That phone mount is fine if you are mounting your phone only on your bike. I prefer to have a RAM mount on the bike and a magnetic one in the car. Both are more affordable and compatible with any phone and phone case.
I put 300,000 Km's on my 2003 FJR. It now resides at the Barber Motorsports museum in Alabama. It completed two Iron Butt Trans Canada Golds and one Trans Canada Quest rides among a few others. Other than basic maintenance, I had a leaky engine seal that required a starter rebuild and a final drive seal leak. That was it for problems. It never let me down. After 15 years, I bought another one.
Perhaps they could have afforded a higher state of tune of the engine? I believe that it is a close cousin to the engine in the R1, and my 2004 R1 has 130,000 miles (210,000 km) on it. I bought it new, and have no immediate plans to replace it. And it still does a couple of trackdays a year too.
Love the FJR. Had a 2012, 2017 and now a 2020. Plan on keeping this one for the rest of my life. Very enjoyable and dependable bike. I really need to get to Barber Motorsports Museum in Birmingham someday. Would be neat if your bike is still there when I do.
I have a Honda VFR 800 Interceptor and it is known as one of the most reliable motorcycles ever made, that V4 with it's gear driven cams is indestructible, mine was made in 1999 and now it's almost 2024, it runs flawlessly and is in primo condition.
@@herbertsiegl7762 Late response, and *slightly* different bike but - 1996 VFR750, 96,420 on the clock. I feel that with the stator and r/r, seems like the one thing they couldn't ever fix 😭.
Agree, my Gen5 '99 still runs like a new bike, bought it with 1800miles in '05 now with 85,000miles, I have twice looked at new bikes, and have twice snatched my keys back rather than part with it...
@@John451vfr I will never get rid of mine. I did a tune on it, full stainless steel exhaust with a 4 into 1 Delkevic and just about to hit 26k miles. If there is one thing I would complain about it, is the location of the radiators on the sides, they do get quite warm on my leg in hot summer days.
In a way that's kind of sad. I'm sure he had some other privileges in exchange. You should buy him a new one just to see the look on his face and the joy in his heart.
Exactly why the Ninja 250 was my 1st bike. Bulletproof reliability and I was a absolute hooligan on it and it never gave me a problem. Further proof why the Ninja 250 then 300 and 400 are the king of beginner bikes.
I owned 2 Ninja 250's. One a Black and purple one,and the 2nd one,an all Yellow one! I did some mods to my Yellow one,by installing two aftermarket-exhausts in place of the OEM one's,rejetted it,and my FAVORITE one (which I was asked ALL THE TIME about),is if you pause the video when your able to see the BACK of the Ninja-250,You'll quickly see @ the 3:11 mark,that it has 3 separate red-lenses in the tail section! The middle lens being the actual brake light,while the outside smaller two red lenses didn't serve any purpose! HOWEVER,I took MINE,and installed CLEAR lenses on both sides and removed the stalk rear turn-signals and took the bulbs and wiring and stuck them in the no-light lenses on either side of the brake-light to serve as turn-signals!!! It was a rather easy and simple mod. to do,and looked AWESOME when finished as they worked just as reliably as the stock one's that hung on the lower "Stalks" on the rear. : >)
Honda VFR..all of them...just checked one out recently with 83,000 miles...original miles..never rebuilt just regular maintenance and it sounded like it was still new...and looked the same...was unbelievable.
V-Stroms are surprisingly reliable they can have so many issues, yet they still keep going. It’s like they don’t care if it has issues and just keeps going despite it. Same with certain Africa Twin models.
Excellent list. I think you hit them all! I'd also nod to the V-Strom as it has the same engine as the SV and is equally unkillable. Props to the Cub. You don't become the best selling motor vehicle in history without being high on the dependable list.
I feel like the ol dr650 should have atleast been an honorable mention, tho you did throw it a bone in general with the dual sport category. Im a little over 20,000 on mine and have done nothing repair wise other that oil changes, one valve adjustment, and a bunch of tires being i used to run k760 trackmasters. It has been extremely reliable and not needy in the least, it just works, like the klr there are many that will confirm it as well.
250,000 kilometres on my 2007 Triumph Bonneville that I've owned since new. Tyres, brakes, chains and sprockets and regular oil changes are mostly all that has been required. recently replaced head stem steering bearings and have reshimed the valves once
I actually clicked on this video to come to the comments and tell him that he left out the F4i, and it was the first on the list. My first and only motorcycle so far (currently looking for '07 Fireblade) has been my '04 F4i. Had it over 13 years and the only non-maintenance part I needed to replace was the automatic cam chain tensioner, with a manual tensioner. I work on HDs, but I ride Honda.
