some ways are better than what they copy but again in general are not made for NZ roads. The closest I came was the Guzzi EV. Eurpean roads in some ways are not dissimular to here, or so I have been told so I went for the Guzzi. Wheel base and rake are very close to the Harley Sportster. So if Harleys are your thing the Sportster 1200 is the way I would go. Short fast and light.

    At the end of the day choose a bike that not only suites your style of riding but one that ''fits.'

    Skyryder
    Free Scott Watson.

  10. #25
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    3rd May 2005 - 11:51
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    I've been on Stewart Island for a few days with my children - excellent fun. Scooters can be hired for $26/hour. So we walked.

    Excellent discussion and you are all right to say that it depends on the type of riding. I'm not seriously looking at trading the R80 but it is fun to consider the options. Some of my friends whose children have left the dribble and crawl stage are now looking at getting bikes again so we tend to discuss whats best - generally on the older second-hand market.

    I think Vasaline Warrior makes a good point suggesting a V-twin. Torque and power.

    Never thought about adventure bikes but it is a good suggestion. I go offroad but usually on an old XR200 or in a 4wd truck. Gotta take the children along cos they enjoy offroad too.

    I'd guess that most bikes are used either for commuting daily, or as a fun machine for weekends/rallies.

  11. #26
    The adventure bikes we are suggesting are not off road bikes,but all road bikes,there is a differnce,and as you ask about the best bike for New Zealand conditions they are the obvious choice.
    In and out of jobs, running free
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  12. #27
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    1st November 2005 - 08:18
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    Quote Originally Posted by RiderInBlack
    Would disagree with that, having tried both the GSX750F and the VFR750. Ended up with the 1990 VFR750. It had well earned it vote as the best allround road bike of it's year. Good commuter. Used it working as an RN in Tuaranga. Made easy work of the traffic. Did day hoons with it, Track days, and toured. No complaints. Would have another one if I was not so much into long distance Touring.
    Im in love!!!!! (Said in best Blackadder voice... "I love you and want to have your babies!!!")
    Shame about the fact it's not an all-round bike though. Moto has got the solution though!
    TOP QUOTE: “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.”

  13. #28
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    24th September 2004 - 06:46
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    Quote Originally Posted by Winston001
    I've been away from motorcycles for a few years so have been pleasantly suprised - astonished really - at the power and sophistication of modern bikes.

    My teeth were cut on mates Titans, Bonnevilles, CB350 , 750/4, Z1900, etc. Those machines were lots of fun, especially the Z1 which was a headturner for a few years.

    But modern bikes seem to have vastly superior power-to-weight ratios, more comfort and better handling.

    It used to be that about 1000ccs was the desired size of all-round bike but I'm wondering if that is true today. NZ is a motorcyclists paradise. Reasonably good roads, lots of corners, low traffic density.

    But............the current speed limit enforcement by the Police means that a 250kph machine becomes rather academic. Most of its high end speed will never be used.

    Which leaves acceleration and torque up to say, 140kph being the most useful feature.

    So what is the ideal bike for NZ? Something like the Kawasaki 636? Whaddya reckon?
    Well having only owned late 70s and early 80s air-cooled Japper 4 strokes no greater than 750cc's for the last 20+ years. They still seem to scoot around this fine country of ours with aplum at the speeds you desire.

  14. #29
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    29th October 2005 - 16:12
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    Talking

    There's gotta be about as many "ideal" bikes as there are "ideal" bikers! My own old GSX600F was not my first choice when I decided to return to biking, but a mate offered it to me at a price I really couldn't refuse! Being a fussy old blighter it was in superb nick and had only 30k on the clock! I had intended to buy a cruiser, but after riding with mates on their cruisers and being used, now, to the handling of my sports bike, I doubt I'd be happy with a cruiser, or an adventure bike either! Yes, though old now, the GSX is streets ahead of the old T500 Suzuki I had back in the dark ages, with twice the power - and handling the T500, and my old XS750 Yamaha, could only dream of! It hits 200kp/h real quick and sits nicely at 110k where there is enough torque to waste the cages in most passing situations. The riding position suits my aging portly bod and is comfy for all day tours. It also is a peach on the gravel, being rock steady and easily controlled at handy speeds! I've racked my feeble old brain trying to decide what to upgrade to, and each time I ride it it just does everything I want, so with the staggering choices available today, I just can't seem to better it! I'd love to ride a GSX-R thou, though, just for the experience, and am rather taken with the latest HD 1200 Sporty, but how can one choose? If you've not had much to go on, just try a few different styles out and pick one, the joy of riding will overcome any minor imperfections in whatever you ride!

  15. #30
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    22nd August 2003 - 22:33
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    as hitcher says - the DL1000, or for a more sportbike-like ride, the VFR800.

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