1997 REVIEW OF A VTR BY R1100GS PILOTS
1997 REVIEW OF A VTR BY R1100GS PILOTS
1997 REVIEW OF A VTR BY R1100GS PILOTS
VERY FUNNY STUFF
First, one other BMWfile's opinion of the then new R11GS
Along with the grey import Honda 650 Hawk
, the R1100GS is the most underrated bike you can buy. Thirteen years of dreary K-Series plodders and grown-up advertising have created the impression that BMWs are about as much fun as eating your greens.
Not the new twins, and definitely not the GS. It does all the speed, handling
and comfort things the other bikes here do, differently. It's so big, traffic
moves over for you on motorways. There's so much room for both of you it's
comfier than a car. The wacky suspension means you never, ever have to slow down over bumps. Try that on your GSX-R and you'll die.
Now a fast 47 year GS guy who is an old lady. His complaints are primarily the "big 3"; i.e., small tank-poor gas mileage, "crotch rocket" ergos and poor saddle. But this from a guy who thinks 100 HP is too much for "public roads" and thinks the VTR's suspension is too STIFF! On one hand he says VTR's handling was truckish and on the other was light years ahead???
From ibmwrNoSpam@NoSpamworld.std.com Thu Jun 19 23:26:55 1997
From: "John Mulvihill" <mulvijNoSpam@NoSpampacbell.net>
To: "BMW Internet Riders" <bmwmcNoSpam@NoSpamworld.std.com>
Cc: "Roozbeh Chubak" <roozbehNoSpam@NoSpamwco.com>,
"BMW GS Mailing List" <BMW-GSNoSpam@NoSpammicapeak.com>, <asmialekNoSpam@NoSpamSEVA.net>
Subject: BMW: R1100GS vs. Honda VTR1000 SuperHawk (long)
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 1997 20:02:27 -0700
Reply-To: "John Mulvihill" <mulvijNoSpam@NoSpampacbell.net>
To see if a crotch rocket's lay-down riding position could help my aching
back (see my post "Back pain, joint aches, HELP!"), I took a Honda VTR1000
Super Hawk for an extended test ride today on one of my favorite twisty
roads. It made a fascinating contrast to my 1995 R1100GS.
Actually, just getting a test ride on one of these hot-selling Super Hawks
was an accomplishment. Many dealers have already sold their year's
allottments, and those who have stock are refusing even a spin around the
block. It's a seller's market for Super Hawks since the riding mags gave it
the nod as the "street-oriented sport V-twin of choice" over the Suzuki TL
and even the Ducati 900. The latest Cycle World named the Super Hawk their
top open-class sportbike of the year, in ANY category.
For giving me a test ride on his personal machine, I thank the owner of
newly-relocated Concord Motor Sports (Bay Area). They have a fabulous
selection of Hondas, Suzukis and Ducatis, and a staff who really try to
accommodate you, even if you're interested in a model they can sell over
the phone. They're a big operation but, in my limited dealings with them so
far, I find them to be real motorcycle people and recommend them if you're
in the market for any of these brands.
Half a block into my test ride, I could understand the critics' enthusiasm
for the Super Hawk: This bike is one serious go-fast machine packaged in an
ingot-like chassis that exudes Honda's superlative engineering and build
quality. It feels like a late-model VFR with massive goat-gland injections.
The Super Hawks' riding position is considered mild by sportbike standards,
but after my touring-setup R11GS (with barbacks, Russell saddle and
Aeroflow screen) my 47-year-old frame found it demanding. Within a couple
of miles my wrists informed me they were not accustomed to supporting my
upper body, especially at a weird angle, and that they weren't about to
take it lying down. My hip joints protested their unnatural rotation, as
result of splayed legs and high pegs.
Look away from the screen for a moment and up at your ceiling. That's the
position my neck was forced into every minute of the test ride, unless I
wished to peruse the top of the too-small gas tank. (We're talking a
hundred-mile range here--in the Harley Sportster peanut-tank
category--thanks to the massive 48 mm carbs 30 mpg thirst.) From my
bicycling experience I know my neck would adjust, but I wasn't sure about
my hips.
While I adjusted to the realities of sport riding posture, we (they sent
along a young hot-shoe on a new GSXR 750 to chaperone me) made our way
through city traffic to the serpentine and bumpy Marsh Creek Road. Those
five miles of stoplights made me long for the wide bar and tall saddle of
my GS. But my discomfort was mollified by the Honda's incredible surge away
from the Living Dead in their Avalons. With more than 100 horspower pushing
440 pounds, and torque in the same league as my R1100GS (!), the Honda felt
like it could ride OVER the traffic ahead of us. And the power pulses of
the 90-degree V-twin are, I have to admit, far more sensual than the BMW
flat-twin's reassuring side-to-side massage. (I recently heard a Super Hawk
with Staintune pipes and it was the greatest basso profundo since E. Power
Biggs on his pipe organ.)
