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LONG WAY
HOME - Gear
Sue:
BIKE
650GS 2002 Model
The single spark engine
was noticeably less
economical, taking
usually 2Ltrs more than
the twin spark Dakar,
each time the tank was
filled. In general the
bike ran beautifully and
didnt use any oil
or water. Surprisingly,
there have been no after
effects from having to
run the bike on poor
quality fuel. With the
octane rating in Mongolia
as low as 76 I had
expected some damage to
the catalytic converter
and possibly the valves,
but after a full service
at Rainbow Motorcycles
they were pleased to
report absolutely no
change to the valve
clearances and gave the
bike a clean bill of
health. (For the next
70,000 miles?)
Setting off from home,
negotiating my steep
drive I pulled the most
amazing
wheelie,
unintentional I might
add, but my street
cred went up in
leaps and bounds. This
meant we had to drop the
front forks by a good
half inch to try and
stabilise the handling.
Dropping the forks put
the bike level countering
the heavy weight on the
rear and I
dont mean me! It
did work, making the bike
handle like a better
class supermarket trolley
when fully loaded.
For the level of skill I
showed handling the bike
in the deep sand, I doubt
whether having a 21 inch
front wheel would have
made any difference,
though Mick swears his
was better. What I did
find frustrating was, I
couldnt see over
the top of the screen to
see where to put my front
wheel THAT is the
excuse I used explaining
why my bike had the front
wheel in one rut and the
rear in another
SEAT
The standard seat was
still comfy after 10
hours in the saddle and
riding day after day.
PANNIERS
Hepco & Becker.
If marks were given out
of 20, these panniers
would have to have 25.
They were superb.
Considering the number of
times my bike ended up on
its side in Mongolia, the
dents are not too bad.
The corners may have been
chamfered a little more,
and I did actually break
the locking mechanism
after one particularly
hard fall, but due to the
design of the panniers,
it was easily strapped on
securely. Mick had made
some brackets to carry
2Ltr plastic containers;
one for water, the other
for fuel, these fitted
easily to the front of
the panniers and were
worth their weight in
gold.
TANK BAG
Wunderlich with
side panniers. These
stood up reasonably well
to the test. I carried
light, flexible items in
these bags, so that if I
fell off, there was
nothing hard to damage
the side panels of the
bike. The zips performed
adequately, though I had
to wash some sand out of
the teeth on more than
one occasion. The plastic
map case really was
waterproof when put with
the zip on the underside.
After about 15,000 miles
and countless times
taking them on/off, the
strap that secured the
bottom of the bag to the
bike pulled out. A strap
around the bag and
fastened to the engine
bars was enough to secure
it.
ROLL BAG
Wunderlich and
totally waterproof. This
carried sleeping bag,
roll mats, three legged
stool, food supplies,
pots and pans and
from Uzbekistan onwards
my Bukhara Carpet!
Without doubt an
excellent piece of
equipment.
TYRES
Continental Escape and
TKCs. We started
off on the Escapes and
after 6000 miles once
into Mongolia, changed to
the knobbly tyres, the
TKCs. I didnt
much like the feel of
these to begin with, but
in the loose sand and
gravel they came into
their own. After 10,000
miles we changed back to
the Continentals for the
rest of the trip back up
through Europe. Perhaps
the TKCs would have
been ok, but I had a
feeling that on the wet
roads they didnt
have the same stability
that the Escapes did. It
was astonishing how many
miles those TKCs
did though and
just for the record
not one puncture!
SUSPENSION
Wilber suspension
and front forks. Again, I
cant speak highly
enough of the Wilber
suspension unit. The bike
floated over the
atrocious road conditions
of Russia, with potholes
big enough to swallow the
bike, not once did it
bottom out. A
really smooth ride and
the unit is as good as
the day it was put on,
20,000miles ago. I had
hoped that it would
sag a little
but unfortunately for me
it hasnt, and now
the bike is stripped of
luggage I find it
difficult to touch the
floor!
THROTTLE ROCKER
This I found difficult to
use. The idea is good,
allowing the heel of the
hand to rest on the
rocker so that the
fingers do not have to
curl around the throttle,
but what a pain it was
when not on long straight
roads. It got in the way
and after one or two
instances of accelerating
when I didnt want
to, it was soon tossed
into the bottom of the
tank bag and ignored.
