totalmotorcycle wrote:Video of 2011 BMW F650GS off-roading in New Zealand:
That's not off-roading, that is a dirt and gravel road that can be ridden on anything.
I've ridden on much harsher surfaces and also in mud on things like a CBR900RR (not even my own bike), FZR600, R6, GPz750, RZ350, SRX 600 -- including riding in the gravel, mud and snow on some of these...
sooooo... again... the "adventure touring" thing is sold as a fashion statement, but the reality is that the rider is the one who can make it happen. Putting real off-road capable tires on this bike and doing some reasonable off-roading would make it a fun ride... but it aint cool in and of itself like a KTM. It's pussified for street duty.
The real trick is tires. If they built it as a real off-road thing then they should do something with it, rather than just copy the styling of better a/t bikes.
As an example of a bike another level removed, even my DT200 was useless on a lot of muddy and snowy surfaces with the oem dual sport tires. It needed knobbies big-time. It was even more useless for jumping, and a motocross track would cripple it (or you) quick because of the suspension "compromises"... wayyyy undersprung... so even that thing wasnt much of a "dual" sport without serious upgrade work. So the "fashion" was still lacking the real function back then too. It's another side of the marketing morons, just like playing 650 with an 800 engine because they cater to customers who really are too stupid to evaluate a bike on it's true merits.
(oh, excuse me, was i thinking out loud again?

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BMW 650 w/800cc twin gets an uncool... so just buy one and do something cool with it yourself

"Zounds! Zorched by Zarches, Spaceman Spiff's crippled craft crashes on planet Plootarg!"
For Sale: Ninja 600 with parts bike, needs minor work, $30, no title... (GEE THAT DOESNT RING ANY WARNING BELLS DOES IT?)