The twisties of Marsh Creek Road showed me how forbidding modern crotch
rockets are on bumpy secondaries, and yet how blazingly fast they can be if
you show them who's boss. After a couple of getting-acquainted miles, I
started increasing corner entrance speeds and exist blasts. To be frank,
the resulting experience left me more in awe of my GS than of the Honda.
While the Honda tracked true, it literally threw me off the seat reacting
to bumps my GS would shrug off, even with 48,000 miles on its stock shocks.
And while I could lever the tall GS into tight corners while cranked over
and hard on the brakes with only minor effort, I really had to yank on the
Honda's narrow clip-ons to get the leverage necessary to get the wide
Dunlop 204 radials to change direction.
There are few passing places on this road, but when we came up on traffic
the Honda easily powered around the largest obstacles, including
double-trailered dump trucks. It's the finest motor I've had the pleasure
of wicking open and shut.
My buddy on the GSXR was falling behind, so I waited till I saw him in my
mirrors before branching off to the Byron side road, with its undulating
hills and long sweepers. Then I took off again.
This time I sampled the Super Hawk's 80-mph-plus characteristics and found
it ultra-stable. But I was disconcerted by the laydown riding position.
After the GS, which is also rock-solid at speed, I felt my forward vision
compromised by the Super Hawk's closeness to the road (not reassuring at
speed on a country road with many entrances), and the bumps made the
tightly-suspended Honda feel dartier than the long-travel GS suspension.
The return journey impressed upon me how quickly the Super Hawk's learning
curve could be mastered. I could throw it into corners at serious
veolicities (e.g., 70 mph in a 30 mph-signed corner), and it gave the
impression there was great reserve capacity still unexplored. Still, the
word is getting out that a disproporionate number of new Super Hawk and
Suzuki TL riders are washing out their front ends and crashing big-time,
probably due to intoxication induced by seemingly unlimited entrance
speeds. As it turns out, there ARE limits. I hadn't found them yet, because
they are so far beyond the speeds at which a sane person would ride on
public roads.
My ride on the Super Hawk made me understand how easily Roozbeh Chubek and I can reel in most crotch rocket riders on our GSs, and at the same time,
how much serious trouble I could get myself into on a state-of-the art
sportbike. How to explain the contradiction? The GS is easier to ride fast
and handles the bumpy stuff far better. But the new Japanese sport twins'
tractable power and superior tires make their ultimate potential velocity
through the twisties much greater--IF the rider can master their various
demands.
I could see myself going very, very fast on a Super Hawk, but to what
purpose? A trip to the local hoosegow or emergency ward? There's no victory
podium in street racing, only a clammy realization at the next rest stop
that you've cheated the odds once again. There's also the exhileration that
comes from riding fast on top machinery, of course, but this ride showed me
that to explore the potential of today's sportbikes requires speeds that,
on public roads, invite catastrophe.
So as we navigated the city traffic back to the dealership, I concluded
that for a one-bike kinda guy who's not a member of the No Fear fraternity,
the Super Hawk isn't a realistic alternative to the R11GS. In every way
other than canyon carving on smooth roads, the GS is so superior it's
almost laughable. And even on the smooth stuff, I know I'll be able to reel
in 23 out of 25 Super Hawk riders on my GS.
Still, I'm strongly attracted to the Honda twin. There's that gorgeous
90-degree twin. With Staintunes it would feel like the hammer of Thor. And
an Eclipse Sport Bag set would enable me to do some touring. . .
So, contrary to logic, I haven't totally discarded the prospect of
acquiring a Super Hawk. For what it does, at the level I can do it (e.g.,
less than road-racer velocities), it's the best bike I could ask for. As
Honda's first effort in the 90-degree arena, it's a brilliant
accomplishment.
What I need is some context. Tomorrow I take out the Speed Triple, and who
knows what else. Stay tuned to see if there's something out there that can
coax me off my GS and back into all-out sport riding.
- John Mulvihill
VERY FUNNY STUFF
First, one other BMWfile's opinion of the then new R11GS
Along with the grey import Honda 650 Hawk
, the R1100GS is the most underrated bike you can buy. Thirteen years of dreary K-Series plodders and grown-up advertising have created the impression that BMWs are about as much fun as eating your greens.Not the new twins, and definitely not the GS. It does all the speed, handling
and comfort things the other bikes here do, differently. It's so big, traffic
moves over for you on motorways. There's so much room for both of you it's
comfier than a car. The wacky suspension means you never, ever have to slow down over bumps. Try that on your GSX-R and you'll die.