EXTENDED SUMP GUARD
Says it all really.
Extends the cover to the
bottom of the engine,
handy for keeping a bit
more dirt out and
an excellent place for
storing the spare chain.
Also great for catching
an engine mounting bolt
when it dropped out of
the frame as Mick
found out!
HANDLEBAR RAISERS
A nice touch, they look
good, they probably do
the job, but after one
horrific sand tumble that
put me in the hospital in
Khovd with a suspected
broken ankle I
didnt do much
standing up on the pegs,
so I decline to comment
on these.
AUXILIARY LIGHTS
Wunderlich. How
does a woman tell the man
in front she needs to
stop for a
photograph, a coffee, to
stroke a camel or go for
the obligatory pee? She
puts her auxiliary lights
on of course! When I ride
by myself these are
essential as the BMW
headlights on the F650gs,
to be frank, are
dreadful. But for this
trip when we did very
little riding at night,
they came into their own
as a signalling device
and cheaper than
an intercom system!
Seriously though, they
are brilliant at lighting
up the surrounding area
without dazzling the
person in front. With so
many potholes, on the
rare occasion we had to
ride in the dark, they
were invaluable.
EXTENDED RACK
A plate made to fit on
the back of the bike. A
home made affair, cut out
from alloy checker plate,
the idea was that the
tyres would balance on
the rack and then lean on
the kit bag. It was a
total success. Room for a
rucksack in the tyres and
with a cargo net
stretched over, it became
a safe haven for all
sorts of bits and pieces.
Only once did I loose
something, a packet of
biscuits dropped through
the gap, and a box of
cakes with a six-month
shelf life followed. The
biscuits were reduced to
crumbs falling from the
bike at 50mph the
cakes? not a
scratch or dent. Says a
lot about the ingredients
eh?
CAMPING GEAR
Mick will cover I expect,
as he carried the tent
and the bivvi. My own
concession to
comfort for the
aged, was to have 2
self inflating Thermarest
mats, fastened
together with boot laces
so that they
wouldnt come apart.
This worked well and made
a big difference on my
poor old back.
SLEEPING BAG
A Snugpak Softie
9 Hawk. A
three-season bag which
was totally adequate for
the trip. We also took a
sheet sleeping bag each,
which we didnt use,
as all the accommodation
we found had clean, if
not pristine, bed linen.
COOKER
MSR Expedition.
Initially this worked
well, although the flame
was pretty fierce and
food would not
simmer in the
pan. Micks patience
was severely strained
when it gave up working
altogether. This was the
night in the Gobi when we
were cold, tired and
battling with a sand
storm. The reason it
wouldnt work was
that we hadnt
cleaned it properly; the
poor quality fuel was
sooting up
the pipes. Our apologies
to Arnold of Trapper
Equipment, Holland, for
the curt e- mail, the
stove worked every time
after it was cleaned
correctly!
GPS
My Garmin GPS III Plus was
a little beaut! There was
enough information on the
base map to be able to
navigate without detailed
maps. I used it for total
mileage of the trip.
18,910miles for my bike,
with several hundred more
covered on the top of a
lorry, and 500 more on a
train which we will not
talk about!
Interestingly there was a
discrepancy of 252 miles
between the bike mileage
and the GPS mileage. (GPS
showed more) Maximum
speed for my bike was
96.9 mph and average
speed for the trip was
35.2mph
CAMERA
Kodak EasyShare DX4330
Digital Camera.
A no nonsense, point and
press, foolproof piece of
equipment for somebody
not really interested in
photography. It threw a
bit of a wobbly in Russia
with the extremely cold
temperatures and the
continual vibration it
was getting in the tank
bag. When I turned it on,
it would whiz through the
options I could choose,
landscape, close-up,
night mode etc., before
it decided I could only
take videos. But as the
weather warmed up it
started to behave and it
took some really good
shots. A good camera for
a beginner. I had three
camera cards, 2 x 64MB
and a 256MB. These
photographs were
transferred to a CD
whenever we could.
Facilities in Mongolia,
Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan
were exceptionally good
for this.
