I'm thinking about moving on from my Yamaha WR250R to something a little more street savvy and, well, just a different ride. Between the one that was stolen and the current bike I've gone over 40,000 miles on them in the last 2 years, so the urge for 'shiny new thing' arises again. The only thing I really dislike about the Yamaha is its inability to really get on the slab and cruise at 75-80mph for a few hundred miles if/when I have/want to. It happens more than you'd think, particularly since I am still without a car and still happier because of it.
I prefer new bikes to used if only because over the last 10 years of vehicle purchases I have HORRIBLE luck with buying used. I definitely want fuel injection and minimal maintenance. I like to ride not wrench, but I prefer wrenching to paying a shop for service and therefore want most of the work to be easily completely at home or on the road (I like to travel and I ride a lot, would ride more with a more comfortable highway bike probably) with minimal fuss. I prefer the looks of old bikes too, naked over plastics, standards over cruisers or sport bikes, narrower vs wider, middleweight category. I keep coming back to three similar but different bikes: a 07+ HD Sportster with mid controls (probably an 883 Iron), a Triumph Bonneville, or a Moto Guzzi V7 Classic.
The Bonne is easy. I test rode a '10 thruxton at a triumph demo a few weeks ago as the bonneville was taken. Great sewing machine smooth motor, good power everywhere with a really flexible powerband, competent handling even with the horrid rear shocks, and a great exhaust note from the Arrow 2-2 exhaust. The ergo changes I'd want in the thruxton would make it a bonneville (taller bars, lower pegs), rear fender eliminator (GOD that stock rear fender is hideous!), and ohlins or ikon shocks to start. Maintenance is oil changes, filter changes, chain tension, valves checked and/or adjusted every 12k. Shim-under-bucket valves though.
The Sportster is less easy. I got to ride a Nightster a few weeks ago too, went in thinking I would hate it but it was a damn fun motorcycle. It rode way better than something with 1.6" of suspension should, the motor made all the right sounds stock, and I love the blacked out looks. The stock 1200 motor was more than enough for me, so I'm guessing an 883 with breathing mods would be similar? I felt a little cramped thanks to the slammed seat, but there are hundreds of aftermarket options and there always seems to be a decent amount of people looking to trade or swap. I'd really want the 4.5gal tank, but again there seems to be no shortage of people looking to change their bike. Can't beat the dealer network or aftermarket range, period. I'd be torn between buying a new Iron or finding a lightly used unmolested Nightster, changing to Road King air shocks, swapping or buying a seat to start. Maintenance consists of oil changes, filter cleanings, and belt/primary/clutch adjustments from what I can tell.
The Guzzi I have not ridden yet but spent too long oogling today at the local Ducati/MotoGuzzi dealer. Pictures don't do this bike justice, it looks much more svelte and compact in person. Its the lightest by 75-100 pounds, but is also the least powerful engine. Shaft drive means no belts or chains to maintain, but lots of fluids to change every 5k miles (engine, trans, final drive). Screw-type valve adjusters with cylinders right out there in the open where you can work on them. Its Italian, but Guzzi's were always known for being reliable right? From the reviews I've been able to read online, the only thing it needs are shocks as the forks are supposed to be decent from the factory. Basically no aftermarket, very few dealers, and just plan odd. Beautiful, but odd. Which I like. Sounds great with a set of slip-ons from the video's I've seen too.
These are my thoughts, I'm fairly well equally torn at this point. If you were choosing, which would you chose and why?