Now a fast 47 year GS guy who is an old lady. His complaints are primarily the "big 3"; i.e., small tank-poor gas mileage, "crotch rocket" ergos and poor saddle. But this from a guy who thinks 100 HP is too much for "public roads" and thinks the VTR's suspension is too STIFF! On one hand he says VTR's handling was truckish and on the other was light years ahead???
From ibmwrNoSpam@NoSpamworld.std.com Thu Jun 19 23:26:55 1997
From: "John Mulvihill" <mulvijNoSpam@NoSpampacbell.net>
To: "BMW Internet Riders" <bmwmcNoSpam@NoSpamworld.std.com>
Cc: "Roozbeh Chubak" <roozbehNoSpam@NoSpamwco.com>,
"BMW GS Mailing List" <BMW-GSNoSpam@NoSpammicapeak.com>, <asmialekNoSpam@NoSpamSEVA.net>
Subject: BMW: R1100GS vs. Honda VTR1000 SuperHawk (long)
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 1997 20:02:27 -0700
Reply-To: "John Mulvihill" <mulvijNoSpam@NoSpampacbell.net>
To see if a crotch rocket's lay-down riding position could help my aching
back (see my post "Back pain, joint aches, HELP!"), I took a Honda VTR1000
Super Hawk for an extended test ride today on one of my favorite twisty
roads. It made a fascinating contrast to my 1995 R1100GS.
Actually, just getting a test ride on one of these hot-selling Super Hawks
was an accomplishment. Many dealers have already sold their year's
allottments, and those who have stock are refusing even a spin around the
block. It's a seller's market for Super Hawks since the riding mags gave it
the nod as the "street-oriented sport V-twin of choice" over the Suzuki TL
and even the Ducati 900. The latest Cycle World named the Super Hawk their
top open-class sportbike of the year, in ANY category.
For giving me a test ride on his personal machine, I thank the owner of
newly-relocated Concord Motor Sports (Bay Area). They have a fabulous
selection of Hondas, Suzukis and Ducatis, and a staff who really try to
accommodate you, even if you're interested in a model they can sell over
the phone. They're a big operation but, in my limited dealings with them so
far, I find them to be real motorcycle people and recommend them if you're
in the market for any of these brands.
Half a block into my test ride, I could understand the critics' enthusiasm
for the Super Hawk: This bike is one serious go-fast machine packaged in an
ingot-like chassis that exudes Honda's superlative engineering and build
quality. It feels like a late-model VFR with massive goat-gland injections.
The Super Hawks' riding position is considered mild by sportbike standards,
but after my touring-setup R11GS (with barbacks, Russell saddle and
Aeroflow screen) my 47-year-old frame found it demanding. Within a couple
of miles my wrists informed me they were not accustomed to supporting my
upper body, especially at a weird angle, and that they weren't about to
take it lying down. My hip joints protested their unnatural rotation, as
result of splayed legs and high pegs.
Look away from the screen for a moment and up at your ceiling. That's the
position my neck was forced into every minute of the test ride, unless I
wished to peruse the top of the too-small gas tank. (We're talking a
hundred-mile range here--in the Harley Sportster peanut-tank
category--thanks to the massive 48 mm carbs 30 mpg thirst.) From my
bicycling experience I know my neck would adjust, but I wasn't sure about
my hips.
While I adjusted to the realities of sport riding posture, we (they sent
along a young hot-shoe on a new GSXR 750 to chaperone me) made our way
through city traffic to the serpentine and bumpy Marsh Creek Road. Those
five miles of stoplights made me long for the wide bar and tall saddle of
my GS. But my discomfort was mollified by the Honda's incredible surge away
from the Living Dead in their Avalons. With more than 100 horspower pushing
440 pounds, and torque in the same league as my R1100GS (!), the Honda felt
like it could ride OVER the traffic ahead of us. And the power pulses of
the 90-degree V-twin are, I have to admit, far more sensual than the BMW
flat-twin's reassuring side-to-side massage. (I recently heard a Super Hawk
with Staintune pipes and it was the greatest basso profundo since E. Power
Biggs on his pipe organ.)
The twisties of Marsh Creek Road showed me how forbidding modern crotch
rockets are on bumpy secondaries, and yet how blazingly fast they can be if
you show them who's boss. After a couple of getting-acquainted miles, I
started increasing corner entrance speeds and exist blasts. To be frank,
the resulting experience left me more in awe of my GS than of the Honda.