MOBILE PHONE
Nothing fancy, just my
usual Nokia. Wished I
hadnt taken it
really, one call home for
8 minutes cost me a
whacking £22 from
Kazakhstan. There was
only one occasion we
wished we had satellite
phones and that was when
we were separated on the
way to Altai, in
Mongolia. There was no
signal in the desert for
an ordinary mobile.
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Mick:
BIKE
BMW F650GS-Dakar 2004
model. The
bike has a heart of
gold and a backbone of
steel. It makes me cross
that BMW market this
bike as an entry
level or beginners
bike. Its an
accomplished long
distance
overlanding
machine, a serious
tourer, and a giggle on
the back lanes. It has
also embarrassed a few at
the Nürburgring.
However
for this
trip it was ideal and
gets a resounding
Yes vote from
me. One tough little
cookie! The twin spark
2004 engine is noticeably
smoother than the earlier
single spark version,
uses much less petrol,
and will pull a higher
gear at lower rpm. It ran
on the very poor quality
petrol poured down its
throat without too much
complaint
and
doesnt appear to
have suffered any after
effects or lasting
damage. The Remus exhaust
is a fraction of the
weight of the original,
does away with the cat.
And although a little
noisy its not
uncomfortably so.
Especially with the
excellent earplugs
supplied to us by Deaf
Leopard errr mmm
sorry
Green Leopard
(Sheffield).
Chains and sprockets,
much to my surprise,
lasted the whole nineteen
thousand plus miles.
Fitted new to go with,
they were on their
last legs
when we rolled into
Rainbow five months
later. Thanks probably to
the regular (read most
every day) quick spray
with Putoline Ceramic
chain spray. We each
carried five tins of the
stuff, but where?
the secret will be
revealed later, just to
see if youre really
paying attention!
SEAT
Wunderlich seat
supplied by
Wunderlich
All day
riding comfort, no
complaints, but Sue was
happy with the standard
BMW saddle.
PANNIERS
These were supplied by
Wunderlich and were the Hepco
& Becker
Gobi (how
apt eh!) double skinned,
plastic, and very very
tough! Sue made several
attempts to destroy hers
and failed miserably. We
even stood her bike
on one to get it (the
bike) onto the top
of a truck
didnt even mark it!
Lockable, secure and
waterproof, they
didnt vibrate, and
carried much more weight
than was ever intended.
Top notch tackle that
does what it says on the
tin!
TANK BAG
BMWs
own
which I like,
and always use in
preference to other
makes. Let down only by
the zips!
ROLL BAG
BMWs
own
which I like.
Totally waterproof until
the zip let go
Cmon BMW!!
TYRES
Continental tyres
were supplied by
Wunderlich (in liason
with Continental). The
Escapes being
their version of the
road/trail type like the
Metzeler Tourance which
Im so in love with,
and their TKC 80s
for off road use. One
pair of each, for each
bike. The
TKCs are fitted to
the BMWs for their
Off Road
Courses and I have
no doubt whatsoever that
their limits far exceed
mine. I liked these
tyres, and to be honest,
in over nineteen thousand
miles, I never had a
slide. OK, only once,
uphill right hander and
both tyres,
Escapes, let
go
but hey, they
didnt throw me off,
so no complaints there.
Sues heart was in
her mouth as she watched
my bike slide
broadside, wobble, and
then re-compose itself!
Not tell you where my
heart was
Two bikes, over
38,000 miles between
them, over some of the
worst terrain imaginable,
through deserts,
mountains, potholes, and
rubble strewn
highways
and not
one puncture!
SUSPENSION
Wilbers suspension
was supplied by
Wunderlich (in liason
with Wilbers) and was
truly one of the
revelations of this trip.
I have a new 1200GS
Adventure on
order
and
itll be fitted with
Wilbers. An offshoot from
WP Suspension, Wilbers
are made in Germany. They
supplied rear units with
slightly stronger spring
rating, and new front
fork springs and oil. The
suspension was at all
times totally unfazed,
and riding along side Sue
in the Gobi desert her
front and rear wheels,
forks and swinging arm
were just a blur on those
roads (roads
ha!).
