I'm in the making up my mind and sorting out a few household chores stage before buying my GS.
I've been a biker for many a long year and I've had a GS test ride and I'm hooked on getting a 1200gsa as my last big adventuring bike.
I wan't to have a bike to grow old/er with and try and do the far off bits of Europe I missed in my youth and may be hit Mongolia or other of the longer harder to access destinations to the east.
I'm not a forgiving sort and I don't stand by the ideas of problematic bikes and cars with the odd teething prob.
Going back 30 + years I had a three Suzuki's ending up with a legend of a 750 "kettle". The two stroke kettle did 130000+ miles trouble free apart from the Lucas Rita system having 1 overnight run in with a bead of condensation.
My touring in those days was fast most of the time and the kettle flew around europes highways and byeways at 100 and 100mph plus for mile after mile trouble free riding.
My riding style is a little more relaxed these days and a GS suits my XL sized frame. The last thing I want is to be heading for Moscow or Listvyanka on a gravel track miles from anywhere and find that 5000 miles from home I have a cracked frame part or the gearbox has clunked once to often
reading various posts on this forum and doing a bit of research, I've come across pics and stories of cracked gs frame tubes, iffy electrics, suspension and lower bolt failures.
It's not as though the GS has just hit the roads or off roads, I'm expecting a £10k plus bike to be at least as reliable if not more reliable than my Suzuki's built in the 70's. The old Suzuki's may not have been trail bikes, but they covered Europe and Cyprus at speed and on many challenging tough roads and I never ever had a bad let down.
I want the edventure before age forces retirement from biking, but I don't want to be gambling on a bike being hassle free when I'm half a world from home.
Am I expecting to much from a GS ?
I don't want a war, just some good advice on reliability and durability.
I've been a biker for many a long year and I've had a GS test ride and I'm hooked on getting a 1200gsa as my last big adventuring bike.
I wan't to have a bike to grow old/er with and try and do the far off bits of Europe I missed in my youth and may be hit Mongolia or other of the longer harder to access destinations to the east.
I'm not a forgiving sort and I don't stand by the ideas of problematic bikes and cars with the odd teething prob.
Going back 30 + years I had a three Suzuki's ending up with a legend of a 750 "kettle". The two stroke kettle did 130000+ miles trouble free apart from the Lucas Rita system having 1 overnight run in with a bead of condensation.
My touring in those days was fast most of the time and the kettle flew around europes highways and byeways at 100 and 100mph plus for mile after mile trouble free riding.
My riding style is a little more relaxed these days and a GS suits my XL sized frame. The last thing I want is to be heading for Moscow or Listvyanka on a gravel track miles from anywhere and find that 5000 miles from home I have a cracked frame part or the gearbox has clunked once to often
reading various posts on this forum and doing a bit of research, I've come across pics and stories of cracked gs frame tubes, iffy electrics, suspension and lower bolt failures.
It's not as though the GS has just hit the roads or off roads, I'm expecting a £10k plus bike to be at least as reliable if not more reliable than my Suzuki's built in the 70's. The old Suzuki's may not have been trail bikes, but they covered Europe and Cyprus at speed and on many challenging tough roads and I never ever had a bad let down.
I want the edventure before age forces retirement from biking, but I don't want to be gambling on a bike being hassle free when I'm half a world from home.
Am I expecting to much from a GS ?

I don't want a war, just some good advice on reliability and durability.

It'll keep goin
, sorry pal, I don't do Honda. And surely it has a chain drive, how quaint


