The ubiquitous 'GS'
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- Scotsrich
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
Had a 1200 then a 1250 that’s going in a couple of weeks.
Loved mine, 135 bhp and enough torque to climb a cliff it’s a much underrated bike.
Surprisingly good handling too especially on decent road tyres. It can be chucked about with the best.
A bit of a dilemma on mine, solo it’s great but 2 up it’s simply too top heavy. The dilemma is if I was riding purely solo I wouldn’t have a GS in the first place. I bought it for the pillion capacity.
The engine/ gearbox takes a bit of getting used to but the torque makes up for that.
Loved mine, 135 bhp and enough torque to climb a cliff it’s a much underrated bike.
Surprisingly good handling too especially on decent road tyres. It can be chucked about with the best.
A bit of a dilemma on mine, solo it’s great but 2 up it’s simply too top heavy. The dilemma is if I was riding purely solo I wouldn’t have a GS in the first place. I bought it for the pillion capacity.
The engine/ gearbox takes a bit of getting used to but the torque makes up for that.
- Rockburner
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
When i bought Rockster 3 i very nearly bought an 1150GS that Vines had in. I test rode both and they only thing really different was that the GS riding position made me slouch too much and i could see it kiling my back.
The Rockster had 10x less mileage and was £2,500 cheaper, and in better condition, and a year newer.... so it was a no brainer to carry on with Rocksters.
The Rockster had 10x less mileage and was £2,500 cheaper, and in better condition, and a year newer.... so it was a no brainer to carry on with Rocksters.
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
The Rockster looks a ton better than those horrid GS barnacles too.Rockburner wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:58 am When i bought Rockster 3 i very nearly bought an 1150GS that Vines had in. I test rode both and they only thing really different was that the GS riding position made me slouch too much and i could see it kiling my back.
The Rockster had 10x less mileage and was £2,500 cheaper, and in better condition, and a year newer.... so it was a no brainer to carry on with Rocksters.
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- Rockburner
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
Funny really because there's not a lot of difference between them, the GS just has longer travel suspension (pretty much).Skub wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 10:02 amThe Rockster looks a ton better than those horrid GS barnacles too.Rockburner wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:58 am When i bought Rockster 3 i very nearly bought an 1150GS that Vines had in. I test rode both and they only thing really different was that the GS riding position made me slouch too much and i could see it kiling my back.
The Rockster had 10x less mileage and was £2,500 cheaper, and in better condition, and a year newer.... so it was a no brainer to carry on with Rocksters.
Looks-wise i don't really care, that's for other people to worry about.
non quod, sed quomodo
- wheelnut
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
That’s not an unusual story. They do take a few miles to get used to for the first time. The telelever front end can feel ‘odd’ with a slightly dead feeling at times. Easily made up for with the lack of dive under braking.v8-powered wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:10 am Nearest I've came was an R1150R Rockster, one of the few bikes I regret selling along with my 5VY R1 and RSV1000R Factory.
First impressions I hated it but within a few miles really bonded with it….
The engines are an absolute peach, oodles of torque to fire you out of corners.
They are a bit of a pain to handball about but once you’re moving the weight disappears.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
My preference was always the R over GS.Rockburner wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 10:04 amFunny really because there's not a lot of difference between them, the GS just has longer travel suspension (pretty much).
Looks-wise i don't really care, that's for other people to worry about.
Partly because GS seats are too high and bars too wide
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
*cough* original type flappy indicator switches? *cough* They take a couple of days ...wheelnut wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 10:11 amThat’s not an unusual story. They do take a few miles to get used to for the first time.v8-powered wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:10 am First impressions I hated it but within a few miles really bonded with it….
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- wheelnut
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
They were brilliant - it was a poor day when they changed to the standard way.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
It was the first big handful.of throttle I gave it and yanked me to the other side of the road, didn't expect thatwheelnut wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 10:11 amThat’s not an unusual story. They do take a few miles to get used to for the first time. The telelever front end can feel ‘odd’ with a slightly dead feeling at times. Easily made up for with the lack of dive under braking.v8-powered wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:10 am Nearest I've came was an R1150R Rockster, one of the few bikes I regret selling along with my 5VY R1 and RSV1000R Factory.