I have a 1996 cbr600f3. 27 yrs and 55,000kms. Put on some modern brakes and an after market shock. Doesn't leak or burn oil. NEVER burps, farts or looks like it's not going to get me home. Still pulls 140 mph, handles nicely and scares late model sports bikes. I love it
Honorable mention to the Suzuki Bandit 1200, they were oil cooled, carbureted from 1997 to 2006. Then in 2007 they basically give it a 1250cc hayabusa engine that’s been detuned to 95hp and 80 ft/lbs. VERY understressed engine. Suzuki is slow to evolve but they’re tanks.
I have had my Sportster for 25 years and 400,000 miles.37 back tires and 17 front ones and 3 belts. It has out lasted all of my Honda's put together. My BMW 100/7 had 500,000 miles on her at the time of her demise. My CX500 had 250,000 miles before suffering Catastrophic engine failure. Cam chain broke and destroyed the engine.
@@garylaajala9461 The carberater and the alloy cylinders and head make for a cool running motor. If you don't cook your oil to ☠️ it lubes and cools your engine.A cool running motor is nice to ride since it's not cooking the oil and the rider to death 💀☠️.
It should! It uses an R6 block. So is super understressed in the 6R. I've seen a bunch of 40,000miles + FZ6R's on Craigslist over the years. They get ridden, people love them.
I've seen a dude on a forum hitting 200 000 miles on an MT-09 (dude was also hitting the drag strips here and there)and a dude on the RU-vids hitting the same on the Tenere 700. Yamaha baby.
My 2015 MT-07 is at 54,000 kms, its not insane but its the highest KM mt-07 I've seen - But I've heard of them making it past 100,000 so I'm not worried at all.
SUZUKI SV650...❤ A naked street motorcycle whose looks and designs could never get bored or old....!!!!! It has got that " naked street bike " looks that people/riders may still wanted to BUY AND RIDE in upcoming generation too.....!!!!! 😱😱😱
VFR-800, I’ve had 2…one with 5 owners and 35k miles and the one I have now which was 6 owners and I’m at 43k miles. Even with the high mileage it’s still one of the smoothest running engines I’ve ever owned (smoother than my 954 that has half the mileage).
Great video. Imma have to listen to it as i drive my work van two hours to my next job, Time to go to work. Gold Wings, FJRs and Vstrom 1000's come to mind and always always always maintain that bike. She will love you long time if you do that.
I'm very surprised a Kawasaki concours and the BMW 1150R aren't on the list. Those things are damn near bulletproof and even after 80 to 100k miles with basic maintenance and still run brand new
The 1100 and 1150 boxer motors are incredible, unfortunately it's the rest of the bike that wasn't. The wiring back then had really weird sheathing that breaks down over the years and causes all sorts of odd gremlins. An unfortunate side effect of a dry clutch and shaft drive also mean that the transmission and rear drive units can wear out with extremely costly repairs being necessary. I saw a R1200CL, which is the same motor as the 1150, with only 30k on the clock that needed a clutch but during disassembly I found the input shaft to the transmission wiggling which meant blown bearings inside. That job went from a clutch replacement to a tear down and part out thanks to the cost of required repairs. But... Yes the engines alone are fantastic 🤣
I have a bulletproof 2009 Kawasaki Concours that has 135,000 miles of pure joy, just normal maintenance and a lack of problems. I fully expect another 100k plus as I personally know of other Concours going forever also.
Last year I met a man who owned 3 Moto Guzzi California 1100. They were all running with 110k, 170k and 330k kilometers on the odo. Just regular maintenance
It was obvious that you will not include a 150 cc commuter motorcycle in the list but in my personal experience my honda unicorn 150 already completed 250 thousand kilometres without any major issues. When the video started by showing a unicorn... 😊😊😊
Hi.Maybe add any Kawasaki KZ - I rode a 1978 KZ 650 for 31 years and it never failed me . i know I have told you before , but it is still the longest and best relationship of my life. Thanks for all of your fun videos.
My dad has over 680,000 miles on his original engine '01 Goldwing, the only thing he's changed was 3 of his spark plugs and rides completely without an air filter.
