Selling an adv bike and downgrading to the previous generation that is inferior in power, torque, suspension, and economy because of complaining of poor plastics paint and noise? LOL.
Who says lower power and less tech needs to be = "inferior"? Inferior in terms of top trumps and "my willy's bigger than your willy" perhaps.
If a bike performs well, is made well, handles well and does everything you want of it, then who is
any other person to
tell the OP or any of the rest of us "inferior machine" shod riders that we are somehow on "inferior" bikes? Arrogant, spareparts, arrogant.
You laugh all you want but having traded a much faster, smoother bike for my lumpy old 2016GSA a few years ago. I haven't ever looked back once with any regrets because it still has some of the charm and character which seems to have been all but ironed out of the 1250 in the same way they've made the S1000R undeniably top of it's class but oh so dull compared with Yamaha's Mt10SP o Aprilia's Tuono V4. It does everything I want of a bike and so competently, so reliably and so well, I, for one, couldn't give a monkeys if the new one is faster, smoother or any other "...er".
It's not the first time any of us have heard that 1250 shiftcams are noisier and these boxer lumps, when warm sound enough like a blacksmith's forge on overtime anyway. A mate of mine, a long time ADV bike man and very experienced off roader with many thousands of off road riding under his belt recently changed his bike after being invited to a bmw off road event in Spain last year as a guest of one of their test riders. He road the 1250 and the 1200 and whilst he loved the 1250's electronics off road and it's extra straight line haul on-road, he bought a 1200GSA when it came time to change his old ADV bike. He could easily have afforded the 1250GSA. By his reckoning, the 1200 was all the bike it needed to be or that he needed and he is a better rider than probably most people lining up with cash for a new 1250. To his mind, his last gen 1200 was so much better value, loaded up to the gills and in reality lost out nothing in smiles per miles, it wasn't worth the extra for the 1250. Maybe if I was buying a used one in a few years I could be tempted over, but having ridden the latest models from BMW, like him, I was definitively of the mind that the 1200 GSA is still a mind blowingly competent bike by any measure. It's a wonder I'm still here at all what with the soggy old rubbish suspension of my terrible 1200 not having spat me off on the last corner I tried navigating, not to mention struggling to overtake all those cars that are so much faster than my lardy old GSA lump!
For all that, I wish everyone going the 1250 route every pleasure in their ownership and would never presume to belittle them for their choices.