Suspension is rather poor on the first few years and has been upgraded a bit (stiffer) just recently. Still mostly not adjustable though.
Damn, while Honda has never been the choice for exhilaration but a few of their recent bikes that seem interesting at first glance (Transalp and 250 Rally) seem to be lost to the bean counters. Some more money in suspension and they may have been acceptable out of the box.100%
I took one out for a ride and was going to do a write-up on it, but realized I had zero nice things to say about it, so I skipped the review.
The suspension is terrible for off-road. Too soft and the bike doesn't track where you want it to go in the rough stuff. Horrible handling, easily the worst of the "mid-weight" ADV bikes on the market.
Would not recommend.
Pavey Jr of Brake Magazine bought one and the first mod he did was to switch out the suspension (to TracTive I believe).
My buddy bought one of the 23/24 bikes and after the first year he spent a good chunk on new shock and fork internals. Not sure on brand, he got them sent over from somewhere in Europe. Also put crash bars, a Motoz Adventure rear and AX41 front tires, and some other stuff. It's a great bike on/offroad now.100%
I took one out for a ride and was going to do a write-up on it, but realized I had zero nice things to say about it, so I skipped the review.
The suspension is terrible for off-road. Too soft and the bike doesn't track where you want it to go in the rough stuff. Horrible handling, easily the worst of the "mid-weight" ADV bikes on the market.
Would not recommend.
Pavey Jr of Brake Magazine bought one and the first mod he did was to switch out the suspension (to TracTive I believe).
Why don't you have a AT and a KLR?Glad i'm reading this as the Alp was on my radar.
Thinking of trading my AT and the Alp was one i was looking atWhy don't you have a AT and a KLR?
Is there any real benefit to the TA over the 500X (or NV or whatever they call it now) besides more power going from 500 -> 750?
Seems more in line with a NC750XA or similar...but for more money and in a different skin.
I would have preferred to see a 19inch instead the off-road focused 21inch front wheel.
Thanks for that. I've tried, and didn't enjoy, going into the dirt / off roading as much as I would like.CB500X is more street-oriented, with its 19" front wheel and 17" rear. Earlier models (pre 2018) had both 17" wheels. Wheels are cast, which make it lighter and more nimble on the street. Suspension travel is short, 5.9"F/5.3"R, it will bottom out prematurely on obstacles but be more planted on the street.
Transalp has the off-road-oriented 21" front and 18" rear. Easier to roll over obstacles like rocks or logs. However, on pavement, it's slower turning, reduced cornering grip and braking (more due to the skinny size of the tires than wheel diameter - less contact patch). Wheels are spoked, which make it heavier unsprung weight on the road, but more durable to impacts off-road. Suspension travel is taller than CB500X - 7.9"F/7.5"R - more ground clearance, better for off-road, but will feel more pogo-like on the street than CB500X.
Power and electronics aside, if you're planning on going off-road, the Transalp is the superior bike. However, as mentioned above, there are better offerings in this space by other manufacturers. If you're staying on the pavement, the CB500X will behave better on tarmac than the TA, especially when pushed hard.
Thanks for that. I've tried, and didn't enjoy, going into the dirt / off roading as much as I would like.
Could be me, could be the wrong bike for the job...but not for me.
Anything new for me will be primarily road focused.
There is a class of bikes out there I call the Faux-ADV. Bikes like the Multistrada, S1000XR, Versys, earlier VStroms, Tiger Sports, F650FGS
But for riders who want to maximize on-road sport performance while enjoying adventure bike ergos and longer-travel suspension, there’s the crossover.
Think of crossovers as a mash-up of a sport-tourer and an adventure-tourer. In fact, many of the bikes on this list are derived from one or the other. All of them have road-biased 17-inch wheels that distinguish them from the more “compromised” adventure-tourers.