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..That's what i thought a while ago as well, until I found the adventures of this couple on Honda Super Cup 90's - https://youtu.be/7_yJ2kcQilw Amazing, but in the end perfect : Low weight, eeeaasy handling, low fuel consumption, nearly indestructible. On roads like those in the video you don't really go faster with a fully equipped Beemer GS and in case of a slide and fall you don't have to fight to lift it up. I'm still impressed
That's my take. I shake my head in befuddlement when I read the travelogues of people who crossed South America or Africa or South Asia "the hard way", and instead of riding a 250cc or 350cc bike that cost $4995 new which they can pick up if it falls over, or will ride easy on a balsa raft, sips gas at 60 MPG, and which will run 60 MPH all day in areas where they might make 50 miles a day if they're lucky ........ they have a $15,000, 1200cc, 5-foot-tall monster that weighs over half a ton gross on the road, that's impossible to pick up alone, that breaks subframes, can't go over light bridges, bogs in mud up to the seat, gets 35 MPG .... I mean, their own journals are a litany of breakdowns due to massive high-tech unfixable-CANbus monsters, while Peggy Thompson or Lois Pryce or someone are motoring along on their 175 or 250 having no such problems, just enjoying the ride ....Lannis
Touring bike of choice in my family for one up riding. Cheap to buy and maintain, decent gas mileage, good range, reliable and light enough to pick up on your own, plus it will cruise at 70 mph all day long or chug in 1st gear at walking speed.Been from the arctic circle to the Mexican border a few times and many place in between.For two up the Beemer sofa on two wheels is hard to beat but I would rather be on the KLR given a choice.
Seen on the road to the Nordkapp:https://www.flickr.com/photos/7317806@N06/35715619990
I like this guy...Capn America helmet in there...
Skagway?
My eyes are not so good, but that little Honda world traveler seems to need a drive chain.
Some of those little Hondas had stacked sprockets on the rear...there may be a smaller one the pic doesn't show. Carry a piece of chain and extra master link and you have mountain/trail gearing! Terry
We rented a Beaver on floats at Skagway and flew into a pristine lake inland. There wasn't a *sound* when that P&W quit turning. Amazing, and unforgettable.