To change or not to change... daily bike needed!

To change or not to change... daily bike needed!

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MotorsByMurphy

Original Poster:

36 posts

5 months

Friday 7th February
quotequote all
So, I'm caught in a predicament of deciding what to do about my motorbike, with spring approaching.

I currently own a 2007 Yamaha FZ6 N S2, which I've had since I passed my test a couple of years ago. At the time I was living in Fulham and commuting circa 8 miles through city traffic @ 15-40mph to get to the office.

Fast forward to now, I've moved 40 miles from the office, and the naked bike is slightly less appealing to commute on (30 motorway miles).

Assuming I don't sink £1,000 into servicing the current bike and buying a whole load of kit and some luggage before the new season (Probably the cheapest option), what should I buy to replace it?

Basic requirements:

- Able to complete 30 miles on the A1, followed by 10 miles filtering through London.
- Powerful/torquey enough to be comfortable on the motorway (I'm thinking 1000cc instead of the current 600).
- Some wind protection, to provide an improvement over the current bike (screen, hand guards, fairing etc).
- Luggage options for the daily commute.
- Narrow enough to filter (doesn't need to be tiny, but ideally avoid 1250 GS etc).
- Enough fun to enjoy at the weekends.

Budget circa £5-6k

Currently considering a Sports Tourer or Supersport, rather than a naked or adventure, but open to the idea of a road-biased adventure.


K1300S @ £5,795


R1200RS @ £5,888


Fireblade @ £5,980


FJR @ £4,195


GSX-R1000 @ £4,890

All thoughts and suggestions appreciated...



WarnieV6GT

1,299 posts

213 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
My money would be going on your 1st suggestion, the K1300s if your ruling out naked and adventure bikes.

In fact I'd quite like to try one myself when I move on eventually from my 1200s multistrada. Which in keeping with PH tradition of recommending your own bike, that would have been mine !

black-k1

12,425 posts

243 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
I too would go for the K1300S. A real underrated bike that is better at pretty much everything than the alternatives.

Check out www.EuroKClub.bike for buying advice and have a good shop around. There are some great bikes out there but there are also some dogs.

snagzie

644 posts

74 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Whats the mileage on the K?

jhoneyball

1,781 posts

290 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
k1300s is wonderful bike -- have had mine nearly 10 years

heroically quick and easy to ride

but it is a bit big for london filtering, in my experience. and it is not light

The A1 part -- most definitely. Central london? hmmm.

you want a narrow bike without panniers.

Edited by jhoneyball on Saturday 8th February 08:27

hiccy18

3,298 posts

81 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
The R1200RS is not really any better at filtering than a GS: the mirrors are at van mirror height, the bars are at car mirror height and the cylinders add another psychological barrier.

I've never ridden one, but reading the requirements my first thought was a Tiger Sport 1050.

jhoneyball

1,781 posts

290 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
the r1200rs is a great bike -- i also have 2013 r1200r

but again it is wide. and the panniers are the width of the cylinder heads.

again, not my choice for london filtering. If you can manage without filtering, then a v easy bike for the ride.

Rubin215

4,154 posts

170 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
I don't understand why you are so keen to step up to a litre+ bike for a commuter?

Trust me, if you're doing 40 miles a day every day, you're soon going to stop going out on the bike at the weekends as it just isn't fun any more.

My advice would be to stick with what you have, maybe add a small screen (remember, all bikes used to be nakeds and we covered thousands of motorway miles without complaint), and look at getting something you really want for the weekends instead of a halfway compromise.

Two bikes that each do what you need them to do is always better than one bike that is a compromise.

nordboy

2,357 posts

64 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Out of those I would have the R1200, I massively rate those and the 1250 (more so) after riding one for many many miles in work. I'd happily buy one.

HairyMaclary

3,751 posts

209 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
80 mile round trip mainly on motorways? You need something boring, reliable, cheap to service and fuel efficient.

Only one bike for the job..... NC750X.

Spend the servicing and fuel cost against a bigger bike on something fun for the weekend.

MotorsByMurphy

Original Poster:

36 posts

5 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Thanks for all the replies.

K1300s was the first thought, and something that I’ll definitely look to get a test ride scheduled on. Gives me everything I need, with the only questions being width and weight once in London.