First impressions I hated it but within a few miles really bonded with it….
The engines are an absolute peach, oodles of torque to fire you out of corners.
They are a bit of a pain to handball about but once you’re moving the weight disappears.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
I wasn't a great GS fan, a mate gave me a ride on a 1200 and I hated it, just didn't like it one little bit for some reason. I had a couple of old RT airheads so was a bit surprised. Went to have a ride on another a few years ago but fell in love with the K12 on sight and bought it instead.
Fast forward another 3 years and I needed a big trailie, another mate had bought an 1150GS with a minor oil leak and in typical fashion, had practically rebuilt it from front to back, I took a test ride around where he lives which is all shit roads and I fell in love with the thing. That was a year ago and it hasn't missed a beat since. I bought a second set of 17 inch wheels and it can take everything I throw at it. It's tank off road but it's a great road bike.
Having the K12 meant I was used to the funny front end and the indicator switches, which quite frankly are brilliant.
Fast forward another 3 years and I needed a big trailie, another mate had bought an 1150GS with a minor oil leak and in typical fashion, had practically rebuilt it from front to back, I took a test ride around where he lives which is all shit roads and I fell in love with the thing. That was a year ago and it hasn't missed a beat since. I bought a second set of 17 inch wheels and it can take everything I throw at it. It's tank off road but it's a great road bike.
Having the K12 meant I was used to the funny front end and the indicator switches, which quite frankly are brilliant.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
A yellow 1150GS AND a K12? You're me aren't you?Bigjawa wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 10:47 am I wasn't a great GS fan, a mate gave me a ride on a 1200 and I hated it, just didn't like it one little bit for some reason. I had a couple of old RT airheads so was a bit surprised. Went to have a ride on another a few years ago but fell in love with the K12 on sight and bought it instead.
Fast forward another 3 years and I needed a big trailie, another mate had bought an 1150GS with a minor oil leak and in typical fashion, had practically rebuilt it from front to back, I took a test ride around where he lives which is all shit roads and I fell in love with the thing. That was a year ago and it hasn't missed a beat since. I bought a second set of 17 inch wheels and it can take everything I throw at it. It's tank off road but it's a great road bike.
Having the K12 meant I was used to the funny front end and the indicator switches, which quite frankly are brilliant.
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- Horse
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
Yup.
Switches that worked the way your thumbs swivel. Plus, press both and it's instant hazard lights.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
I'd imagine most bikes feel a bit top-heavy with a pillion on board. I carry pillions very rarely, but it does change the ride completely for me.Scotsrich wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 9:37 am Had a 1200 then a 1250 that’s going in a couple of weeks.
Loved mine, 135 bhp and enough torque to climb a cliff it’s a much underrated bike.
Surprisingly good handling too especially on decent road tyres. It can be chucked about with the best.
A bit of a dilemma on mine, solo it’s great but 2 up it’s simply too top heavy. The dilemma is if I was riding purely solo I wouldn’t have a GS in the first place. I bought it for the pillion capacity.
The engine/ gearbox takes a bit of getting used to but the torque makes up for that.
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- KungFooBob
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
I've only ridden mine twice without a pillion.
I only really notice the extra weight at junctions. Makes no difference when moving.
I only really notice the extra weight at junctions. Makes no difference when moving.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
A C90 would do it. Whether or not the rider wanted to be on it for that long.
The fad for GSs is no different, really, to the previous one for Blades, R1s, etc.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
This. If we all rode bikes designed for the actual riding we do, we'd all be riding CB500's
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
I remembered I needed to tax mine at the end of April, tired to do it online and it's told me the MOT is out... so I'm now at the MOT station, hoping I can get it done and home before it rains.
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Re: The ubiquitous 'GS'
I've managed to offset the tax and MOT dates so the tax comes up at least a month before the MOT, but this year i mistimed it ...MOT runs out tomorrow, bit couldn't get a booking until Friday. D'oh!KungFooBob wrote: ↑Sat May 06, 2023 12:23 pm I remembered I needed to tax mine at the end of April, tired to do it online and it's told me the MOT is out... so I'm now at the MOT station, hoping I can get it done and home before it rains.
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