New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
FWIW my R100GS has 103K very hard miles and has never left me stranded. It�s come close a few times but generally the bike has given enough warning to allow maintenance before failure.
If anyone is interested, I know where there's a '94(?) R100GS that's for sale.
LannisI have a Stelvio and find it very comfortable in the stock form. I�m 6�1�, 225, 33inseam and longer arms that most at my height. Interested in what ergo changes you made to Stelvio, outside of the seat.And which changes were the most impactful.
You can�t :Beating_A_Dead_Hors e_by_liviu the 650 vstrom�sp two would also work🛵
If I were riding to Alaska I would consider a VStrom or Versus, something along those lines, newer, cheaper, better performance, more reliable. I wouldn't make this trip based on styling or nostalgia. Of course, I probably wouldn't consider that ride.
More details forthcoming, but here's a "teaser" photo the owner sent me.
Not the point.Your Grandma could do it on a V Strom. It's about fulfilment of a desire, not making it artificially easy.
Find you a used V Storm and enjoy the trip on a bike that was designed for that type of ride.
Charlie, what's a location on this GS?
Not trying to beat anyone to the punch, just wanted to know a rough, general location.That affects a lot of folks, like me, as to whether they might still be interested or not...
You're a mere 155 miles from it. Until I get the owner's okay to release more information, that's all you get. Instead of causing further thread drift, PM me or just send an email.
I agree the GS would be a better choice, and I love my RS. Even better would be a GSPD with the 9 gallon tank. The tank and fairing provide good wind protection as well. As a counterpoint to taking a new (or newer) bike that's more powerful, stops better and rides better and all that - I'd rather take something I enjoy riding. Something I can fix when problems surface. Something that won't leave me waiting for a tow. Something that doesn't depend on electronics to function. I knew a guy who traveled all over the planet and had something like 7 R100GSs planted in different countries. Each one had a driveshaft strapped to the handlebar cross bar. They all had spare parts just in case. Sure, anything can break and you'd think an older bike with 100K on the clock wouldn't be a good choice, but you're wrong. They'll keep on running just like the old Guzzis. Treat them decently and they last forever - or wear out very slowly and tell you something needs help long before it fails. Another thing on the RS - it's not really comfortable for tall or big people. I even have trouble with the left side lower fairing hitting my knee on it. it wore a hole in my aerostich knee ballistics in a week. I'm 5'10" just for reference.
The Bosch alternator/rectifier/regulator system used on BMWs is the same as that used on Guzzis, so I imagine many on the WG site are familiar with the system. Both my 100K mile LeMans and my 102K mile R100GS are on their original rectifier (what BMW people call a diode board). Both are on their second rotor. The Guzzi for some reason needed a set of alternator brushes at around 90K miles, the BMW is still on its first set as I remember.I've had no ignition problems with my '90 GS to date, nor on my previous '88 or '92. Seems to be bulletproof, at least for 28 years of use. The original Bosch spark plug caps were as bad as they were on Guzzis, and installing NGK plug caps is the simple 5 minute solution.I dislike much of what BMW has produced over the years, and ever moreso today. There is no question that I'd buy a new Suzuki DL over a new BMW GS and I agree that an R100RS is probably the worst bike you could choose for a trip to Alaska due to the handlebar and fairing setup. Regardless, an airhead GS is IMHO the best choice, particularly in pre-91 form. It's the most practical any road, anywhere motorcycle ever made IMHO. The front brake is the only thing I'd upgrade if buying another one today.
Tusayan, you indicated your preference for a pre-1991 GS. I'm guessing you have issues with the PD style fairing. There's not much else that's different between pre 91 and 91 onward (at least as far as I know ..... though I've never owned any GS other than my 1991 model.)Bob