Join me on motorcycle tours, test rides and other outdoor adventures!
facebook.com/anywhere.rider
Documenting on-the-road motocamping trips and rides to state and national parks, historic locations, bike rallies and other people, places and funky interests along the way!
www.youtube.com/@AnywhereRider
I ride Penny, a 2017 Indian Springfield. Accessories used: Indian highway pegs, Kuryakyn heel shifter, front fork wind deflectors, oil cooler and Eagle Lights Gen3 headlights. I’ve also recently installed a touring luggage rack. Ultimate Seat and 14” Freedom Shield Windshield. Look for reviews of the products that I buy and use. I also ride Rocky, a 2022 Indian Pursuit!
Footage captured by a combo of iPhone 14 Pro Max, GoPro Hero10. Canon EOS Rebel DSLR Camera. GoPro Max is a new addition. Email: AnywhereRider@gmail.com #indianmotorcycle, #indianspringfield, #motovlog, #motovlogger #SpringfieldOwner #Springfield Owner #Indian Pursuit #Indian Pursuit Owner
I am actually getting ready to sell or trade my Goldwing and purchase a T120. Been looking at them for over a year. Spoke to the local sales manager about it. The Wing is getting a bit heavy for me to move around the garage
"Entry level bike " ???? I past my bike test in the UK in 1963, and the Bonneville was the ultimate speed machine... People were being killed on them all over the place... has it got stainless spokes..those details are important
Hi I'm Wayne! I live in the Hedgesville WV area and am looking for a good friend or friends that like to ride motorcycles (especially ADV motorcycles), go fishing, camping, back road and trail riding, exploring, or just hanging out with like minded people! If you or anyone you know needs a good friend, like I do, and is interested in getting out of the house and going on some adventures please let me know!
Hey Wayne, Funny you mention ADV bikes because I just picked one up. I’ve not had much experience yet with them but I do want to get out and have some adventures on it! I visit WV but I’m based in TN. But I’m game for a ride, camping when I get back. You have favorite roads or other places you’d recommend?
@@AnywhereRider The Blue Ridge Parkway is always a nice ride up into VA, then into WV I would suggest Berkeley Springs, rt 50 west towards Romney and Kyser WV! The Cumberland valley up in MD is beautiful as well! Ride safe! Let me know if you're ever in the area!
@@WaynerWayneTheIllest I hope to get back. I may spend a week or so in early September. I haven’t yet done Blue Ridge so that’s on my list of to Do’s WVU is loaded with great rides. Always good to go home
@@WaynerWayneTheIllest I haven’t yet tried a KLR. But the most important thing is to find what you love and you have! I have a triumph Tiger 1200 Rally Explorer. Lots to learn on that big bike!
Highly recommend. But weekends get much busier and more trafficked. But that’s really only the downtown section. There are plenty of open roads for exploring.
I learned a lot on this test ride. At the end I started to realize this fact. It was an unusual situation where that would have been better explained if the salesperson had not sustained an injury and couldn’t walk me through those details. So it took me a bit longer :) but I thought it may prove helpful to show that just jumping on one, even if an experienced rider, isn’t necessarily the best idea. Two wheels and three are different!
Greetings from Franklin, TN. Just found your channel and have watched a couple of your videos. The Bonneville is intriguing though I would probably lean towards the T100 based on my fairly limited riding experience. I will be checking ourt more of your videos.
Those are nice. I looked hard at a few myself. My only concern was if I’d notice the high exhaust too much on the right side. But it too is a cool bike.
I quit using ride command and for rhe most part google. I use Rever because it has a feature to follow the route you planned. Glad you had a great time, North Carolina and Tennessee are both great!
My 2018 T120 is nearing 23K miles and is at the top of my list of the 17 motorcycles I’ve ridden over 42 years. At 73 years young, the Bonny checks all the right boxes for me: classic looks, comfort, great engine, fuel injection, antilock brakes, cruise control, heated handgrips. Who could ask for more! Long day rides, often 200k miles, and some long-distance touring. Probably my last motorcycle (My wife says, Yeah, right.)
