What makes the best winter bike?

What makes the best winter bike?

Author
Discussion

TurboHatchback

Original Poster:

4,199 posts

160 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
I’m considering getting a 2nd bike, something more suitable for winter use, long journeys and carrying a pillion & luggage than my GSX-8S. What factors do the learned members of PH think make for a good winter bike?

• Wheels: Cast (easy to clean, can’t rust) vs spoked (tougher)?
• Tyres: Slightly knobbly vs road?
• Big, heavy & powerful vs small & light?
• Does wind protection make much difference to how cold and/or wet you get?
• Drivetrain: Is shaft the best option?
• Gadgets & heated stuff.

From learning to ride last winter on naked bikes I found my hands got cold but the rest of me was largely fine with the right gear, I’ve not had more than a 45min test ride on bikes with screens & fairings. The road conditions were shocking around me last winter, floods everywhere for months and giant crater potholes. I imagine they will only get worse this winter and beyond.

My thoughts look towards adventure bikes, with soft long travel suspension to deal with the potholes, good ground clearance and wading depth for floods, protection against drops, beefy enough to handle a passenger and luggage and comfortable for distance. The Moto Guzzi Stelvio (tested, liked it), Africa twin 1100, Royal Enfield Himalayan 450 (budget option) are models on the prospective shortlist thus far.

A500leroy

5,591 posts

125 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
Elderly fazer is all you need or sv650.

SteveKTMer

1,061 posts

38 months

Monday 16th September
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I'd strongly recommend a Volvo for the winter. Probably get one cheaper than a decent bike.

the cueball

1,270 posts

62 months

Monday 16th September
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Honda Pan European. Job done.

Until the ice hits, then a car. wink


Biker9090

1,131 posts

44 months

Monday 16th September
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Something that shirks off corrosion - so not a BMW.

ABS and whatever other aids you can afford. I find it odd people choose old stters without ABS for winter riding.

Japanese.

I ride my old CBF500 ABS through winter and the only time it's ever let me down is when I've abused it (way too much heated kit but a Blackbird stator cured that).

black-k1

12,176 posts

236 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
I'm of an age where the best winter bike has 4 wheels and a good heater, but before I grew up biggrin I did ride through the winter.

Don't overthink the requirements. The weather and conditions will degrade whatever bike you use so something cheap that you're not too attached to is a good idea. That said it also wants to be reliable so you're pretty sure it's going to start every time.

Get good road, not sport or knobbly, tyres and good lights. Shaft drive is an advantage but it restricts the bikes you can choose from.

Working ABS is a real bonus in poor weather and extras like heated grips are also worth it.

lancslad58

1,105 posts

15 months

Monday 16th September
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I'd recommend an ambulance with flashing bule lights, you get there quicker and it's alot more comfortable than lying on a grass verge.

It's very difficult to see black ice, on a corner, even at 30pm,car coming at you, best roll into the grass verge. Still it did cause a bit of a traffic jam..

GreaseNipple

429 posts

248 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
I'd get a niken for winter, the perfect use case for it

TurboHatchback

Original Poster:

4,199 posts

160 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
To clarify, I live on the south coast where it almost never freezes and I have no intention of riding if and when it does. Dark, water and bad road surfaces are the issue here.

Crudeoink

732 posts

66 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
Honestly probably a larger engined moped. Heated seats, heated grips, loads of wind protection, can fit the 'skirt' and handlebar muffs for added warmth / wind protection. Loads of underseat storage for added layers, waterproofs etc.

marcella

165 posts

131 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
For me I'd get a cheap Royal Enfield Himalayan and clart it in ACF50. Easy to work on, cheap parts and decent on all terrain. A bit underpowered but probably a good thing in the winter.

lancslad58

1,105 posts

15 months

Monday 16th September
quotequote all
Ideal for commuting, cast wheels, weather protection, loads of storage, easily take two people - Yamaha Tricity 300

https://www.yamaha-motor.eu/gb/en/scooters/urban-m...

SAS Tom

3,546 posts

181 months

Monday 16th September
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Car, any car.

OutInTheShed

9,354 posts

33 months

Monday 16th September
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The bikes I've enjoyed riding in winter are light, not precious and for short journeys only.
A trail bike or 250 -450 'all rounder' of some sort can be fun.
A 125 or similar in nice snow can be an absolute riot.

If you want to do distance in Autumn or early spring then heated grips make a huge difference.

Big heavy bike with a pillion, bugger that when things get iffy


If we are really talking about salty dirty roads with no real danger of ice, then many bikes will be OK if you can hose them when you get home and they can dry in a well aired garage or car port.
Equally most bikes will suffer if put away salty and wet in a closed garage.
Maybe something British, already rusty with generous oil leaks will degrade least?

hiccy18

2,984 posts

74 months

Tuesday 17th September
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Smother it in XCP Rustblocker before the salt goes down. Shaft drive and heated grips are good. Michelin Road tyres.

stu67

840 posts

195 months

Tuesday 17th September
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SV650 with bar end muffs!

Steve_H80

376 posts

29 months

Tuesday 17th September
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Obviously a brand new fully spec's up GS1300 Adventurer with knobblies...

Gas1883

568 posts

55 months

Tuesday 17th September
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I used a Kawasaki kh250 through all weathers , after a night shift in Bristol I headed up to the East Midlands through freezing fog , went to fill up at more ton on the marsh & the girl had to undo filler cap , then unzip jacket & remove wallet then cash , my hands were gone .i did get a 1300 cortina & flying down m69 I
Wondered why everyone was pointing , beeping horn , one look in mirror , plumes of smoke told me I’d blown the motor , switched off in East Midlands & never statered again
I actually did Bristol to East Midlands on my
Moped , Suzuki ap50 , that was a journey , just the thought of it now
Now a spot of rain would have the bike hid in the garage , young & foolish I guess , but I’d not change a thing .

ChocolateFrog

28,623 posts

180 months

Tuesday 17th September
quotequote all
Isn't a Honda Deauville the default answer here.

My friend was selling hers recently for £600. A hell of a lot of reliable bike for that kind of money.


Exasperated

453 posts

18 months

Tuesday 17th September
quotequote all
Anything, so long as you have a Keis jacket and gloves smile