The front fork stanchions
blued with the heat
but the damping
didnt go AWOL.
Totally impressed
if I had the money
Id buy the company!
As an aside
Wilbers
want the units back to
see how theyve
faired these last
nineteen thousand miles,
check for wear, problems
etc. The units will be
rebuilt and we can have
them back. Ive
removed mine and
its cleaned up like
new! The rebound damping
adjustment still turns
freely and apart from a
few scratches the unit
really is like new.
Im rather afraid
that my Öhlins fitted to
previous machines would
not have faired so
well
I know this
for sure.
THROTTLE ROCKERS
Throttle rocker (Wunderlich)
I loved it. It will live
in my tank bag and
whenever Ive got
some miles of motorway or
A roads to do
it can be fitted in
seconds. Just saves
having to
grasp the
throttle. Good kit.
EXTENDED SUMP GUARD
Extended sump guard
Grrrr
I had already
fitted mine, good kit,
but Wunderlich supplied
Sue with hers! Helps the
bike bounce over
rocky terrain, and keeps
the crap from underneath
the engine, suspension
links etc. We wrapped up
a spare chain in plastic
and secured it on the top
of the sump guards,
underneath the engine.
Great eh! Not only but
also
checking the
bikes over
one day I noticed this
ere bolt thingy sat
on mi extended sump
guard! It was only my
rear (only) engine
mounting bolt that had
not only come loose, not
only come out, but had
been caught by the sump
guard extension. The
threads were well dirty,
it had been there several
days, we had been over
some rough roads
how the engine
hadnt shaken itself
out of the frame
Ill never know! One
tough little cookie to be
sure!
AUXILIARY LIGHTS
I have a Xenon
gas discharge light
fitted, and though I make
a habit of not being on
the road at night (bar or
bed
but not on the
road!) this is a
lifesaver for those times
when the planning has
gone AWOL. Four hours in
the dark, in the Gobi,
and I would not, at any
price, have been without
it. The new bike
doesnt come until
the new year
but I
have one ready for
fitting
honest
and I
dont ride at night!
BATTERY
Wunderlich. The
totally sealed batteries
never gave any problems.
Maintenance free and leak
proof they were quite
literally out of sight
and out of mind, and no
worries when the
bike (Sues)
was on its side!
CAMPING GEAR
Camping
equipment was a
miss-match of tried and
tested old and new
equipment! The tent was a
Mountain Hard
Wear supplied by
our good friend Arnold,
of Trapper Equipment.
Designed for Everest
Base Camp
conditions it quite
simply
worked! It
didnt blow away,
was roomy
and we
didnt use it if it
was raining! Well, with
hotels at £3 a night
would you? The
Tarp as the
Dutch call them, was
useful
again
supplied by Trapper
Equipment, used in high
winds and sand storms in
the Gobi desert when it
was impossible to put a
tent up, gave safe
haven for the
night. I shared my space
with a rather large
beetle
woke up with
eye to eye contact, we
didnt frighten each
other and had mutual
respect...
SLEEPING BAG
By Mountain
Equipment
the beetle slept outside
though! Initial grumbles
with the MSR Expedition
cooker were unfounded.
(Sorry Arnold) It quite
simply didnt like
76 octane petrol!
GPS
To put it quite simply,
there are things in life
that we cannot do
without. Well, put
another way
wed rather not do
without! I navigated the
Gobi, at night, without a
GPS, without even a
map
and Id
rather not do it again!
The old fashioned
magnetic compass was
called into use, and it,
and the Xenon headlight,
were my very best friends
I can assure you. GPS
every time please. GPS
are a bit like
MZs
we can do
without them, but the
only people who call them
are those that have never
owned one!
CAMERA
I took a Canon
Ixus 400 Compact,
and a Canon G3
both digital, with plenty
of Compact Flash storage,
but took along an Apacer
to write the cards to CD,
works off the mains or
12v, would even write
Sues SD cards
(Kodak) to CD also. It
very quickly gave up the
ghost! We then had to
call in at photographic
shops en-route and have
the cards written to CD.
No probs. Plenty of
places could do this, so
next time (next time?)
Ill just take
plenty of memory and have
them written to CD as and
when we can
. no
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