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....But seriously, the older I get, the more I think about what would happen if I dumped the bike out in the boonies while riding alone. Would really like to see a 400cc ADV bike. That seems like the perfect size to me.
Honda actually made a 250cc ADV bike in the late 80's, the NX250:Dry weight was 260lbs, so, likely 300 wet. The 249cc water cooled engine made 25HP, plenty for a 300 lb bike.The air cooled 249cc engine of the XR250L at the time was only 19 HP.The suspension had 8.7" of travel in the front, and 7.9" in the back, definitely off road capable.It had a small fairing to offer a little wind protection on the highway.
That's why my ADV bike is a 650cc thumper instead of a 1200cc twin. It still weighs over 400#, but, I can at least stand it back up by myself. Now, a 400cc AV bike weighing 300#, that would be the perfect ADV bike IMHO.I don't see any reason one couldn't just buy any of the already existing 250cc Enduros and make an ADV Bike out of it.There are many (not all listed are current models):Yamaha WR250R (likely the best of the class)Kawasaki KLR250Kawasaki KLX250XKawasaki Super SherpaSuzuki DRZ250Honda CRF250L (and the older CRF230L)I'd be a lot more comfortable with the reliability of these Japanese models than an unproven Chinese bike.
You forgot the XT225 and XT250. "Lois on the Loose" proved the 225 was ADV capable. She was at the Timonium (MD) Motorcycle Show last year, but unfortunately not again this year. http://cycleshow.net/travel-touring/
Peter, I see at the moment that you have a big block and a small block.Have you considered getting rid of the big block, getting a 250 for general all purpose stuff and keeping the small block for the longer trips. I do not find the (small block) Breva very heavy at all to heave around and also find it very comfortable for the longer trips.