Yes, in ideal world I’d run 2 bikes. A CB500x or NC750 etc for commuting and then a fast road bike for the weekend that I could do some short tours on. The current bike still doesn’t tick either of those boxes, I don’t think, so would leave me needing to sell mine and buy 2 new’ens and that just won’t sit well with the other half mid wedding plan!

‘Swapping’ mine for one more suitable bike is much easier to justify.

For reference, this is the current bike, without any weather protection:


Marquezs Stabilisers

1,902 posts

75 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
The mileage you're going to do you might as well keep the Fazer S2 and put a flyscreen on it. Only issue was if commuting on one - and I did for years, Streatham to Canary Wharf - is the parts and rot situation. Mine became a pig to work on as parts supply was a pain for stuff only Yamaha could do, and it rotted despite being drowned in ACF50.

Alternatively you want something narrow and powerful. Multistrada?

Hugo Stiglitz

39,288 posts

225 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Have you run insurance quotes on each as you'll be surprised on some of them. I was on the BMW K (bad).

If buying remotely? You really need to see the bmws up close in person as corossion can be bad but photos of dealers hide it beautifully..


I've bought a KTM from BSB before and his bikes tend to be immaculate.

MotorsByMurphy

Original Poster:

36 posts

5 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Marquezs Stabilisers said:
The mileage you're going to do you might as well keep the Fazer S2 and put a flyscreen on it. Only issue was if commuting on one - and I did for years, Streatham to Canary Wharf - is the parts and rot situation. Mine became a pig to work on as parts supply was a pain for stuff only Yamaha could do, and it rotted despite being drowned in ACF50.

Alternatively you want something narrow and powerful. Multistrada?
You’re right, one problem with the FZ is that there are bugger all of them around and limited parts/accessory supply. Proving difficult to get luggage etc for it.

MotorsByMurphy

Original Poster:

36 posts

5 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Hugo Stiglitz said:
Have you run insurance quotes on each as you'll be surprised on some of them. I was on the BMW K (bad).

If buying remotely? You really need to see the bmws up close in person as corossion can be bad but photos of dealers hide it beautifully..


I've bought a KTM from BSB before and his bikes tend to be immaculate.
The quotes aren’t ridiculous, circa 5-600 per year with only 2 years experience.

I’ll go to see the bike - I’ve seen/heard a lot about this BMW corrosion…

GriffoDP

246 posts

151 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
I did about 6 years commuting over two K1300S bikes. It's a nice bike for it, and its low speed handling is a beaut' for filtering etc. Plus the expandable sports panniers are great.

Downsides are - from ongoing conversations on the forum black-k1 mentioned, and with current owner friends - it's getting harder to find parts for these bikes now.

And yeah as mentioned above, if you do go for the K, inspect closely. Expect BMW to try and sell it with corrosion on the final drive and front wheel carrier. And no engine paint by now. And quibble over fixing the hot start issue. Trouble is, if you ride one you'll love it. Same with many bikes I imagine!

Incidentally, I found my riding and enjoyment got much much better once I stopped commuting! smile

EDIT:
At 29k miles on that K, once out of used approved 6 month warranty the suspension won't be covered if you went with the BMW Insured Warranty as it only covers those bits to 30k miles (I got value for money out of it but I was doing big miles).

On closer inspection of the images on the ad I spot corrosion on the front wheel carrier, pretty extensive. On the final drive too. And somehow on the swing arm top thingy. On that note, I vote no. It's hella difficult to find a decent condition one these days.

Edited by GriffoDP on Saturday 8th February 10:54

Hugo Stiglitz

39,288 posts

225 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Same with the R1200R that I owned. Lots had extensive corrosion on the cylinder heads at very low mileage! Mine was absolute factory when I found the right one.

Marquezs Stabilisers

1,902 posts

75 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
MotorsByMurphy said:
You’re right, one problem with the FZ is that there are bugger all of them around and limited parts/accessory supply. Proving difficult to get luggage etc for it.
Are the Givi racks no longer available? I had three boxes on mine when required.





(also, if anyone could let me know if the pictures are visible or not)

Edited by Marquezs Stabilisers on Saturday 8th February 11:15


Edited by Marquezs Stabilisers on Saturday 8th February 11:41

hiccy18

3,298 posts

81 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
Yeah if it's pictures of a monochrome no entry sign wink

Marquezs Stabilisers

1,902 posts

75 months

Saturday 8th February
quotequote all
hiccy18 said:
Yeah if it's pictures of a monochrome no entry sign wink
Baws. Thanks.