Have you had a decent look at the Triumph Tiger Malcolm? (old style or new)
Sit up comfort, long range tank, long service interval etc
Course I am a bit biased but they are good long distance bikes
Experience......something you get just after you needed it
My Darmah did something like what you are looking for last year in Europe.
Buy a Darmah.
...she took the KT, and left me the Buell to ride....(Blues Brothers)
really dont think the mileage will be a problem for the oil...its norammly short runs,cold starts etc that kill the oil...if you are that worried book a service midway....ring them before you get there,and they will know you are in a hurry..have a nice lunch/rest while you wait...wuould take 30 mins max i would think....
i have michellen Road Pilots (But not the dual compound...) and get around 10,000 on the rear and 15,000 on the front...
but apparently they only have the dual compound now so I don't know for my next tyre.... however, the firestorm isn't that heavy, so it probably won't be too bad
my rear lasted 8500, front is rather knackered too, turned quite triangular, including the 1000km gentle run in period... so they won't really last much longer. Depends how you ride it, I found taking off from the lights a bit fast and doing a little wheelie rather addictive, ruins the back tyre tho. Spinning it up on gravel roads also reduces tyre life rather drastically.
Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
I did 6 700kms in 11 days of general touring this past March - on a 1200GS.
2 new tyres were fitted to start off but by the end, the centre line of the rear tyre was down to the wear indicators and the edges still had the hairs on!
(Long Straight roads) The bike was serviced before I left and only needed another 15 000k later. Fully synthetic oil.
I ended up replacing the entire clutch afterward (the previous owner's riding style, I am convinced, as my previous R80/7 went 76 000kms on the clutch in the bike when I bought it) but that was not indicative of the machine.
I was accompanied by 3 other BMW's - a 1200GSA, a 1200RT and a K1200GT. They all made it easily - another 3 300k in the same time would have been child's play.
Enjoy the ride - unchain yourself and ride a 1200 BMW...!![]()
You ask about a suitable bike. There have been 3 and a bit suggestions for these, but amongst quite a few BMW riders in the US, the GS is highly regarded as an all-round touring bike. You have a recommendation on tires that will last the distance on these. You have a recommendation to handle the servicing intervals. A good second-hand R1150GS with ABS would be a top bike for a hard Iron-Butt-type rally. Some would prefer the 1150 over the 1200 because of even better reliability.
At the end of the rally you are then left with a first-class all-round bike. Additionally, if you look to keep it for a while, you can increasingly "improve" it with various add-ons that make the whole Iron-Butt thing more-and-more attractive.
Do not be fooled by by the fact that the US contains large quantities of freeways....it is also riddled with twisty, remote, attractive and empty roads, whole states and regions of them, wherein reside flocks of GS and other riders. The experience of IB'ers there is directly relevant to NZ.
Ralph
...the older I get, the faster I was...
2001 FZ1 161,000kms (so far) - Service every 10,000km. Been using Contis for the last 60,000 and am now trying the new Conti-Motions after having used the Conti-Maxs and lately the ContiRoad Attacks. Have always got 9-10,000kms out of a rear tire and 12-17,000 out of the fronts - always depends though.
Am trying a new acceleration method of hard out of corners, easing off on the throttle as the bike becomes upright. My theory is that there always seems to be more tread on the sides of the tires than the centre.![]()
cbr250 would do it no sweat.
Then I could get a Kb Tshirt, move to Timaru and become a full time crossdressing faggot
KLR 650.
Even the DR 650 would be viable,light,handles well,tyre changes and servicing are as close as the nearest motel car park.
About the only thing i would change is the gearing to suit the slower speed limit,it would be lugging at 100 kph and add a Corbin.
With a Sarfari tank it would be a lunch stop and top up for a 1000 km day.
I dismissed big singles forever then actually rode one.they are not bad and eat the miles no problem.
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