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01-28-2013, 04:03 AM
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#1 |
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Adventurer
Joined: Nov 2012
Oddometer: 11
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HD XR1200 performance question
Couple of months ago or so I was asking about commuting on Sportster 883 but decided to put the idea on hold and consider other bikes. Recently I tested GSXF650 and FZ6 and im on the verge of taking the plunge with the FZ6. But suddenly I chance upon a 2009 HD XR1200 with less than 10k on the clock at a good price. Based from what Ive read in the internet - the stock performance of XR1200 seems lack luster - 70mph in 5th @ 4000RPM seems not up for the task I wanted (something that can do 100mph easily and but no more than that - Im an expat in the middle east where freeway has higher speed limits). So why do I still consider HD if Im looking for a "performance" bike? I really like the simplicity of the HD evo engine, the belt drive, the character of HD vtwin, not so bad resale value and for the XR - the oil cooler, modern USD fork and swing-arm.
So hows the XR1200? the 70mph 5th @ 4000RPM - how true is this? |
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01-28-2013, 05:38 AM
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#2 |
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Harden the phuck up
Joined: Nov 2006
Location: God's country, Western North Carolina
Oddometer: 662
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Check the xr1200 forum, there is a couple great threads on doing a pulley swap that may be what you are looking for in addressing rpm for extended "high" speed runs.
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01-28-2013, 08:49 AM
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#3 |
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Charismatic Megafauna
Joined: Oct 2003
Location: Cackalacky
Oddometer: 46,055
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Go here:
http://www.xr1200ownersgroup.com/site/forum.php The Scotty Mod is well documented there, and there are people who can tell you about the other mods they've made to go with it. You may also find people local to you that can help out, since the site is mostly UK/Europe/Places-Other-Than-NA.
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Only an XR1200 owner knows why Cthulhu hangs its head out a car window. Like I like. Yep. Photog screwed with this post 01-28-2013 at 09:16 AM |
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01-28-2013, 09:18 AM
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#4 |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Mar 2007
Location: U-gene, OR.
Oddometer: 17,989
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The XR1200X is the best Harley ever made and my personal favorite motorcycle. It is fine at 100mph.
__________________
"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind." — Dr. Seuss “Watch out for everything bigger than you, they have the "right of weight" Bib |
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01-28-2013, 09:22 AM
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#5 |
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Paint it black.
Joined: Jan 2005
Location: Über Alles,Ca
Oddometer: 12,888
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The Buells weren't that great and this thing is what 100 pounds heavier?
Harley and performance don't belong in the same sentence. They will put a big ole smile on your face when you ride one. |
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01-28-2013, 09:45 AM
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#6 |
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infidel
Joined: Jan 2002
Location: New York
Oddometer: 42,858
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01-28-2013, 09:25 AM
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#7 |
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The AntiHarley
Joined: Mar 2009
Location: Bristol Hills in the Fingerlakes region of NY
Oddometer: 2,195
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My brother had one and I have a Ulysses. They are both a blast.
__________________
Our ride across the USA on a Ural Gear Up- http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?t=781149 |
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01-31-2013, 08:23 PM
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#8 |
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Some Guy
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02-01-2013, 06:22 AM
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#9 | |
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Hegelian Scum
Joined: Jul 2005
Location: Asheville NC
Oddometer: 3,502
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Quote:
__________________
"That ain't right. How can Honda paint a bike green?" "It's not 1978 anymore?" |
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01-28-2013, 01:57 PM
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#10 |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Nov 2010
Location: Milwaukee
Oddometer: 643
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I've rode one and it certainly is a bag of character. Nice ride, cool feel, and great sounds. Not comfortable for longs trips though. After about 60 miles my ass was ready for the couch. People change seats with no luck either. I put the blame on the 6" rise handlebars. Too upright of a riding position puts all your weight on your ass. I'd like to try a 2" rise or superbike type bar so you lean forward a bit and take a bit of pressure off your bottom. Kinda feels weird to ride anyway sitting bolt upright and having the somewhat rear set foot pegs.
As far as power goes I'd say it's much more fun using the motors low end rather than top end. Do not expect the top end punch of the lightweight 4 cylinder bike's you tried. No doubt you'll love ripping through the first few gears, but once you're above 60 or so you feel it getting weak. So for riding around town and shooting off of stoplights it was tons of fun, but in the country when passing traffic on 55 mph roads, not so great. That being said if you're interested in keeping a hot pace down the freeway and do a fair bit of passing you might be disappointed. Although the kids say an exhaust, air filter, and tune do wonders up top, but I cannot attest. I still wouldn't mind owning one and modding it to find out.
