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- Oct 10, 2004
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Interesting but also a bit annoying road test of the new Tiger 800.
On the positive side, MCN is quite correct to position the standard Tiger 800 against the F650GS, and to position the Tiger 800XC against the F800GS.
As you can tell from the thread title, the outcome of the test is that the Tiger 800 wins. The reasoning isn't very scientific--it's because the exhaust sounds nicer and the engine is more powerful.
The fact the F650GS is £499 cheaper seems to have no bearing.
Although I'm on my fourth BMW and second F650GS twin, I'm not blinded by loyalty and I will gladly conceed that the Tiger 800 is possibly the better bike, but not for the reasons identified by MCN who would really have liked the Tiger 800 to have a 17-in front wheel.
BMW made some deliberate product positioning decisions when it came to differentiating the F650/800GS against the R1200GS/GSA, and in differentiating the F6650GS against the F800GS.
Triumph hasn't made the same compromises. For example, the Tiger 800 has the height adjustable twin seats and the adjustable windscreen that the R1200GS has but the F650/800GS don't. Not that the MCN test made much of that.
Another plus point for the Tiger is that the speedo is digital which is a real plus point for me. I spend more time overseas than in the UK and it's a real positive to be able to switch the speedo and odometer to kilometers rather than squint at tiny characters on an analog speedo.
On the positive side, MCN is quite correct to position the standard Tiger 800 against the F650GS, and to position the Tiger 800XC against the F800GS.
As you can tell from the thread title, the outcome of the test is that the Tiger 800 wins. The reasoning isn't very scientific--it's because the exhaust sounds nicer and the engine is more powerful.
The fact the F650GS is £499 cheaper seems to have no bearing.Although I'm on my fourth BMW and second F650GS twin, I'm not blinded by loyalty and I will gladly conceed that the Tiger 800 is possibly the better bike, but not for the reasons identified by MCN who would really have liked the Tiger 800 to have a 17-in front wheel.

BMW made some deliberate product positioning decisions when it came to differentiating the F650/800GS against the R1200GS/GSA, and in differentiating the F6650GS against the F800GS.
Triumph hasn't made the same compromises. For example, the Tiger 800 has the height adjustable twin seats and the adjustable windscreen that the R1200GS has but the F650/800GS don't. Not that the MCN test made much of that.
Another plus point for the Tiger is that the speedo is digital which is a real plus point for me. I spend more time overseas than in the UK and it's a real positive to be able to switch the speedo and odometer to kilometers rather than squint at tiny characters on an analog speedo.




