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| Derivative |
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 Derivative World Chat Champion
Joined: 03 Aug 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 03:22 - 19 May 2012 Post subject: Touring, 2-up. |
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Hi guys,
Looking at getting a bike in the near future, I'm pretty much settled on getting one of the 500 commuters like a GPZ, CB or ER-5 now, unless I can't find one for a decent price, then it'll probably be an SV or similar.
I need to convince my girlfriend (and myself) that going camping on a bike is actually viable. Likelihood is we'll be staying in the UK, going out to one place and staying there for a week (looking at the Highlands atm, but that may change).
So I have a few questions really:
How do you get everything on the bike with a pillion? Is strapping dry bags to a rear rack actually viable, or will that put too much stress on the subframe, be too unstable, or is there some other caveat I've overlooked?
How much do you actually have to spend on a tent to get one that's small enough to fit on a bike - assuming summer weather but the possibility of rain? I've been seeing suggestions of £150+, I can stomach paying that much but it'd need to come with a hefty warranty or be virtually indestructible, considering an accident with a sharp object or bike exhaust would see your investment going up in flames.
Tent would need to suit 2-man and hopefully have a porch for gear etc.
How friendly are campsites generally towards motorcyclists? Will they be happy with you parking next to the tent?
If anyone has any pictures of bikes loaded up with pillion and camping gear I'd be happy to see them, by the way.
Cheers  |
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| John933 |
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 John933 Crazy Courier
Joined: 01 Mar 2005 Karma :  
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| shereen |
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 shereen World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Mar 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:50 - 19 May 2012 Post subject: Re: Touring, 2-up. |
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| Derivative wrote: |
How do you get everything on the bike with a pillion? Is strapping dry bags to a rear rack actually viable, or will that put too much stress on the subframe, be too unstable, or is there some other caveat I've overlooked?
How much do you actually have to spend on a tent to get one that's small enough to fit on a bike - assuming summer weather but the possibility of rain? I've been seeing suggestions of £150+, I can stomach paying that much but it'd need to come with a hefty warranty or be virtually indestructible, considering an accident with a sharp object or bike exhaust would see your investment going up in flames.
Tent would need to suit 2-man and hopefully have a porch for gear etc.
How friendly are campsites generally towards motorcyclists? Will they be happy with you parking next to the tent?
Cheers  |
Hi,
I have never had any problems with campsites letting you park with your tent. They all seem pretty cool.
This is me and the OH bike when on a trip to Europe.
https://i959.photobucket.com/albums/ae74/Clearancelines/DSCF1190.jpg
No pillions but just goes to show how much crap you can fit on a small bike, I think you would be ok with a pillion as well. You can get tank bags, side panniers to carry more shit it and a top box or a rack with shit strapped down on it.
My tent was about £75 it is a 3 man and really good, not sure if it is small enough for lightweight touring for you but you can seen it on the blue yamaha in the picture, it is strapped to the blue rucksack.
Have fun!! ____________________ "The Internet is the first thing that humanity has built that humanity doesn't understand, the largest experiment in anarchy that we have ever had" |
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| Maruchino |
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 Maruchino Spanner Monkey
Joined: 02 Jul 2009 Karma :     
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 Posted: 11:05 - 19 May 2012 Post subject: Re: Touring, 2-up. |
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| shereen wrote: | | Derivative wrote: |
How do you get everything on the bike with a pillion? Is strapping dry bags to a rear rack actually viable, or will that put too much stress on the subframe, be too unstable, or is there some other caveat I've overlooked?
How much do you actually have to spend on a tent to get one that's small enough to fit on a bike - assuming summer weather but the possibility of rain? I've been seeing suggestions of £150+, I can stomach paying that much but it'd need to come with a hefty warranty or be virtually indestructible, considering an accident with a sharp object or bike exhaust would see your investment going up in flames.
Tent would need to suit 2-man and hopefully have a porch for gear etc.
How friendly are campsites generally towards motorcyclists? Will they be happy with you parking next to the tent?
Cheers  |
Hi,
I have never had any problems with campsites letting you park with your tent. They all seem pretty cool.
This is me and the OH bike when on a trip to Europe.
https://i959.photobucket.com/albums/ae74/Clearancelines/DSCF1190.jpg
No pillions but just goes to show how much crap you can fit on a small bike, I think you would be ok with a pillion as well. You can get tank bags, side panniers to carry more shit it and a top box or a rack with shit strapped down on it.
My tent was about £75 it is a 3 man and really good, not sure if it is small enough for lightweight touring for you but you can seen it on the blue yamaha in the picture, it is strapped to the blue rucksack.
Have fun!! |
you whore this pic more than a cheap hooker :p |
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| willis1337 |
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 willis1337 Brolly Dolly
Joined: 06 May 2009 Karma :   
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 Posted: 17:17 - 19 May 2012 Post subject: |
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Blimey I bet that honda wheelies easily.
 ____________________ Current bike: KTM SD1290GT
Previous bike: BMW K1300S |
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| Serendipity |
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 Serendipity World Chat Champion

