Thread: Selecting a bike for triping
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#1 Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Location
- Beijing
- Posts
- 32
02-10-2012, 03:02 AMHi guys,
First of all thanks for all the useful tips you ve given me till the moment. Thanks to them I have been able to get my chinese driving license. Now I am looking for a bike in Beijing. However I dont want it for riding it in the city (which I will of course, but its not the main reason Im buying this bike). I want it for triping round China. So the number of bikes I think can fulfill my requirements has been drastically reduced. I would like some recomendations on the subject. My options at the moment
- New CF Moto 650
- New ChangJiang 750
- Second hand BMW 650 cs
I also was looking for the CFMOTO 650 TR but it will take too mcuh time to buy it (you have to wait 3 months) and i will be gone in 8 months
Taking into account that my mechanical abilities are limited at its best, and I have only been driving 150 cc bikes till now, I think that the CJ 750 must wait for more experience on the road.
Thanks ahead!
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#2 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
- Location
- Beijing
- Posts
- 407
02-10-2012, 03:31 AMYou did get you driving license, so you want a road legal bike?
Does it have to be something of over 600CC?
You are gone in 8 months, as in not coming back anytime soon after that? Then why spend RMB 30k or more! You don't know in advance how fast you can sell it again later.
Got scared of the JH600 after reading about the stalling issues that some fellow-MCM members have?Kawasaki Versys 650
Shineray X2
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#3 Re: Selecting a bike for triping02-10-2012, 05:48 AMRide report - Few weeks in South West China
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#4 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Feb 2012
- Location
- Yunnan
- Posts
- 7
02-10-2012, 07:05 AMA 2nd hand BMW 650GS is the best choice if the budget is not a problem, otherwise, any Chinese-made 125cc or 150cc, even a 250cc from the well-known manufacturer are all good for your trip. If Tibet and Qinghai Plateau is on your map, a 250cc is recommended. I'm a Chinese from Yunnan, now in Africa, welcome, Buddy.
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#5 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
- Location
- Beijing
- Posts
- 32
02-11-2012, 05:50 AMThanks for the advice!
Actually the problem is one of time. Even though I am staying for 8 months in Beijing, I am working here, and my holidays are not so long so I thought it would be better to buy something around 600 cc. I have also been told that some displacements are not allowed to drive in the Gaosu (highways) but there was nothing about this in the driving test
Yeah Barry, I saw some of the problems of the Jh600 and as I will be very little time here (though I will probably come back in a couple of years) I thought it would be better to buy a more reliable machine
Could you then please recommend me any chinese 250cc manufacturer bike that I can actually buy in Beijing, without having to order it to the factory?
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#6 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Dec 2009
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- mostly Shanghai, sometimes northern California
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- 3,222
02-11-2012, 07:37 AMDear Gambitox,
This is perhaps going to sound strange, but I'll nominate the Jialing JH600 as absolutely, hands down, the best bike for touring in China at that displacement, unless you can afford an import. I've toured extensively on my JH600, tackling expressways, rural highways and twisties, rural lanes, dirt roads, mud roads, gravel roads and even some single-track, and it's been not only super reliable, but also a huge pleasure to ride, day in and day out. With 41liter Tourfella aluminum panniers and room for as big a duffel bag as I want, its carrying capacity is wonderful, and there's still room -- and enough oomph in the rear suspension -- for a pillion if I so choose. And I'm a relatively hefty 90kg/180cm rider.
The reliability concerns come down to only a couple of things, according to more than 100,000 km of accumulated experience by a handful of us JH600 riders in China.
First is the stalling issue. This is a huge issue if your bike stalls, and most of the pre-2011 bikes do; mine does not, at least not often. And, though Jialing itself has fumbled and bungled its management of the stalling issue, they do seem to be addressing it. The latest production version, the JH600A, has an upgraded fuel injection system that seems to have eliminated the problem (though we do worry it may crop up as these bikes rack up the miles). And, more recently, Jialing is working with owners of earlier versions to swap out the old V2.0 fuel injection with the V3.0 found on the JH600A. Milton is the trailblazer on this, and his upgraded bike is not stalling.
Another issue posing actual danger to the rider is the poor design of the rubber chain guard that isolates the chain from the left swingarm. These are not attached well, and have been known to come loose and get sucked in between the chain and the front sprocket, risking a potentially catastrophic drive-train seizure that could lock up the rear wheel and send bike and rider flying. Not good. But this too can be remedied, though I've not yet seen whether Jialing has addressed this faulty design in the JH600A.