I'm glad you recognized the Harley Sportster. They are bullet proof with basic maintenance. I do have to mention my 84 Harley FLT which has accomplished over 300,000 miles with only one valve and ring replacement. I know it's not normal for big twins but it was the first year for the Evolution engine and Harley was out to prove themselves with it's launch. It truly is an exception.
I'm liking many of these. Sold my Goldwing and swapped my Valkyrie for my brother's KLR650. Man I love riding that little thing around. Nearly got an SV650 but got the 1000 instead. My '02 R1150RT really is unkillable and those who know, know how good it is as a sports bike. Even learned to ride over 45 years ago on a Honda "step-through".
One of our customers had a 2003 GOLDWING, he logged 450,000 miles before the original engine's compression gave out. The only significant repairs were replacing 2 alternators and one starter motor.
Add to the sv650, the DL650. More comfortable, nice and simple and bomb proof. One of the best middleweights ever created and loads of nice early examples still on the roads.
Amen ! Here here ! DL650 owner right here. Uh, that's a Vstrom 650 for you non-Suzuki riders here. But yes my 2008 Vstrom 650 is uber reliable - she just goes & goes....
It's older than anyone in this video or watching the video, except maybe you and me. Hey, all those '70s Hondas ran forever. Change oil in them, if you remember, and just keep riding. Eventually, you have to replace tires and chains, when the tires won't hold air anymore and the chains are so loose, they fall off.
Surprised Honda st1300/1100 pan European wasn't mentioned like the goldwing they go for ever my 1300 has 87k miles on it and my friends ex police 1100 has nearly 90k on it still both going strong
ST's never caught on in the U.S. like they should have, but you're right - they're fantastic. I have a `91 1100 still running strong at 65K (as well as a 1978 GL1000 with 51K).
A little surprised neither the VFR800 or the Pan European made the list. A Hayabusa should run for a great many miles, so long as it's not turbocharged. Same for the ZZR, probably the old Honda Blackbird too.
Glad to see two of my bikes made the list: Suzuki SV650 and Harley Davidson Evolution Sportster. I know he talked about the Ninja 250 but I have a ZX6R which didn't make the list. And there was no mention of the Suzuki V-Strom (650 and 1000).
Haven't seen a Virago 1100 mentioned. Impressive reliability, 17k on the clock and just basic service. Still has amazing power and no oil leaks. The only time its let me down was a couple of flat tires.
I have an EVO Iron 883. Not going to lie, I definitely abuse it, so I can say for fact they’re unkillable. Shrugs off abuse that would crack a lot of bikes in two
Another b******* story stop the lying.We are sick and tired of your harley davidson boys spewing fake news. HD's have never been known for reliability.People think they're cool and love the heritage, but they have never been reliable. Stop the disinformation.
There is a guy on the Indian forums that has 550,000+ miles on his Indian Chieftain with only oil changes. They did a nice job on that thunderstroke motor.
Another b******* story don't believe it.They are not known for their reliability.Maybe people think they're cool and they have a unique heritage, but they're not reliable.
No love for the T-dub (Yamaha TW200)? The thing is so reliable that Yamaha has barely made changes to it over several decades. It's practically the last agricultural bike too which that in itself has some high reliability standards from my understanding.
I once met someone on an 80's Goldwing. He shows me the odometer was over 600k miles and he insisted he was still on the original engine with no major issues. My dad has a Ducati 900SS which is now over 90k miles. Original engine, never had any major problems and not many minor issues either.
My first bike was a Honda Silverwing (GL500). I bought it with 1,200 miles on it and sold it at north of 97k. Horrible starter bike as every time it fell over it landed on the fiberglass fairing and the mirror snapped off, but boy did that bike take a LOT of abuse and keep on running!
I’m surprised the Busa isn’t on this list. With countless going 100-150k miles no problem, and being absolutely beefy and unkillable in the first place
Yammies favorite motorcycle, the Blvd s40 is pretty reliable but there is something important that doesn't have a housing so you have to clean it all the time or make a housing for it.
Pretty cool to see 2 of my 3 current motorcycles on this list. 2008sv650N and my crf250l . The Yamaha Wr250f I also have isn't supposed to be street legal but mine is. It's an off road racing engine so incredible reliability isn't legendary but it is great for type of engine and its power output for its size.
