That's more like it
When I bought my first new GS they were far from mainstream
They were weird, quirky & different - but they were excellent 2 wheel travelling machines
There were no Twat suits ( we did have Rukka but they weren't mainstream either)
There was no Touratech
Wunderlich operated from a shed by a railway line & were more famous for developing performance parts for the mighty XT500
Wudo were the BMW aftermarket parts & styling creators
Crud catchers would have been frowned on
Metal boxes for panniers were not mass market & if fitted would have been made in the shed, at home
Plastic panniers were all the choice you had, but at least they didn't leak
GPS wasn't invented, so not used & thus maps were the tourists friend
Modes were of the Depeche variety, but not bluetoothed via an IPod
Life wasn't all bad though![]()
Think I'm hearing violins ..... Did you eat hovis too?

Having owned both models I sit firmly in the 'post 1150' (something missing) camp. Currently ride a TC and will probably chop in for a WC in a couple of years.
However I agree that most of the electronics are pointless. I specced my TC with ABS and heated grips only, and don't regret that decision for a moment. When I change the bike I'll do the same.
People shouldn't fall for the salesman's pitch that 'you'll never sell it' if you don't pay £2k+ extra for all the bells and whistle. Complete bollox imo. I for one would prefer a basis model every time. Never had problems selling previous GS (1150 and 1200) with no extras.
Surely you mean noobs
Noob![]()

It's interesting to see that some have ordered basic bikes, I think they will possibly have the better bike (especially if they ordered wire wheels).
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I'm wondering if I would spec the KTM 1190 Adv with the electro trickery suspension. It's only another £500 and IMO, it does make a difference both on road and off. But just how complicated is it if it goes tits up and how expensive to sort ?
I hope your joking! All the electronics it had couldn't stop the worst case of fork dive I've felt since riding my brothers Super Dream in the 80s!
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I agree wire wheels are deffo better looking i regret not having them for sure the electronics are waisted on me, I've set the clocks to the configure i want to see I've used the cruise now and again but everything else I've left alone and just ride it.



, but than peeps always want extras abs and so on so i think resale value will be stronger in the long term.
You've just summed it up, you don't use all the stuff now
You'd have been better off with ABS, heated grips and spokes
Saved yerself probably £2k too![]()
Spot on
After 2 years, the difference in resale value between a fully spec'd bike and a basic is in proportion to how much it all cost in the first place. As the bike gets older the differential gets less and less. At the point the bike gets out of warranty the added on extra's start to become more of a hindrance to a sale as people get wise to the cost of replacement and the sort of people who buy 2-5 year old bikes are much more difficult to persuade when it comes to any benefit argument versus the cost/replacement of the added on extras.
Who freaking cares about resale value you bunch of moaners.
I want it all and I want it now!
Got it actually.
Have a nice day worrying while the rest of us get on with our lives.
My GSA is over 5 years old and doesn't owe me anything.Resale value won't be stronger.
They'll always be people who specifically do not want all the extraneous and superfluous add ons and the potential problems they bring on a used bike that's out of warranty.
And the less of those bikes around means a healthy market.
You can always tell when it's an old GS arriving in the Pub car park as the whining carries on after the engine has been switched off.![]()

That is exactly what I have found, I have had no issues trading in my previous 'vanilla' 1200's for a satisfactory deal - yes they don't command as high a trade in value because there are fewer toys but they maintain their value proportionally as well if not better than a fully loaded bike.