I’ve had mine since 2018 and to this day it’s so difficult to buy something new. Hard to justify a new purchase when I have such and absolute beautiful well rounded bike
I've had my T120 for 2+ years and find it performs above average at nearly anything you ask of it. I've commuted, toured, two up, hills, curves, wind, traffic, it can do it all very well. I do miss wind protection above 70mph and the weight can be felt when you throw it back and forth in the curves, but I knew both of those going in. What it provides is a comfortable platform to do almost any type of on road riding you wish, with style and a cool factor that few bikes can hope to match. I would choose others for month long tours or purely to carve canyons, but the last bike standing after all others were sold would be my Triumph.
Truth. I do have and wear the gear on most days and rides. But as you can tell, not at all times. When riding alone and on slow country roads is where I sometimes give myself an out. Full protection is always best. But I’m not an absolutist
I had a 2021 T 120. Nice bike but I traded it after a year because of 1) chain drive maintenance is a real pain...Triumph manual recommends every 200 miles; 2) still does not have self cancelling turn signals...that's long overdue, and 3) There are really no comfortable seats that I'm aware of...I even bought the expensive Saddleman seat for it, just not comfortable. It probably would be a great bike for commuting and short trips, but I want to tour, and this just isn't the bike for that.
got the same chrome edition and love it! only thing i noticed is severe heat between the legs where you dont want to have heat :) Was around 28 degrees celsius though
Lovely bike, but "beginner" friendly? Maybe to a mature rider with a bit of off road experience, but these things are as fast as any '70's era super bikes and then some.
I’ve been called on that by another. And it’s a good catch. What I meant to point out is its simple classic approach. Not overly techie, lightweight. Many new again riders will appreciate it. But you’re right. It’s not a first bike!
@@AnywhereRider That definitely makes sense. I considered one of these as a returning rider for that very reason + ergonomics. I discounted it due to the power. I'm in Australia and there's just no where here to thrash a machine like that without facing the prospect of heavy fines and harsh penalties. 80 mph on the highway, here, will see your licence in serious peril along with about a $300 USD. fine. I'm not joking. I ended up with a W800 which is about half the power of the T120. I've still got to watch myself on that! Thanks for the reply.
Bought a brand new 2020 Speed Twin. Been super reliable, done some mods, and love it. Rode it 1800 km to Nova Scotia last spring. Got a sore bum, but it was awesome. Great all rounder.
First, it doesn't have a center stand. I installed one . . about $320 USD. I had a shop remove the catalytic converter, replacing it with a cross pipe. Removal of CAT & install X-pipe: $600. The cross pipe was about $150. Had to order it from Spain; no American supplier would ship it to California where I live. I removed the peashooter mufflers. Sooo impractical for rear wheel maintenance. The "Bunny Ear" mirrors allowed me to see 2/3 of my arms, 1/3 of what's behind me. Replaced those with bar end mirrors. Replaced stock handlebars with "Clubman" style handlebars. SoFarSoGood
A center stand is a great add. I’ll have to look into clubman handlebars. I’m not familiar. I do like the pea shooter exhaust though. It sounds to me like it has a subdued strength. But I hadn’t considered it regarding maintenance like you have. Thanks for the great comments and good ideas.
In my experience, Music City Indian has all that you're looking for. I try to support my local dealer, and in turn they throw deals my way, including low or no markup on parts and making their money on labor. I've found them to be pretty excellent so far.
Thanks for the comment. MCI has a good reputation. They’ve done a few upgrades and an oil change on my Springfield. So I’ve spent some time there. I do wish I didn’t have to face as much traffic to deal there. AND, Parking on a slope may get ya but I’ve avoided dropping my bike so far! But MCI does have a good Reputation, even to dealers I’ve dealt with in San Diego and Pikes Peak, Colorado. That’s a good sign!
I have a T120 have had it for about a year and I am absolutely in love with it. I took it last year up to Scotland covering about 1500 miles over a few days on the standard seat with absolutely no issues. I've done some motorway stints on mine with just a little fly screen and again it hasn't been a problem but you probably wouldn't want to be doing over 80mph for any length of time without a screen. The throttle can be a little snatchy at very low speed but if you have good clutch control you can ride around that without too much trouble.
Sold.... looking to sell my HD Sportster 1200 I just paid off , my first bike I love it but want a more comfortable bike for longer rides . Been interested in Road Kings and HD Heritage.... but just started looking into these Indian Springfields and there's 3 beautiful ones an hour drive from me. I'm only 5.7 tall and like that the Seat sits a little lower than road king and a little bit more throttle than the 107 . Think Indian Springfield is at the top of my list.
