I was the club member in question. You beat me to it Graham!
Now it might be a sign of me getting older, feeling nostalgic, and so on, but I found myself browsing the Royal Enfield site the other day and see that they've just launched a new EFI model.
Although my DR has served me well, it is getting a little tired now (mainly through neglect and just in time maintenance!) and I got thinking about what I could replace it with. The new XTs look great, but as with the DR, they're a bit tall for my short legs, and I think it would take a bit of getting used with its futuristic transformer looks. (Says he who also has a KTM Duke II!; On todays POTD as it happens).
There doesn't appear to me to be many current model bikes that I feel would make a good all rounder without being too expensive/complicated/heavy. I seem to find myself always looking at bikes 10+ years old. Why do commuters have to be 125cc, or have a de-tuned 600/1000cc sportsbike engine in it?
I think what I'm looking for as a replacement needs has some or all of the following criteria:
- Dependable
- Can cruise at motorway speeds
- Comfortable on long distance trips
- Good MPG
- Cheap insurance
- Cheap/easy to service
- Push start (ideally with a kickstart as backup)
- Not too tall
- Good luggage carrying capability
- Will take knobbly tyres
- Light enough to pick up if it goes over
- Nice to look at
On paper the new EFI model seems to tick a lot of boxes, top speed of around 80mph, 70 odd MPG, and so on. I'd be interested in peoples opinions on Royal Enfields.
The sort of questions I have are:
Are they reliable? Is 27HP enough to keep up with modern traffic? Is the single saddle comfier than the standard seat? What's the build quality like?
Simon