In my brain, I foresaw a quick blat to Dover, a tootle down the E40 from Calais, chips and mayonnaise for lunch followed by some shouting at MEPs then a dash back to Blighty. What could be finer?
My over-confidence was partly the V-Strom’s fault. Such is its superb long distance ability that the distance and weather held no fears. A supremely comfy saddle, 250-mile tank range and decent weather protection meant the idea of not enjoying the ride didn’t cross my mind.
Unfortunately – and not for the first time – my brain had omitted a few facts.
Firstly, Brussels and back is 600 fricking miles, not the 375 I had in my head. I’m sure the likes of Nick Sanders rattle off 600 before breakfast, but I don’t. I prefer to do zero miles before breakfast. Secondly, by necessity, there would be lots of faffing – other people’s fuel stops, getting lost, the protest ride, getting lost again, missing chunnel trains, etc. This meant the day would be very, very long.
And so it transpired. I rode for 11 solid hours out of 14, and though delirious with tiredness on the final slog up the M11, was coherent enough to remember several things about the V-Strom:
1) On the middle setting, the screen creates an airflow that blows water droplets down and off my visor. In fog and rain, this means you don’t have to wipe your visor above 30mph. If a Suzuki aerodynamicist did this on purpose, I would like to nominate them for a Nobel Prize.
2) There are few faster ways of getting from Calais to Brussels and back to Calais than a V-Strom. Plenty of bikes will cruise at higher speeds, but not many can manage the distance of 250 miles without stopping for fuel. And when they do, the V-Strom will thrum past at 95mph, averaging 54mpg. This ability enabled me to catch an earlier chunnel train home than deputy editor Ped Baker after I lost him in Brussels…
3) After an hour at 80mph, slight tingles in the right bar give my thumb vibration-related ‘white finger’, meaning it gets cold despite bar muffs. However, because I attached the bar muffs to the bar-end weights, I suspect the muffs might have caused the tingle in the first place. Fascinating muff-based experiments are in progress to determine the solution.
0 Response to "Suzuki V-Strom 650 Brussels Further than you think! - MOTOR GERR"
Post a Comment