Definitely worth a look with all your needs! I’ve still never been happier with a bike. If you think to do it, let me know if you agree after you ride one!
The perfect bike. I bought mine 4 weeks ago and no regrets at all. And, I am about to take her today, from the UK over Europe to Austria for a 12 day ride.
That sounds like an epic trip! So jealous! Congrats on the new ride! She’ll do great! I’d love to see any pictures of the pack. Are you going with Saddlebags? A duffle? Did you add any accessories for the trip?
Not at all, happy to help! It’s a Klim Marrakesh jacket. I talk about it some toward the end of this video. (Spoiler alert, I like it!) thanks for the comment and for watching. 🏍️ Gear Review | #LS2 Helmet | #Klim Marrakesh Jacket @AnywhereRider ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-i6x6skpkqCY.html
I am also a 2023 Chrome Edition T12 Bonnie rider. Love the bike. Was on cafe bikes for the last 20 years and find the Bonnie corners as good and is as nimble and flickable as the Cafe bikes but you can ride it for hours without fatigue. Great power curve with the torque in gobs down low in the revs. Plus a Chrome tank and Meriden Blue - what classic Triumph looks. I put cafe style bar end mirrors and the little matching blue Triumph flyscreen on it - and both are an improvement.
Thanks for the comment. I like bar end mirrors if you don’t need the narrow width. Those look really nice! I was surprised that the chrome tank didn’t reflect as much as I thought it would. But yeah, great bike and lots of fun
Yesterday I went out to do some shopping with my Black-Matt Bonnie T120, and suddenly it rained. I never go out in rain or forecast rain 🤥. The passion, 2 hours drying and cleaning the beautiful machine. Regards from Germany.
Hi from the UK. Bought from new two years ago and added the rear grab bars and centre stand. Ride it every week and someone one as already said i look back when putting it in the garage. I get stopped and asked questions about it due to it looks.The bike performs well and a pleasure to ride. Happy riding.
I've got a T-120 it does everything well, I will say taking on the corners confidently has been a challenge for me as well. Regardless I plan to keep it for a very long time.
LOL, this ain‘t a beginner bike at all. It‘s all modern, because it has nothing to do with the old bikes of the heydays, neither does Trinkley have, no more than Polaris with Indian, Royal Enfield and Harris with old Enfield, etc. Even Harley‘s got nothing more at it aside from t-shirt design, and museum operation. Is it a nice bike? Yes, you like it? Good. Ride it, it won‘t disappoint. Sorry I made a wrong judgement, it‘s obviously a beginner bike, because I can see a braindead beginner in a white t-shirt, bare knuckles riding this bike. This isn‘t a 50cc moped. Please explain that to that beginner, he‘ll be happy to save his life, especially in a context of not well trained or equally low attentative cage drivers on the street. Wearing a Helmet with lot‘s of shell piercing stuff on it doesn‘t make it any better. So, proven, it‘s a beginner bike, too. ;-)
It looks like I offended you. Didn’t intend to. I was trying to point out the simplicity of the bike, which will draw beginners. But I do not believe the bike is a beginner bike per se. anyone can start on anything. But most won’t start on heavy baggers. Certainly no disrespect to the bike or T120 owners. It’s solid!
@@AnywhereRider In many ways it can be a beginner, although the weight could be a tad heavy for some. It’s a pretty docile bike, if ya get my drift. I own one and a XMax Yammy. What bikes do you own Sir. Cheers from NZ.
I am certainly getting hit on that comment. And I agree with your comment on the curves feeling heavy at times with the weight. I currently own an Indian Springfield and Indian Pursuit. I’m not a brand snob however. Ive owned Yamahas and a Suzuki. Triumph is a new explore for me. Looking at the Bonneville amd/or a Tiger adventure or maybe even a BMW 1250. GS as future garage additions.
I had a Rocket Classic for years but due to illness it got way too heavy for me. Last year I traded it for an immaculate 2018 T120. Compared to the rocket obviously very short on torque but man I got used to it fast. For a gentleman's express its perfect! Goes faster than you expect, corners and braking are a joy. Sounds good but for me, the biggest plus is just how smooth it is at any revs. No white finger for me. Feels so small which can make you over confident but you make a mistake and it's so forgiving (so far). Best bike I've ever owned I'd say.
