Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
2012 Yamaha Super Tenere
Collapse
X
-
It's a silly large ADV bike. Seems to be a copy of the Beemer GS1200. Big 1200 parallel twin, tubeless spoke wheels, wider and heavier than a school bus...
But, Yamaha reliability (and price), absolutely perfect ergos, and a weirdly low center of gravity. Like, even though it's over a quarter ton, it makes me want to go everywhere.
- Likes 1
Comment
-
I got the 2014 model, its my only vehicle ... Just about to hit 70K on it.
Let me know if you have any questions.Love my brass ... Love my SSR ... Hard choices ...
XEMON's phantom double sided feed
Keep your ATS going: Project rATS 2.0
My Feedback
Comment
-
Originally posted by XEMON View PostI got the 2014 model, its my only vehicle ... Just about to hit 70K on it.
Let me know if you have any questions.
Comment
-
That is a sweet bike.i could see myself camping off of that rig. With the weight, I wonder how it does on loose gravel, but it cant be as bad as my touring bike.
Keep the rubber side down friend!!
Comment
-
I ride a victory XCT so even gravel is tough for me at times.
My wife has been toying with the idea of her learning a clutch and us getting a pair of smaller bikes for our adventures. I suggested a scrambler type so we could do mild offroading if need be. This looks up my alley as I am already used to a dressed 106 cubic Inch beast. As long as this wouldnt wash out on me on the minimum mqintenance roads, I may start looking at em.
-
Very nice pickup. I like those bikes and adventure bikes are my favorite over all the genres. My next bike be a affix twin or Yamaha Tennere T7. I’d guess that the Tennere be much like most adventure bikes. Great road tourers but that road can be anything you can classify as a road.
Years ago I went to le Classique rally in Quebec. Lots of people on big adventure bikes. I went on a TW200 farm bike lol. Had a blast and did all the additional challenges. Seen the guys on the big bikes struggling in the mud and such being exhausted and many not finishing. Glad I left my own V Strom home that trip.
Couple years back though I planned a trip up north to camp on the James bay. It was a epic trip that included 300kms of gravel roads a few kms of trail along the beach and many many hours of seclusion along the second longest stretch of road in north America with ZERO services. For that i road my Strom and could not think of a better mount for that.
my point is. I’d advise agains trying a big bike off-road especially if your not VERY experienced off road. I have trail ridden my last v Strom 650 and broke my foot in the process. At same time I also extensively off-roaded many duelsports dr650,DRz400,cRF250l,and TW200s. That’s just loads of fun and when they fall over you generally can get back up and lift them yourself with easy.
but if it’s a road, dirt gravel or otherwise that bikes going to be a blast.AGD 68 Automag, AGD ULE 68 Automag, Azodin KPII, Tippmann SL68II, Umarex TR50.
Comment
-
Agreed, with those big bikes you can't fly through trails ... But you can definitely fly through jeep trails 😁
On the more challenging spot, you need to slow it down and think a bit more about what and how you're moving than the lighter dirt bike .
I love that I don't have to worry about the road ... Put the camping gear on the back and go ...
PS: I go to the airport and customer sites at least once a week with my toolbox on the back ...
-
-
I definitely don't have intentions on single-tracking it, but I live in Colorado, so I just want to get out in the mountains and not have to worry about road conditions. And I wanted something comfortable enough to really put some miles on as well. This thing seems like it ought to fill a lot of needs and I'm excited to get out there and do it.
And it did come with some cheap Yamaha branded soft bags, but I can't find the models online and I don't think they were meant for this bike. They fit like floppy garbage...
Comment
-
I have to say, after a few days on this bike, I love it.
I've been reading a lot about the differences between gen 1 and gen 2, and most folks say that gen 2 is definitely a better bike. Objectively, sure, it's a better tourer. It's got many more creature comforts. But I grew up on bikes with "personality," and this thing seems cush as a cloud in comparison. On top of that, an unrefined parallel twin just has more charm than a tamed one, even if the refined one draws more power. I'm more than happy. It doesn't help that gen 2's have the Colorado Tax (that means outdoorsy stuff is just inherently more expensive here [I DARE you to find an affordable RV or Subaru here...], and post Covid, all bikes seem to be more spendy... The $7.5k I paid for a mostly kitted gen 1 with only 24k miles is more than fair, and I just really want to go out and thrash this thing.
- Likes 1
Comment
Comment