Don't get it sorry
Do you also wear hair shirts?
See your point, badly phrased. No hair shirt, just respect for a supremely competent bike.
Maybe that's why I ride Airheads mainly, less out of balance with my abilities

Don't get it sorry
Do you also wear hair shirts?


...and the GS is too heavy off road and you've decided you're not doing it anymore..go the RT...or a lighter off roader.RT's are lovely.
The two side fairing panels don't take long to remove, but the tank is a pain.
They look nice and shiney, but when you remove the fairing panels most of them are badly corroded underneth.
The exhausts fall apart from the inside.
A simple job like fork seal replacement can be a drama if the bolts that hold the bar brackets snap off in the top yolk. First thing to do if you do get one is take the bolts out and copperslip them.
Nice and low, fairing is a beaut in bad weather. The handling doesn't feel as good as a GS, when flicking through the bends the RT feels like the front tyre is low on air.
I aquired a very low mileage damaged RT last year. Just waiting for the parts to appear at the right prices and i'll be toodling around on it.![]()
I don't know why anyone would have a GS if they only do road miles and never want to go off road ?![]()
I don't know why anyone would have a GS if they only do road miles and never want to go off road ?
dual purpose means not single purpose.
if you only ever go on the road - get an RT or RS
if you make a point of riding down tracks and playing, get a GS.
If you're getting on a bit...and the GS is too heavy off road and you've decided you're not doing it anymore..go the RT...or a lighter off roader.

Image
All the sports bikes you see on the road, how many of them actually let to rip around a race track?
Expensive original flight bomber jackets, probably never been near a cockpit.
Image.
I’ve been off road plenty of times though
EDIT: Sproggy beat me to it !
Which RT, Neil?............. 1150 or 1100?
1150 - but i prefer the 1100 fairing, less fussy looking.


... Oh nearly forgot the dealer umbilical....

My question, is, how much easier is a an RT?
Seriously, don’t get an RT if you want less bulk and weight, If you want a middle weight tourer look at the Honda Deauville, a cracking machineInteresting thread this - I was thinking along the same lines as I struggled my 1150GS out of my uphill sloping, gravel floored and very untidy garage for the first time this year.
For the first time I started wondering how long I will be able to carry on doing this.
The GS is the nicest bike I can imagine when its moving, even slowly, but its a bit of a pig to move about.
My question, is, how much easier is a an RT?
Seriously, don’t get an RT if you want less bulk and weight, If you want a middle weight tourer look at the Honda Deauville, a cracking machine
Well thats suprising!Yes, but it's...........so..........boring..........
A mate's got a 650 Deauville and it's pig slow once you've got 2 people and luggage on it. I thought it was just his riding, but I tried it and it wasn't. Transalp power with a hell of a lot more weight to lug around.
You call it a middleweight but the 700 that you've pictured is 236kg compared to the 1200RTs 229kg (both dry, as quoted by MCN) so it's actually a heavyweight tourer with a middleweight engine. It's only 19kg lighter than an 1150RT!
I've yet to lift the GSA once she's laid down for a rest.