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Me too. The Tenere seems a bit too much of one thing & not enough of the other. Great in the dirt, but a bit of a slug on the road. Gimme an old-school DR650 & I can spend the change on getting it ready for long distance outback touring: big tank, subframe strengthening, bags etc.Or the V85TT. Just needs a new midpipe, a cored original can, sealed spoke nipples & you're already there!
To qualify: a slug when loaded up for touring/camping. In reality, without having ridden one yet, it's mere conjecture on my part, but on the open road there's "no replacement like cubic displacement".
My 800XC was way over weight for off-road use. If the 660 Tenere had been available I would have bought that instead. I'd consider this bike once there is some positive feedback about the luggage and subframe. Seems like all the reviews are about its dual sport capabilities and not about its touring capabilities. It's odd that few reviewers ever consider these attributes on a touring bike.
I don't think the Tenere 700 would be considered a touring bike. 4 inch wide seat, no cruise control, and not even sure what its carrying capacity is. I'm sure you can put a giant loop or wolfpack luggage on it which is all I would consider if using the bike for what it is intended for.
If it isn't an Adventure touring bike then what is it? At 450 lbs. it's certainly not a dual-sport....certainly not one that I'd want to spend the day picking up. That's even heavier than the KLR 650! My 800XC doesn't have cruise control and it's marketed as an "ADV touring" bike.
I just went to Triumph's website and only see your bike classified as an Adventure bike. Go take a look at the KTM 790. It has a more touring oriented seat and provisions for hard luggage and it is classified as an Adventure bike. While Yamaha does use the term Adventure Touring when describing the Tenere 700 even though with that 4 inch wide seat the touring better be single track touring because you will be standing as much as possible.https://www.yamahamotorsports.com/adventure-touring/models/tenere-700This would be a bike to do the TAT on, and if you are a prior competitive off-roader can handle off road like all the videos show. Definitely would not want to spend time on the interstate or sitting down for long on this bike.
I don't see any issues with the seat on the Tenere. Then again I've crossed half the US on a stock DR650 seat. I'd ride that bike (on the stock seat) to South America if it weren't for the weak 3rd gear. It's starting to appear that the Tenere 700 is some sort of giant, over-weight...dual sport(?). I'm not sure how much dual there can be though at that weight. My Tiger sure wasn't suitable for anything more than double track and gravel roads. I do believe that factory heated grips, factory 3 piece luggage, factory heated gear outlets and factory "touring" windshields DO make the Tiger an "Adventure Touring" bike. This bike blurs the lines further...not that they were never very clear to begin with. When I bought the Tiger 800XC I thought ADV bikes were dual-sports. Lol! I sure don't think that now. I bought the instructional videos, read the how-to books and practiced for hours and hours. I got better with the 475lb. Tiger off-road but it never turned into a "dual sport". At the end of the day it was a fragile, heavy, street bike with an insatiable appetite for knobby tires. The new Tenere looks like more of the same...minus 25lbs.