Thanks for the cool Tiger reviews! I'm a fan too!
I've owned a few Tigers ...all have been good for me but have always had a few other bikes in the shed to share time with the Tigers.
Bought a used '95 in 1998 from a friend. Very inexpensive, only 12K miles. I used it to commute mostly but had 3 bag GIVI set of hard bags so it could tour as well. Bike handled well enough, very plush or our rough California roads, smooth at 75-80 mph. So-So fuel economy, comfortable all day. Good two up ... could use stiffer suspension, wonky when pushed at high speed. Nice character, average brakes. Not bad on easy dirt roads. Not great on sand, rocky tracks or mud.
Carbs were a pain, but only because the ENTIRE air box had to be replaced to get a new air filter!
Not the best engineering minds designed that bike.
Eventually the valves closed up ... needed total valve job ... this at round 40K miles. I sold it off very cheap to a young guy who rebuilt the head. He kept it a year and re-sold it, still running fine.
A good first effort for Triumph but of course lots of room for improvement.
Next up was a '99 Tiger 885 F.I. that I bought in the UK second hand. Very much like the 955i ... just slightly different motor. I rode that Tiger all over UK, France, Spain, Portugal, Morocco .. did two big Euro trips. OK on easy dirt roads, but with a top heavy feel I had to be careful since I stand just 5' 7". It's a HEAVY bike but a solid touring bike, IMO.
Put about 20K miles on it, sold it off to a friend back in the UK who commuted on it and ran the mileage way up. That Tiger never missed a beat. Good fuel economy, smooth, better handling than the '95. I attended the Triumph USA launch for the '99 Tiger, got to ride the original Tiger back to back with the new '99 which was a totally, 100% new bike. The 955i in 2001 was even better. I've ridden it a lot, never owned one.
Tiger castle hunting in France
I owned a couple Vstroms next and put over 90,000 miles on them. Great bikes but I just got a bit bored ... wanted a change. I test rode the new 1050 Tigers and liked them OK. I knew they needed a lot of changes but my plan was to wait a few years, get a nice used minter cheap.
Found an '07 beauty in 2009 with just 1200 miles for a very good price. Mine came with the Triumph optional power plug. But still ... NO OIL SITE GLASS!
But the silky smooth nature of the motor is a big positive. Riding position is not ideal for me but not bad. This bike is extremely FAST ... Zero to 145 mph is nothing flat. Also, with the radial mount brake calipers, world class braking. But when pushed on our bumpy roads the handling was off.
I had the front forks revalved ... 100% improvement. Bought a used Ohlins for the rear ... it's a bit stiff but still an improvement. One day I'll go to a slightly softer spring.
The 1050 has been a difficult bike to learn to ride properly. Took me a while to trust it. Ground clearance is fantastic ... better than any previous Tiger and way better than any Vstrom. But our beat up California roads can still upset the chassis ... so a smooth hand is required to go fast.
And FAST it IS!
I've ridden both the 800 Tigers several times. My longest ride was back to back with my own 1050. I love the looks and character of the 800. A very sweet bike ... but I really missed the POWER AND TORQUE of the 1050.
I've taken my 1050 on dirt roads ... and one must go very easy to get the feel of the big girl on dirt. But it's doable ... but I'd hate to see what would happen in a tip over !!! $$$$ mine stays mostly on Tarmac.
Bodie Ghost Town, Bridgeport, California's Sierra Nevada.