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Older bikes, good for touring?
Hello!
I'm currently in the process of finding myself a bike for an upcoming tour of Europe, 4 months, all over the place, mostly all tarmac. I'd like to keep my purchase price low, so some of the bikes on my short list are older bikes, some almost vintage. To give you an idea, on my list there is a 1993 Yamaha TDM850 with 40k km. The bike has received full service and inspection, and nothing is wrong with it according to seller (probably a fellow HUBBer, he toured Europe with it, so I'm tempted to trust him). So my question is, how old is too old for a bike to be used for an extended(ish) trip? Can an older bike be a reliable low maintenance option for a mechanical ignorant like me? Thank you! |
Old bikes are the best choise for big trips. Old technik is much easyer to repair in third world countrys then new electronic ons. Also all the problems of older bikes are well known but nobody knows the common problems of brand new bikes.
The transalp I used for Africa had 50.000 km when i bought it for 700 Euro and started to travel for two years. Now it has allmoast 200.000 and still running fine so im gettin ready to ride it to russia. I could also sell it for the same price now so no loss of vaue at all. Try this with a brand new BMW ;) http://afrikamotorrad.de/?report=en_transafrika |
The older TDM can consume a decent amount of oil. My friend bought a used TDM last year and rode of happily as the bike looked all right and seemed to be in a good condition for its age and runned distance. And the price wasnt bad either. The previous owner forgot to mention that the bike used a bit of oil and my friend was alittle ig orant with checking oil as none of his previous bikes had used oil. This resulted quite quickly to total failure of the engine. Even the warning light didnt come on before the whole shit gave up.
So check the engine for oil consumption ofte. so that you dont get any surprises during your long trip..... |
Tobi! Yes I know which Transalp you talk about, we 've met in Huacachina, Peru ;)
Although you were not on the transalp (a small Honda if I remember well). I remember you showed my friend and I your pictures from your African trip around a good meal. Thanks for your answer and nice to hear from you my friend :) |
Thank you Snakeboy. Owner says the oil level never changes.
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The TDM should be a fine bike, design loosely based on older Brit twins but done much better. You will find it a relaxing ride, so stay wide awake :)
I have to say My Enfield is a fine touring bike, not really happy above 60MPH but superb below it, and being very frugal on the fuel is cheap to run, but the big plus is the range. My three cylinder Thunderbird is entirely different... Both great bikes to ride. |
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Forget age...... You want to look at condition and the actual bike itself.
I personally think bikes from the 90's are the golden era for Overland bikes. They are still simple and easy to work on with nothing that can't be fixed by a DIY mechanic given some time and a good manual. Yet still advanced enough to be smooth, powerful and reliable. In my opinion they are also FAR FAR more robust and reliable than the stuff which is coming off the production lines today. Modern bikes are designed to be maintained by dealers with computers. Require specialised tooling for no reason other than to trap the home mechanic into returning to their dealer for simple repairs. They are made of mostly plastic and low grade alloys to speed up production and cut manufacture costs. The Quality Assurance is signed off by accountants instead of engineers. Modern stuff also has redundancy built into it. I know this is a FACT !! Manufacturers don't want you riding around on ten year old bikes when their new models are begging to be bought. Ranting aside, I would be far happier to go touring on a 20 year old Honda than a 12 month old BMW... And remember, just because a bike is newer does not make it less likely to be screwed. You can put 100,000 miles worth of wear on a bike in a fortnight is you ride it hard enough. |
It's what you know and what equipment you have. Give me a 2013 machine and the full diagnostic kit every time, its far easier when the laptop does the work and parts are available. Take away the kit and training and yes, the generic machines you were trained on are easier. Go back beyond your comfort zone ( I hate *****y carbs with their poxy bits of rubber and fag packet adjustments) and you are just as stuffed only with worse parts availability.
My comfort zone is about 2008. Luckily the Guzzi tech is between 1908 and 2008. Andy |
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Fag packet adjustments hahah. When did you last see a bike with a set of points ?? For the last two years I've been diagnosing faults using computers and diagnostics kits. Fault codes are useless if you don't know how decode them. And bikes generate random codes all the time. For loads of reasons. When I'd service a bike and read the fault memory, it could have 15-20 faults recorded and there be NOTHING wrong with the bike. Let your battery run flat and you will get endless control unit faults. Plug an accessory into a socket at the wrong time and it will tell you your central frame electronics is miss-communicating with your Kombie etc. TOTALLY misleading if you're not experienced with them.. It's really not road side stuff at all. And these hand held readers generally do is just give you numbers unless you want to carry a big stupid tester with a laptop. Hardly lightweight travel. And if your lucky enough to extrapolate the data correctly, where are you going to get that fuel pump controller, idle actuator or abs speed sensor from ??? An older bike will generally run on any coil if need be, carb can be fixed by anyone who can be bothered to clean it, you can jump or push start it with a flat battery and they are generally far more tolerant to low grade fuel, shit oil and abuse. But anyway.. There are different trains of thought. Both have their pro's and cons.. |
I am trying to get my 2003 Thunderbird "fit for purpose" Ie touring.
I had to shim the rear sprocket to get the chain to run true, never seen or heard of that before, but a simple machining job on the lathe. The thing that is proving top be difficult is it is fitted with a datatool 3 alarm. I want to remove it. Triumphs have thrown away all the technical data on such an old product and can't help :( Thing is if the battery in the remote goes flat, or it dies in any way the bike is scrap. If the alarm fails ditto. It makes the bike apig to live with even with it all working. Lastly the alarm puts such a drain on the battery the charger keeps giving me an error code because it can't go into maintenance mode. As things stand I will be using the Enfield next year for touring as I simply don't trust the Triumph not to leave me stranded. This pretty much sums up all the electronically enhanced vehicles. They might work well but when they fail they die. I doubt many military spec vehicles are blessed with the emission controls of civilian vehicles. A failing big end on The Enfield in Poland was No problem at all as I just rode it home rattling. If I should tread on the remote for the alarm It would probably mean scrapping the bike. Most Modern vehicles are just too fragile, they lack survivability. EDIT UPDATE,.. The datatool has been removed with no trace of it on the bike. Battery now charges and goes into maintenance mode. I can use the bike wearing gloves.. Peace and happiness all around :) Now to make luggage racks for it. |
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Well chaps this is wonderful,we can have the injection pump gradually start to fail,the pieces can cause problems with the injectors,these will over fuel and leak into cylinders,sometimes melting pistons,sometimes just diluting the engine oil and having a slow death...the head furhers at audi,BMW,mercedes etc are probably very pleased their designers have built a car ats fu...d in 4 years...oh and I forgot to include the French I'm sure they can't be left out... |
I am travelling around Southern Africa on a 1951 Harley, much modified for the trip but still old technology , including rigid frame , having as much fun as as Alex Jackson on his new KTM adventure, I do have to fettle a bit but keeps me busy in the evening , a great bike for Africa . Any bike will do , helps if you have a little knowledge about it though .
Gareth |
Well thank you for your replies everyone.
I've been listening. The sale of the TDM didn't fell through, but I found and bought a mint 1994 funduro, 50k miles. Definitely been in the hands of (a) careful owner(s). I have a sweet spot for torquey, smooth thumpers. :mchappy: Hopefully it will prove to be a fun and reliable ride for my trip. :thumbup1: |
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