Sound is subjective but I think so also. It’s more about tone than volume. And you make a fine point about being overconfident. It could happen quickly on this :)
I’ve not tried these but Viking Bags makes lockable Saddlebags for it. Worth a look www.vikingbags.com/collections/triumph-bonneville-t120-motorcycle-saddlebags
I just purchased my first Triumph a couple of weeks ago. The T120. Now, I am 69 years old and traded in my 2020 Kawasaki Versys 650 for the Bonnie. I really liked the Versys however, it was just too high for my 30 inch inseam. The centre of gravity was also high so it became a bit unyielding at stops especially when fully fueled. The T120, although is about 25 lbs heavier, has it's weight slung low so it doesn't feel heavy and uncontrollable. I can easily throw my leg over and boost on down the road. At stops I can easily flat foot and it feels so much more controllable than the Versys. So far I'm simply lovin' it! Traction control, cruise, 2 road modes and gobs of power, great mileage, what's not to like? I did add the wind screen, centre stand, crash bars and a grab rail (which is on backorder). Beauty of a bike in my opinion. Cheers.
The blue looks so pretty. I love my scrambler XC and I want to get a second with this engine, but they don't seem different enough or even up to par with the XC
Tough decisions. I’ve not been on the scrambler but the GM of the dealership has one and loves it. He could have anything on the floor so that says something I think.
I own a 2023 model. Absolutely love this bike. I have toured on it. Mounted some side bags, a removable top trunk and I can strap a bag across the passenger seat for a tour. Its a do it all bike. So easy to ride, very tourqey and yet smooth. I also have a removable windshield on the bike, really helps with comfort on the highway. Cruise controll and heated grips too. I really dont have any comllaints about the bike. Last ride I did it got 59.9 mpg, not bad for a 1200cc bike. I call it a gentleman's hot rod. Low seat height allows my 32" inseam to flat foot at a stop. Ive had many bikes in my 64 years, this is by far my favorite, very close to my goldwing but without the weight and a lot more soul. It was a bit pricey but I think it was worth it, very good build quality.
@Dante-do6ju there are several companies that make them. I’m familiar with Madstad. I have no connection with them but here’s a link for convenience. madstad.com/products/triumph-bonneville-t120-2016?_pos=2&_psq=triumph&_ss=e&_v=1.0
What top trunk did your try? I have a 23' as well. Toured to the tail of the Dragon with a saddlebags and a duffle. I would like a good trunk option. I love my bike. It was great on the tail.
I've owned at least 25 motorcycles since 1964 and loved almost every one but there is something about my T120 that strikes the right note with me. The T120 is a motorcycle that you always want to look back at upon putting it away in the garage. Motorcycles are so good now compared to the "sixties" that dependability is no longer a major concern which makes the Bonneville that much more enjoyable to ride/own. My T120 is a 2020 model so it came with all the bells and whistles such as heated grips, center stand, passenger grab rail, radiator guard, and chrome engine valve covers as well as cruise control. I think this bike is going to be a keeper!
I passed my bike test in Harrogate in 1963. (Tiger Cub). The T120 was seen as huge, powerful, dangerous, fast, the ultimate. Lots of people killed on them. Now it's a commuter bike ? My last bike up to 2 years ago was a Kawasaki 1000 SX.... 145hp 150mph... techno miracle..
@@SunofYork it is a commuter bike in my mind. But not because of its potential for speed or death. But because of the way a rider sits on the bike,the fact that it is not an over sized bagger and because of its easy to use tech. (Fewer distractions). As for death by bike, we can probably agree that any bike could do that if ridden without restraint.
I have a 2017 and the sound is beautiful. Performance and handling is fantastic. its a very nice bike - maybe a bit small for me at 6'3 but pretty close. Long rides i find myself shuffling around the seat. I have added wider tracker (beach) bars which have helped my posture and it feels very relaxed. No need for any extra power as the 1200 is super tough
As a tall guy myself, I wanted to mention the seat as you did. The long bench allows for shifting around. And the wider bars would probably do a lot to resolve the one issue with corners. Agree with the 1200cc comment too. It felt strong to me! I wouldn’t change the sound either. Just really nice all around. Great comments
I’ve heard the complaints about the first gear. And I admit that it’s not very usable. But 2-6 are nice and linear, which is really nice. Do you find that rain mode cures it or just improves the jerkiness of 1st?