Some owners have had a problem with a decompression valve that's driven from the camshaft. These have been replaced. Again, I'm not sure whether Jialing has upgraded the design on the newer bike to eliminate this fault, but it's not been a serious issue.
Finally, at least one owner (Motokai) has had problems with the power generation system in the form of failure of the stator, which seems to have suffered from excessive heat and finally stopped delivering current. It's not known whether this problem is more widespread, what caused it, whether it is related to poor design or bad manufacturing or even something about the owner's riding technique. But since replacement the problem has not recurred.
So, unless I'm forgetting something, apart from the stalling and the swingarm guard, this does not look like an onerous list of flaws. In my view, the JH600 is a bike that handles well the merciless abuse that China's roads offer so generously. It seems to hold up well over time (quite a few of us are at the 10k km mark and some are hitting 20k), and, though parts are not available at every streetcorner as they might be for smaller bikes, Jialing is actually quite good about stocking parts and getting them out by same-day shipping to wherever you are. Parts are inexpensive, and most repairs can be undertaken by any reasonably competent mechanic (which of course is s can of worms). They've produced a good shop manual and parts list with exploded diagrams, and these are available in Chinese and English -- not that 99.9% of shops in China would have these documents.
So it's not a perfect world, or a perfect bike.
But compared to the other domestic bikes in that class -- the CFMoto 650NK and QJiang G600GS, both of which are smaller bikes with more of a lean-forward sport-bike posture -- the Jialing is, in my opinion, far, far better suited for long-distance touring, especially with gear and pillion. A wild card is the CFMoto CF650TR, which is expected to be released in the next month or two and could be a game-changer in the dual sport/sport touring space. That's certainly one to watch.
Lots of threads in this forum on the JH600 as well as the CFMoto/Chunfeng and QJiang/Qianjiang 6XXs.
cheers!jkp
Shanghai
2010 JH600 "Merkin Muffley" (in Shanghai)
2000 KLR650 "Feezer Ablanalp" (in California)
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#7 Re: Selecting a bike for triping02-11-2012, 12:54 PM
I'd echo what Euphonius posted about JH600. Apart from the ECU/stalling issue, I have had absolutely no other problems with it after clocking over 20K km on it. Just recently I've upgraded my 2.0 ECU (for those bikes shipped prior to 2011) to the latest 3.0 ECU, which is standard on newer models (JH600A). The new fuel injection system seems to have fixed the stalling problem. The thread "JH600 stalling", which I started, is one of the longest in this forum and our gripe towards Jialing's customer care is long and ongoing. However, to be fair, the latest JH600A is a fairly reliable and versatile bike, well suited for touring around in China.
There is another thread recording one of my bike trips taken with 2 other fellow JH600A riders. We did together for about 2800km in that trip, and my two other companions went on to Tibet and Xingjiang for additional 2000 to 3000 km. Our bikes took quite a bit of abuses during that trip and survived it in flying colors. Jialing as a factory may be clueless in caring for its customers or building long term customer loyalty, it appears to have finally come up with a reliable and totally enjoyable machine.
Cheers!
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#8 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Jan 2012
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- Beijing
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02-12-2012, 11:55 AMThanks again for the comments, you are starting to dangerously convince me on the matter of the JH600, and I may definitely buy it if I can find some trustworthy dealer in Beijing who could also provide me with any of the two plates (JingA or B). Do you guys know anyone ? By the way which price are we talking about more or less with the JH600A?
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#9 Re: Selecting a bike for triping
- Join Date
- Nov 2010
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- Beijing
- Posts
- 407
02-12-2012, 01:08 PMKawasaki Versys 650
Shineray X2
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#10 Re: Selecting a bike for triping02-13-2012, 12:16 AM
How big are you?
Will you ride alone or with a passenger?
How many consecutive days will you ride?
How far do you plan to go?
Do you prefer twisty asphalt or roughing it in the dirt?
Do you camp or stay in hotels?
Have a budget?
Big guy, two up, long rides, asphalt, hotels, ¥50K = JH600 or maybe the CF Moto.
A little more info about your intentions would help. There's nothing particularly bad about the JH600, but most people buy it because they have to, not because they want to.
Cheers!
ChinaV
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