While the Honda tracked true, it literally threw me off the seat reacting
to bumps my GS would shrug off, even with 48,000 miles on its stock shocks.
And while I could lever the tall GS into tight corners while cranked over
and hard on the brakes with only minor effort, I really had to yank on the
Honda's narrow clip-ons to get the leverage necessary to get the wide
Dunlop 204 radials to change direction.
There are few passing places on this road, but when we came up on traffic
the Honda easily powered around the largest obstacles, including
double-trailered dump trucks. It's the finest motor I've had the pleasure
of wicking open and shut.
My buddy on the GSXR was falling behind, so I waited till I saw him in my
mirrors before branching off to the Byron side road, with its undulating
hills and long sweepers. Then I took off again.
This time I sampled the Super Hawk's 80-mph-plus characteristics and found
it ultra-stable. But I was disconcerted by the laydown riding position.
After the GS, which is also rock-solid at speed, I felt my forward vision
compromised by the Super Hawk's closeness to the road (not reassuring at
speed on a country road with many entrances), and the bumps made the
tightly-suspended Honda feel dartier than the long-travel GS suspension.
The return journey impressed upon me how quickly the Super Hawk's learning
curve could be mastered. I could throw it into corners at serious
veolicities (e.g., 70 mph in a 30 mph-signed corner), and it gave the
impression there was great reserve capacity still unexplored. Still, the
word is getting out that a disproporionate number of new Super Hawk and
Suzuki TL riders are washing out their front ends and crashing big-time,
probably due to intoxication induced by seemingly unlimited entrance
speeds. As it turns out, there ARE limits. I hadn't found them yet, because
they are so far beyond the speeds at which a sane person would ride on
public roads.
My ride on the Super Hawk made me understand how easily Roozbeh Chubek and I can reel in most crotch rocket riders on our GSs, and at the same time,
how much serious trouble I could get myself into on a state-of-the art
sportbike. How to explain the contradiction? The GS is easier to ride fast
and handles the bumpy stuff far better. But the new Japanese sport twins'
tractable power and superior tires make their ultimate potential velocity
through the twisties much greater--IF the rider can master their various
demands.
I could see myself going very, very fast on a Super Hawk, but to what
purpose? A trip to the local hoosegow or emergency ward? There's no victory
podium in street racing, only a clammy realization at the next rest stop
that you've cheated the odds once again. There's also the exhileration that
comes from riding fast on top machinery, of course, but this ride showed me
that to explore the potential of today's sportbikes requires speeds that,
on public roads, invite catastrophe.
So as we navigated the city traffic back to the dealership, I concluded
that for a one-bike kinda guy who's not a member of the No Fear fraternity,
the Super Hawk isn't a realistic alternative to the R11GS. In every way
other than canyon carving on smooth roads, the GS is so superior it's
almost laughable. And even on the smooth stuff, I know I'll be able to reel
in 23 out of 25 Super Hawk riders on my GS.
Still, I'm strongly attracted to the Honda twin. There's that gorgeous
90-degree twin. With Staintunes it would feel like the hammer of Thor. And
an Eclipse Sport Bag set would enable me to do some touring. . .
So, contrary to logic, I haven't totally discarded the prospect of
acquiring a Super Hawk. For what it does, at the level I can do it (e.g.,
less than road-racer velocities), it's the best bike I could ask for. As
Honda's first effort in the 90-degree arena, it's a brilliant
accomplishment.
What I need is some context. Tomorrow I take out the Speed Triple, and who
knows what else. Stay tuned to see if there's something out there that can
coax me off my GS and back into all-out sport riding.
- John Mulvihill
Last edited by skokievtr; Mar 11, 2010 at 04:58 PM.
I ridden that road many time and what he says is all true until you fix the stock suspension and you don't have to worry about those POS 204's anymore, then it's a whole different ball game.....
If he thinks the superhawk is harsh isn the suspension, he needs to eat more cookies... Dang it, it's to soft unless you are half midget...
And yeah, the stock tires wheren't even good when they where new... Now they are a laugh...
And yeah, the stock tires wheren't even good when they where new... Now they are a laugh...
or maybe he's comparing on the basis of inches of travel which can translate into harshness for a sportbike when the roads gets rough. I don't know if he was on bumpy pavement but 8541 rode the road many times.
Fix the suspension and put some good tires on there and it's a whole different story....
On that road with stock suspension, if you weighed over 140lbs the stock stuff would beat the crap out of you. Throw in the 204's they came with back then and it would have been an interesting ride.
Fix the suspension and put some good tires on there and it's a whole different story....
Fix the suspension and put some good tires on there and it's a whole different story....
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