Joined: 07 Jun 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 23:57 - 20 May 2012 Post subject: |
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Touring with a pillion can be a bit snug, but entirely feasible.
This is an ancient picture of my CBR600F taken in 1998 on the way to the Highlands with the missus. Excuse the crop, but this is a scan from a negative which Boots the Chemist never printed due to the fact that they glued a bit of paper over half my bike to enable easier handling of the negative.
https://i221.photobucket.com/albums/dd227/serendipity_uk/CBR600FR/CBR6_Scotland1a.jpg
We had a pair of Oxford panniers containing clothes, cooking gear and sleeping bags. The bike had a Renntec Sports Rack holding a four man tent and a pair of sleeping mats. The tank bag had books, maps and cooking fuel. My girlfriend wore a medium sized rucksack containing mostly waterproofs and food.
All things considered we took too much, but I was dragging her off to Scotland for two weeks when she hadn’t done much camping before. She still ended up marrying me, so can’t have been that bad.
The CBR6 was just about up to the job. Power and the weight of the luggage isn’t really an issue. You just take it a bit easier. However space was limited despite the steely CBR6 being a relatively roomy bike. The panniers forced my missus to place her feet further forward on the pegs so our feet touched if I rode on the balls of my feet like normal. Also having a tankbag in front and pillion behind plays weird games with the aerodynamics and creates tiring buffeting at motorway speeds.
I still use the tent pictured above. Geodesic design four man dome. Survived some seriously inclement weather when other tents were blowing\washing away. Cost about £90, but that was about 15 years ago. I reckon it weighs about 8kg, maybe a bit less. I wouldn’t trust much more than that to a tubular luggage rack, but the bike’s subframe should take anything you can throw at it, unless it’s already twisted
Never had a problem with campsites. We’re their bread and butter. The only place that ever turned me away was a caravan site. No loss.
This was my Blade packed for the BCF BBQ in 2010. Same panniers, but a useless popup tent instead of a proper one. Very convenient to pitch, but cold and damp. Obviously this is for solo riding. I’d like to see someone get a popup tent onto a bike for two-up.
https://i221.photobucket.com/albums/dd227/serendipity_uk/CBR954RR/IMGP7008.jpg ____________________ 2016 CBF1000F - Commuter heaven | 1994 CBR600FR - Awaiting defibrillation |
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| Derivative |
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 Derivative World Chat Champion
Joined: 03 Aug 2010 Karma :   
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| moppy |
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 moppy World Chat Champion

Joined: 26 Apr 2011 Karma :   
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| LordShaftesbu... |
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 LordShaftesbu... World Chat Champion

Joined: 03 Sep 2008 Karma :   
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| Derivative |
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 Derivative World Chat Champion
Joined: 03 Aug 2010 Karma :   
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| harscot |
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 harscot Crazy Courier

Joined: 19 Apr 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 01:24 - 22 May 2012 Post subject: |
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Hi bud, if your not looking at BIG bikes, have a look at the Honda 650 Deauville, It may suite your needs, built on panniers ( down side ) comfy for a pillion, good mpg, good low torque, shaft drive, relatively inexpensive, ( to run and insure ) like every other bike it's got good and bad points, I own and have toured two up on one, if you like the look of it, I would suggest putting the 56lt panniers on, they are much bigger and more capable than the standard one's, anyway just a suggestion for you to think about...  ____________________ First bike R reg Suzuki 125 GT twin in 1978:
2nd bike X reg Honda 650 Deauville in 2011:
Wish bike a Triumph Thunderbird: Dream bike Triumph Rocket........ |
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| c-m |
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 c-m World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:59 - 22 May 2012 Post subject: |
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Here is an old shot of my second tour 2-up on a 1991 ZXR750 that i bought on these forums for £380.
It's actually the only bike that hasn't had an issue on tour. My battery died on my GPZ (poor maintenance), and my front tyre blew out on the ZX9R.
Panniers one for him one for here. Roll bag with a 2 man tent, two sleeping bags, pillows, towels and two self inflating mats. Then a back pack with extra girly stuff in like a hair dryer etc..
https://eastcoastlacrosse.co.uk/carl/eurotour2009/P6100252.JPG
The pillion had loads of room. I loaded up the ZX9R with a taller pillion the same way, again plenty of room.
On a bike like a SV650, or even a GPZ you'll be fine, but you will need a rack. ____________________ Motorcycle headlight bulbs and HIDs
Blogging about my bike and trips
https://ridershandbook.com/ |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 326 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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