Can confirm about the sporty, between my dad and I we have been riding the same 883 almost every day since 2006 and never had an engine problem and done nothing to it beside tyre changing and oil changes when needed. (Road in countries that would reach 100° 6-7month out of 12)
Feel the Triumph modern classics should be on here. Maybe I’m a bit bias having a 126k mile Scrambler that I use as a daily DS, but it still doesn’t burn oil and hasn’t had anything done outside of regular maintenance.
My Suzuki TS50X sat in a garage for nearly 15 years dry, has had 6 owners in total. Took it out last spring, refurbished it, gave it new wear parts and tuned it myself. It runs like new to this day, even with 240k km mileage.
Way more KLR 650's have been used by those hardy souls that wanted to ride around the world than the Honda. They always pick a bike that is least likely to give them any issues so it's not going to be the Honda.
Hondas are great but somehow, Kawasaki seems to rule the roost, in terms of the metric ADV dirt oriented niche - I see 2x as many KLR 650 vs any other make, Honda XL650 included. I'm not partisan never owned a KLR - but would if opportunity arose. For now I'm thrilled with my Suzuki Vstrom / DL650 !
The Honda VFR750F models from the 90s were and still are absolutely bomb proof, basic maintenance and they will go forever, my dads vfr is already pushing 70k with minimal maintenance and almost no work done
The supercub is a personal favorite of mine, more specifically the 70cc and 90cc versions of old in the passports and trail series. Your entire electrical system could fail, even the charging system and as long as you have a kick starter and the 2 or 3 wires connected for the exciter coil, it'll start just fine. Not true of the new ones however but they're still nice bikes. Another testament to the reliability of the old gals is that Honda still uses their engine style with very few, if any, updates in the 50cc, 70cc, and 110cc dirt bikes and ATVs.
How about the Superfour? The Honda CB400 is almost unkillable! Also the Yamaha T-50 TownMate is practically unkillable!! Both bikes have been used hugely in the span of decades for commuting with minimal or no maintenance (especially in the case of the TownMate)..
@@psalm2forliberty577 keep it forever man. if you do that means you can buy a Ducati or something “unreliable” and not be worried about being out a bike.
A common complaint I found with l Royal Enfield (2019-2023) is the oil temp sensor giving false codes. You have to reset it constantly in cold weather conditions. Changed it out twice and still getting the same code.
Over 100k on my 1999 Honda Valkyrie. Was my daily commuter, 150 mile/day round trip. Never let me down and never needed anything other than scheduled maintenance.
5:58 This reminds me of a yard brush I had for over 30 years, and it was used almost daily. In all that time, I only changed the brush head twice and the shaft once.....
I’ve been riding since the late sixties, since the turn of the century, aren’t all bikes reliable? That said, I’d be cautious about conflating cost of ownership with reliability. My BMW RT was reliable, but the cost of ownership was very high; my Suzuki V-Strom was reliable and the cost of ownership was extremely low.
I think a big part of what made super cub so good, is when you do break it, you can pretty much fix it with tape and hammer Many of this kind of work bike and scooter are build not just to be reliable, but also very easy and cheap to fix there are still tons of people out in places like Japan or Taiwan riding around in 30, 40 years old CB125 or super cub and there are so many parts out there you can keep them running for ever, and so simple every shop and mechanic can fix them for cheap
A retired farmer in Lake City Minnesota had 510,XXX miles on his 2014 Indian Chieftain when he struck a deer and put both of them out of commission. Polaris has the bike now tearing it down and evaluating every component for wear.
Hey Yammi Noob, you forgot about the bulletproof Kawasaki Concours 1400. I've had 14 years of smiling 135,000 miles with just wear items like tires and fluids. There's a guy with 294,000 miles on the forum, all original with normal maintenance and rides all over the states every year since 2009.
I dont think you guys know about this, but there're 2 more Honda bikes that absolutely reliable. Honda CBR150R and Honda Wave, both are insanely reliable here in Thailand. And quick mention about Yamaha Finn that's almost on par with Honda Wave. These bikes are unkillable and many squid head here modified Honda Wave from head to toe and it's still pretty reliable.
Just got back from there, would love a wave with loud pipe and skinny tyres but we don't have them here. Loved the wave, and also the 300 yamaha, such a cool bike place!
It's no surprise that Ural is not mentioned on this list since the odometer is calibrated in kilometers! LoL Seriously though my 2006 never gave me any headaches. Nor did it, I'm happy to say, ever strand me on the side of the road.
Kawasaki 400 was good I don’t know why they are jumping to 500cc?! . Anything over 400 needs different license in Canada and 500cc is big for this class!