1200GS gone......but not forgotten.

GSmonkey said:
For various reasons the bike had to go, unfortunately the one item near the top of the list was cost of ownership post warranty. The bike certainly had its fair share of problems from gearbox seals, final drive seals and fuel pumps to various corrosion issues. I always felt is was a liability post warranty.
My 1200's warranty expires in November. I'm thinking exactly along your lines - that the bike, though brilliant to ride, will be a nightmare when I have to pay for it to be fixed.

I love the Adventure concept and am thinking about a KTM 990 Adventure - you went for mental litre sportsbikes - why?
 
My 1200's warranty expires in November. I'm thinking exactly along your lines - that the bike, though brilliant to ride, will be a nightmare when I have to pay for it to be fixed.

Ive been thinking about this a lot lately because I was liking the look of the 1200ADV. Ive still got a years warranty left on my 1200GS but was worrying about its resale value next year (probably 20K+ miles by then)
Mine cost £9500 with all the bells and whistles. Next year if I get £7000 I'll be doing well. Then ive got to get another bike with 2 more years warranty. Thats another couple of grand. The ownership will have cost me £4500 at least :eek. Thats a lot of money toward any repairs.

You could get an extended warranty for another year at £650 to ease your nerves if you wanted to and still be quids in. :nenau

think well about it.
Ive decided to run my 1200GS until it drops. Once the warrantys run out I'll do as much of the servicing myself as possible (just oil, plugs and bits) and the rest will be done by a locally qualified workshop.

There are plenty of 1100's and 1150's on this board with mega miles on them and I dont necessarily think the 1200 will be any different over a period. Its a gamble im prepared to take to hold onto a nicely run in bike that I really like and suits me.

Of course if you just fancy a change then thats a different matter.

:thumb
 
Interesting thread, I'm currently trading in my 1150GS for an R1 for the same reasons: great bike, but simply don't trust it not to go bang in a v. expensive way.

And when I open the garage door I don't want to see a bike that, no matter how much you try keeping it in good condition, is just going to digest itself anyway (corroding forks, cylinders, wheels, rust, etc. etc. etc.)

Welcome to the Forum: interesting first post - and your going for a Yamaha ? :confused:
 
redcastle said:
Ive decided to run my 1200GS until it drops. Once the warranties run out I'll do as much of the servicing myself as possible (just oil, plugs and bits) and the rest will be done by a locally qualified workshop.

There are plenty of 1100's and 1150's on this board with mega miles on them and I don't necessarily think the 1200 will be any different over a period. Its a gamble I'm prepared to take to hold onto a nicely run in bike that I really like and suits me.
I too would like to run the 1200GS until it drops. I've got an 1100GS that's doing just that, 102k miles and not dropping yet. But I think the 1200 is a different bet. Sure I can do the oil, etc and other mechanicals can be done by a decent mechanic but anything electrical and you're off to a dealer, paying £50+ per hour to watch them learning how to use their diagnostic machine.

Difficult decision...
 
Pressurized said:
My 1200's warranty expires in November. I'm thinking exactly along your lines - that the bike, though brilliant to ride, will be a nightmare when I have to pay for it to be fixed.

I love the Adventure concept and am thinking about a KTM 990 Adventure - you went for mental litre sportsbikes - why?
There's normally lots of reasons why people change bikes. I had a change of circumstance which meant commuting on the thing was not an option (secure parking taken away on office move). This meant that I needed a disposable bike that can sit outside in all weathers, cost little to run and I wouldn't mind if it got nicked. For that I chose a commuta-scoot - 125cc bum basic, actually very good for commuting - I save over £600 in fuel a year compared to the GS.

Also co-incident with this change was me starting a familily - just got a little fella 2 months old. This meant that I didn't have the time to spend going on long tours that justify such a bike - I was left with 1/2day blasts round the local roads with the outside possibility of the odd weekend. Now I've always fancied a completely nutty bike having only owned "sensible" bikes to date (Bandit, Fazer, CBR600, GS). So decided to own a gixxer for a few years.

Now what I'll go for next, who knows, maybe back to the GS, maybe a supermoto, maybe a trials bike????? Life's too short to stick to one formula - if I was rich enough I'd have one of every type of bike.

The final thing was reliability. From that point of view it was S-H-I-T-E.......there can be no debate on that subject. For me, this was the only negative for my ownership of the GS. If it'd been more reliable I'd have probably run it another year and sold with 40k on the clock.

So there are my decisions for changing from the GS.

As for life on the litre sportsbike - its been interesting so far. Speeds are difficult to control - that's a definite. I'm only running in at the moment and it is truly ballistic - there's torque everywhere in the rev range (lacking on a lot of litre bikes, but present on the Suzuki due to long stroke). Riding position is also very good, doing a tankful (150miles) on one sitting is no bother. Brakes - on reflection, nice to get rid of the servos. Handling is superb, none of this front biased crap you get with a lot of sportsbikes, its nice and neutral like the GS - means you can go in with bags of confidence. Overtakes are great, unlike the GS its instant torque no matter the gear and no risk of bashing the rev limiter requiring a change mid manouvre.

The downsides are speed (hard to control), riding position (good, not as good as gs), power/torque (you need to modulate, no handfuls on exits from corner), lack of luggage space (although you get a nice bit under the rear hump + I've put on a baglux), turning radius (get in a carpark and it feels like its got the turning radius of the QE2).

All in all an entertaining experience which challenges the rider - just what I was after for my short(er) fixes of biking I'm going to get over the next couple of years.

Still considering populating my garage with an 1100GS................ :)
 
Decster said:
completely nutty bike - just got a little fella 2 months old

to me the above just dont match.
I guess that depends how much trust you have in your own riding. The majority of the risks are constant no matter what bike you choose to ride.
 


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