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#1 Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-08-2011, 03:07 PM
First the route:
The direct way from xi’an to suzhou is about 1300km, but the way I wanted to go takes the exquisite G210 going south out xi’an and bumps the distance up to almost 1900km.
Then there’s the time frame, I had 3 days to make it to Suzhou for a dear friend’s wedding that I could not miss.
And just to make things interesting, I decided I’d attempt to do the trip on my 110cc mini-motox bike.
After substantial modifications to the bike it actually looks a lot like my brand new Qingqi QM250 which I took delivery of last week!
Now let me explain why this ride report will be shit: I did not take one picture during the whole trip. Not one. There.
Day 1
Due to a baijiu related lobotomy of the wake-up cortex, I did not pay any attention to my alarm at 6 and instead woke up at 9. After checking out of my hostel, eating and installing the tail box on my bike which was on the other side of town, I was on the road by 12. Good start.
Luckily, 20 mins riding out xi’an and you’re straight in the mountains. The G210 is a real keeper too; 300km of this, on smooth tarmac.
Some corners even have tire walls on the sides, I swear they actually want people to race on this road! What a treat.
I still managed 430km that day and never left the mountains. Best day of riding I had done in a long time!
Day 2
Can’t really remember what happened that day, I just know I woke up in Hubei and went to bed in Henan.
Actually I do remember the pure bliss towards the end of a hard day’s riding, following my shadow as far east as it would take me before disappearing. The sun in my back lit up the Henan countryside in the most beautiful colours I’ve ever seen in china, the kind of colours that only a photographer, poet or heavy dose of LSD could describe the way I saw them…
Of course I also understood that the price to pay for all this beauty was that every car and truck coming towards me was completely blinded.
Day 3
This was the hard one. 850km left to get to Suzhou and I still had to cross the dreaded province of Anhui. I was on the road from 5.30am to 8.30 that night, stopping only for a few smoke breaks, a quick lunch and a couple of rounds of angry birds. This was the flat part of the journey. Here are some things you can do on boring roads:
- Practice your karaoke skills in your helmet
- Think of a name for your new bike. Mine is called now Molly. It’s short for Queen Molly, which is long for QM250.
- Count how many vehicles overtake you. 2 on the whole trip. Applying my irrefutable logic to this fact, I deduce that I am the third fastest thing in china.
- Think of ways to make a ride report interesting with no pictures
That morning I managed to maintain an average speed of 72kph and was expecting to arrive in Suzhou on time for afternoon tea, but then Anhui hit me and Molly like a ton of torn up concrete roads and immediately my average stats dropped to 0. For those who don’t know, this is what a good road looks like in Anhui:
I spent the next eternity getting pelted in the face by sand trucks. What is all this sand for anyway? Why are they always moving it, and doesn’t everywhere have enough sand already?
“Are you having fun?” I asked, jumping from pothole to oil spill. Molly just shook her head.
Eventually we made it through, I just needed to cross the mighty Yangtze and a short 300km stint across Jiangsu would see me home. The bridge I had planned to cross turned out to be an expressway, so I set out to find a ferry. I did find one, only to learn the next crossing was in one hour. Pressed for time, I decided to look for a way onto the bridge and if I couldn’t find one I’d come back for the ferry in an hour. After 50 minutes I found a slip road onto the bridge.
Having wasted enough time for one day, I zipped back to Suzhou on familiar roads, the feeling of home slowly creeping in. I know this is always a dangerous part of the trip, you think you’re home and you let your guard down. I made sure not to, and arrived into town just on time for dinner and a magnificent wedding in the morning!
I know ChinaV and the big boys are out there throwing out 1000km days, but 1870km in two and a half days is my personal record and you guys can all suck my euphemism.
Cheers!
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#2 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-08-2011, 04:11 PM
Holy Shit Felix!
1870km in two and a half days?
Can't wait to see the photos!
Please post them after you receive in the mail - thanks!
_____________________
嘉陵 JH600-A (Upgraded)
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#3 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-09-2011, 02:06 AM
Amazing feat. Mighty interesting RR even without pictures, summing up very well what go through our minds during long solo ride.
I guess pictures and sore butt don't mix.
BTW, about your new QM250, is it with fuel injection?
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#4 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou
- Join Date
- Aug 2010
- Location
- Tianjin
- Posts
- 93
07-09-2011, 05:56 AMEven without pictures of the ride - the report is a good read and has some good road info.. the G210 sounds great. 1870 km in two and a half days is crazy.. especially with a noon start on day one!
Congrats on the new bike too! I'm looking forward to reading what you think about it.. got any trips planned for her? How'd you get the 110 out to Xi'an to start the trip?
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#5 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-09-2011, 06:10 AM
hey, great report, i like the part about angry birds haha. did you post any info about buying the gm200? can i have some? does have c3, dealers, all the problems with qingqi etc.? many thanks
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#6 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou
- Join Date
- Dec 2009
- Location
- mostly Shanghai, sometimes northern California
- Posts
- 3,222
07-09-2011, 08:06 AMFelix, as I recall, the looooong wait was due to procuring plates. How did that adventure turn out? Will Motokai's camera cops have a legitimate address to which to send your speed-blurred portraits?
Best Helen Keller ride report in history! We could add a new section called RRs for the visually impaired.
cheersjkp
Shanghai
2010 JH600 "Merkin Muffley" (in Shanghai)
2000 KLR650 "Feezer Ablanalp" (in California)
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#7 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-09-2011, 10:49 AM
Thanks for the replies, kind sirs! Here are a few answers:
Mokotai: bahaha! you forget i'm on a 250 and there was very little speeding. I was cruising at 90 - 95kph, hardly ever went over 100.
Milton: nope, mine is the carburetted and therefore non-C3-compliant version, only for export.
Pat: Thanks! I am hoping to do a western china trip in september perhaps. It's all up in the air at the moment due to all my plans having been ruined by the long wait for my bike. The 110cc mini bike was just a joke, i had that thing a few years ago and it's a piece of shit!
Filipu: I'm planning to gather my thoughts about the new bike and how i acquired it in a new post when i get the time. Don't hold your breath though, none of it will be useful info for anyone in china who wants to get one... The process was a once off and i would never go through it again.
Youfonius: the bike is indeed registered, but in my girlfriend's name. It was impossible in the end to get my name on it. Tell me, these RRs for the blind, would they appear in braille on screen?
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#8 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-11-2011, 02:49 AM
[, I swear they actually want people to race on this road! What a treat.
i,m up for that !
nice ride felix
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#9 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-18-2011, 03:50 PM
Just noticed the revolutionary graffiti on the support columns of this place.
Is this related to the E3 Regulations (where all the non-C3-compliant versions meet)? Is Molly part of the revolution?_____________________
嘉陵 JH600-A (Upgraded)
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#10 Re: Iron-butting from Xi'an to Suzhou07-19-2011, 08:40 AM
Yes indeed, that's Molly the Molester making a stand for carburetted engines.
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