Why a GS

oooooooh, get 'er!

Jamie said:
Triumphs are made in the midlands - would you trust brummy build quality at 120mph?:confused:


There must be somewhere else in England with similar history of engineering then....the peak district maybe?
I hear the only things you guys manage to 'knock up' are slow running sheep :P
 
try it for yourself

That's the simple answer. Advice only goes so far.

I had convinced myself that I was going to love and buy a GS. Perfect all rounder including jaunts into far flung regions of the world.

Wrong!
I tried one and 'PERSONALLY' found it much too heavy and tall for off road work and the buffeting on fast roads let it down as a tourer.
I went for the 'R' after a short ride and have not regretted it ever since, much better all round 'road' bike and now I have managed to find myself an old monolever g/s for big trips my motorbike set is full and complete.

The reason GS's are more expensive is simply (IMHO) because they are more popular. Supply and demand. Market forces etc.

2pence
 
Re: oooooooh, get 'er!

alan hopkins said:
There must be somewhere else in England with similar history of engineering then....the peak district maybe?
I hear the only things you guys manage to 'knock up' are slow running sheep :P

Bollox:D

But yeah, horses for courses
 
I swapped to a GS from a T509 Speed Triple - excellent bike for hooning around, sounds great on a race pipe, what a howl! and plenty of attitude.

BUT:-

Hopeless commuting down the M1 every day. Oh me poor ol' neck/back etc.

It's horses for courses of course, but the GS is the best bike I've owned to date. Better in the real world than any other bike ever!
 
Re: Stately manner

BigBadBen said:
Head up.

Chin out.

Stiff upper lip

Bunch of char-whallas running behind 'one' :)

Ben.

I'll give it a go, not many "char-wallas" here though:rolleyes:

After this weekends ride (550kms of mainly twisty mountain roads and the equivalent of UK "B" roads I think the biggest pain in the arse with a GS is waiting for riders of OTHER bikes to catch up with you:D :D :D
 
So whats the answer, why did you lot choose a GS and not an R or RS ?

~Stef~ [/B][/QUOTE]
 
Try again!

So whats the answer, why did you lot choose a GS and not an R or RS ?

~Stef~ [/B][/QUOTE]

Try again (Computer's got a bad attitude!)

I went to my local dealer cos I was after a R1100s. I knew he hadnt got a 2nd hand one, but thought he might know of one. Anyway, he lent me a 2001 Mandarin 1150GS for the weekend. I hated the look (& colour) of it, but after 2 full days I just didnt wanna give it back. It did everything I wanted (and loads more) and I just felt like Id found the perfect bike.I quickly sold me Hinckley Bonnie and bought the demo bike the next weekend.

ITS BLOODY BOSTIN!

:bow
 
A simple triangle.... with riders..

The GS works so well mainly because of the enduro heritage, also it is well large.

Let me explain:-

Most of us humans are not superbike championship material. Superbikes handle, period. To ride one on the limit you need to be very fit, hone your neuromuscular system into a very flat bundle of hysteresis loops, be possessed of good eyesight and have cojones of andalusian foothill proportions.

To get the same degree of perceived handling control for a mere mortal rider it is better:-

1. If the bikes geometry is off road derived. The GS is really just a large super-moto.

2. If the rider is carried high. Most of us are a bit blind compared to a superbike champ. Also we like to see a bit further ahead in anticipation that we need to set "the line" a bit earlier....usually we may not know the course!

3. The bike carries a lot of weight low down and as close to the axes about which it rotates as possible. In this position it is most useful for making the supension more "adaptable" to tuning whilst at the same time making the least contribution to oscillation moments.

Superbikes are designed to win races by being the faster than the rest of the field. The GS is based on a bike that was designed to be just fast enough to be a contender and then not have terminal wipeout for about a week. These enduro bikes are designed to avoid bad accidents...weird but true. This gives them a very "companionable" limit to their envelope. This makes it the sort of bike that one would be "happy to share a slit trench with". Superbike derived machines can't really get under your skin because basically they have no duty of care built into them.

I guess this means the GS..the very embodiment of of Grrr! actually has a bit of a feminine side after all. Blimey!
 
Re: A simple triangle.... with riders..

boundless said:
The GS works so well mainly because of the enduro heritage, also it is well large.

Let me explain:-

Most of us humans are not superbike championship material. Superbikes handle, period. To ride one on the limit you need to be very fit, hone your neuromuscular system into a very flat bundle of hysteresis loops, be possesed of good eyesight and have cojones of andalusian foothill proportions.

To get the same degree of perceived handling control for a mere mortal rider it is better:-

1. If the bikes geometry is off road derived. The GS is really just a large super-moto.

2. If the rider is carried high. Most of us are a bit blind compared to a superbike champ. Also we like to see a bit further ahead in anticipation that we need to set "the line" a bit earlier....usually we may not know the course!

3. The bike carries a lot of weight low down and as close to the axes about which it rotates as possible. In this position it is most useful for making the supension more "adaptable" to tuning whilst at the same time making the least contribution to oscillation moments.

Superbikes are designed to win races by being the faster than the rest of the field. The GS is based on a bike that was designed to be just fast enough to be a contender and then not have terminal wipeout for about a week. These enduro bikes are designed to avoid bad accidents...weird but true. This gives them a very "companionable" limit to their envelope. This makes it the sort of bike that one would be "happy to share a slit trench with". Superbike derived machines can't really get under your skin because basically they have no duty of care built into them.

I guess this means the GS..the very embodiment of of Grrr! actually has a bit of a feminine side after all. Blimey!


...is that long for 'horses for courses' :confused:
 
Re: A simple triangle.... with riders..

alan hopkins said:
...is that long for 'horses for courses' :confused:

No. For brevity....... try the Bible:-



"Behold we count them happy, which endure."


......James, Chapter V, Verse 11
 


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