Taranaki Daily News

Five fine lightweigh­t tourers

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bike here that you can ride on a learner licence.

Moto Guzzi V7 II Stone

Claimed Weight: 189kg (dry) Price: $12,990 (TC and ABS equipped: $14,990)

You’re going to have to pay extra for a windscreen and luggage with the V7 II, but it does come with shaft drive. Like the Honda it develops 35kW of power, but does so in a completely different manner. The Guzzi chugs where the Honda revs, and it vibrates a bit more as you can feel every power stroke. Some, like me, will find this charactere­nhancing. While for others, it’ll become annoying and tiring during long terms in the saddle.

The other limitation on the Guzzi’s touring potential is its basic suspension package, which will present the most obvious opportunit­y for improvemen­t for many owners. Otherwise, this is a great do-anything, go-anywhere machine for anyone short enough to comfortabl­y slot their knees behind the air-cooled cylinders of Guzzi’s venerable-yet-lovable short-block V-twin. Then again, those who do fit may wish to wait for the V7 III, which promises a 10 per cent power increase and improved suspension when it arrives mid-2017.

Yamaha MT-09 Tracer

Claimed Weight: 190kg (dry) Price: $18,199

Time to get a bit more hightech, and with the Tracer 900 (the Yamaha’s tongue-friendlier name in the UK), we enter the realm of triple riding modes and a range of traction control options. Power also increases to more than double the outputs of the CB500X and V7, and the 850cc Yamaha inline triple puts 85kW (115bhp) in the rider’s right fist, making it the most powerful of any bike listed here.

The plush long-travel suspension of the Tracer and pampering seat make it easily the most comfortabl­e bike in Yamaha’s MT (Mighty Torque) series, along with a fairing and windscreen that better insulates the rider from the worst of the weather.

Panniers come included in the Tracer’s price, which makes it one of the most ready-to-tour bikes here, along with the Ducati.

Triumph Tiger 800 XR

Claimed Weight: 188kg (dry) Price: $20,490

The base model of the popular Tiger 800 range is also the most rider-friendly when it comes to touring over a variety of road surfaces, and still offers riding aids like traction control and ABS-equipped brakes. As the stripper in the range, it’s also the lightest of the 800 models, and comes with a quicker-steering 19-inch front wheel instead of the 21in hoop fitted to more adventurou­s Tiger 800s.

With the option to position the seat at two heights, and two seat thicknesse­s available, the tall Tiger can be tailored to a range of four seat heights starting at 790mm and rising to 830mm.

With nearly 180mm of suspension travel available at either end (50mm more than the Hyper below and 30mm more than the Tracer above), the Tiger is the most gravel road-ready bike here, and comes with defeat buttons for the electronic­s if you’re keen on honing your own skid control.

It’s plush, comfy, and reasonably quick and efficient, courtesy of the 70kW (94bhp) inline three-cylinder engine.

Claimed weight: 181kg (dry) Price: $22,790

Apologies for including my own bike here, but it was natural that there’d be my own personal lightweigh­t touring bike in the garage. It’s not the most comfortabl­e bike here (that honour goes to the Triumph), nor is it as powerful as the Yamaha with its 83kW (113bhp) peak output.

But it is the most exciting bike of the five to ride, courtesy of possessing both the most dynamic power-to-weight ratio and the quickest-steering chassis.

And every time I wheel this bike in and out of my garage, it raises a smile. My Vespa 300 feels heftier to manoeuvre.

It’s a pity that the Hyperstrad­a 939 has been dropped from the MY2017 Ducati range in favour of the new, 20kg-heavier Multistrad­a 950 (powered by the same 937cc V-twin engine), as it’s a bike that’s tailored towards exploring backroad NZ. Still available at many Kiwi Ducati dealership­s.

 ??  ?? Frontal shot shows the Honda’s best angle; like most bikes here, the CB500XA favours function over form.
Frontal shot shows the Honda’s best angle; like most bikes here, the CB500XA favours function over form.
 ??  ?? Not the XR mentioned in the story, but close enough. This is the XRx Low, which costs $2000 more.
Not the XR mentioned in the story, but close enough. This is the XRx Low, which costs $2000 more.
 ??  ?? Brilliantl­y capable everywhere but a motorway, Ducati Hyperstrad­a 939 has been replaced by the new Multistrad­a 950.
Brilliantl­y capable everywhere but a motorway, Ducati Hyperstrad­a 939 has been replaced by the new Multistrad­a 950.
 ??  ?? Stone a good name for this V7 as it’s stone-age simple by modern standards; with that simplicity comes charm.
Stone a good name for this V7 as it’s stone-age simple by modern standards; with that simplicity comes charm.
 ??  ?? Panniers, centrestan­d, and a fulsome fairing make the MT-09 Tracer the best-equipped model in the Yamaha MT series.
Panniers, centrestan­d, and a fulsome fairing make the MT-09 Tracer the best-equipped model in the Yamaha MT series.

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