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01-28-2013, 06:03 PM
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#11 | ||
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Charismatic Megafauna
Joined: Oct 2003
Location: Cackalacky
Oddometer: 46,055
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Quote:
I have no problem ripping around at 85-95mph on my stock '11 XR1200X during the 5 o'clock chaos of my commute where speeds go from 10mph to 90mph and back in the same 3 mile stretch.... Quote:
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Only an XR1200 owner knows why Cthulhu hangs its head out a car window. Like I like. Yep. Photog screwed with this post 01-28-2013 at 06:09 PM |
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01-28-2013, 06:50 PM
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#12 | |
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Beastly Adventurer
Joined: Sep 2002
Location: Newnan, GA USA
Oddometer: 1,454
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Quote:
I've never ridden an XR1200, but my XL1200X 48 is no slouch at all above 60 either.. It just lopes along nicely at 70-80 and will gladly punch on to 90 and beyond pretty quickly. It's no superbike, granted, but it is plenty entertaining and has TONS more character (and much more enjoyable to ride as a result) than any inline 4. The most bland, boring and unsatisfying bike I've ever ridden was an inline 4. Sure they have acceleration that threatens your license, but after the new wore off that, it was B-O-R-I-N-G! Don't know how the stock XR compares to my Buell S1, but that bikes is one of the most FUN bikes I've ever owned. And this is from a guy that was very anti-H-D up until just last spring when I bought my S1. That experience changed my thought process and lead me to getting the 48 earlier this month... Loving that H-D engine now! ![]()
__________________
"Life is too short to do anything other than that about which you are absolutely passionate."..........."Adventure is a frame of mind, set upon by action, not defined by equipment."..........."I didn't get a Sportster because I wanted a Harley....I got a Harley because I wanted a Sportster."..............."It all boils down to your ability to say "SCREW IT" and really mean it".....Randy |
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01-28-2013, 08:10 PM
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#13 | |
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Studly Adventurer
Joined: Nov 2010
Location: Milwaukee
Oddometer: 643
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Quote:
Still would have one though. Love the feel and sound of that engine, plus you get top notch suspension on the X and good looks to boot! Harley hit it out of the park with that bike. A shame us Yanks don't get it anymore. |
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01-28-2013, 06:15 PM
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#14 |
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In the Dark
Joined: Dec 2010
Location: way back up in the woods among the evergreens
Oddometer: 188
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Yes, you can tour on it. I did 16 days in Europe (3500 miles) on an XR1200X with throw over saddlebags and a duffel bag. No problems. Long days, rain, shine, all kinds of roads. This bike rips up the backroads and gives you miles of smiles. Redline is 7000-ish and I bounce off that from time to time. Pulls hard up thru 5500 or so. A stock XR is at 70 mph at 4000 rpm, so yes, that's accurate. An easy pulley change will improve this. PLENTY of power to pass, run at consistent 80mph or more. No worries passing. Rolls on strong from 55 to 75.
I bought mine in 2009 and have loved owning it. |
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01-28-2013, 07:33 PM
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#15 |
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bam-a-lam
Joined: Aug 2009
Location: Charleston, SC
Oddometer: 1,842
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Love mine. I say it starts to run out of steam at about 80 mph but still has enough go go power to easily hit 105+, just the rate of acceleration slows down once you hit 80.
Uncomfortable, for any length of time, compared to what? I put over 10 hours in the saddle on back to back days last fall and while it wasn't as comfortable as my Road Glide I didn't think it was particulary bad. Was on a recent semi-organized ride on some of the few curvey roads (long sweepers) we have down here in the flatlands of the Lowcounty. Lead rider is an ex-marine fighter pilot riding a KTM Duke. His other bike is an R1 and lets just say he likes to ride really fast. There were about 10-12 bikes ....several GSs, a Buell 1125R, Triumph Speed Triple, K1600GT, Tiger 800 XC, Sprint GT, and a couple of cruisers. Now I know it's the rider and the not the bike but I had problem on the XR1200 with the non-X suspendsion upgrade keeping a 50-70 foot distance between myself and the lead Duke rider. We were averaging 75-80 on a two lane blacktop with a 45-55 mph limit and several times hit the century mark. The other riders were typcially 200-400 yards behind and we stopped every few miles to the let the slower riders catch up. The XR is certainly no sport bike and hits it performance window around 100 mph but sure is fun to ride moderately fast, especially in the twistys. The low rpm grunt makes the power delivery incredibly smooth with no peakines and no need for constant gear changing. If I was going to be constantly on sustained rides above 75 mph I might consider the Scotty Mod to reduce high speed engine rpms but as it stands now it doesn't get vibey and without looking at the tach once can't really tell the difference between 4000 and 5000 rpm. I recenlty upgraded to the "X" suspension and can't wait to get back up to the NC/TN mountains this spring.
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'12 H-D Road Glide Custom '09 Suzuki DR650 '09 H-D XR1200 |
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