CiaoPaddy
Guest
Howdy all. Just new here. I'm currently running around on a Honda Blackbird on which I've knocked up 43k in the past two years. It's an absolutely superb bike, but for years I've been wanting something that can handle a wee bit of offroad as well as do everything else, and the GS seems to be the bike.
My main issue is this - the upright seating position. I have a very crappy back on occasion, and sitting upright seems to put all the weight right down the spine. I'm about 6'2 and 15 stone.
I had a '99 Triumph Tiger for a year and 13k's before I had to get rid of it because of the riding position and windblast. Anything more than 30 miles was torture. I tried raising and lowering the seat but to no avail. I also suffered from windblast, which couldn't be cured either by removing the screen, adding a higher one, or cutting down the standard one.
So I'm wondering has anyone else experienced this sort of trouble on the GS (I'm specifically thinking Adventure), or should I avoid it at all costs ? The best way to find out is of course a 100mile plus testride, but any dealers I've spoken to have been reluctant.
Plus I'm still undecided as to whether I can manage with the loss of power, but think I can
Thanks,
Paddy.
My main issue is this - the upright seating position. I have a very crappy back on occasion, and sitting upright seems to put all the weight right down the spine. I'm about 6'2 and 15 stone.
I had a '99 Triumph Tiger for a year and 13k's before I had to get rid of it because of the riding position and windblast. Anything more than 30 miles was torture. I tried raising and lowering the seat but to no avail. I also suffered from windblast, which couldn't be cured either by removing the screen, adding a higher one, or cutting down the standard one.
So I'm wondering has anyone else experienced this sort of trouble on the GS (I'm specifically thinking Adventure), or should I avoid it at all costs ? The best way to find out is of course a 100mile plus testride, but any dealers I've spoken to have been reluctant.
Plus I'm still undecided as to whether I can manage with the loss of power, but think I can
Thanks,
Paddy.
), if twinsparking hasn't solved the problem, that your bikes could be, by statistical luck, in the 60% that don't surge.