Well I stumbled on a bike I never knew existed
The CBF1000 - a detuned Fireblade litre motor in a light sport touring package with good ergos, exceptional brakes, 490 lb with circa 100 HP and a hilariously good torque curve and decent factory bags.
http://www.cbf1000.com
It's fun around town as it's got bags of torque at any rpm so you don't have to thrash the shifter and yet I put 8000 km touring on mine between end of Sept and mid November.
Feels and looks like a mid-sized ..until you wind it out.....nice rush - no sense of losing it.
lean for local riding
and dressed for touring

Never brought into the US....extremely popular in Europe.
There is a few on kiji
http://www.kijiji.ca/b-ontario/honda-cbf-1000/k0l9004
I'd buy this in a heart beat if I didn't have one....Honda inline 4s are good for hundreds of thousands of miles...let alone KM.
http://www.kijiji.ca/v-sport-tourin...0a/1147393473?enableSearchNavigationFlag=true
this is a fun read ...as they learn to love the machine over time.
http://www.visordown.com/road-tests/living-with-a-2006-honda-cbf1000/15631.html
snip
I can finally keep up with my kid's FZ8 ....something that you might consider if you are looking lighter that can still tour.
The 2013 was very highly rate
https://ultimatemotorcycling.com/2013/06/07/2013-yamaha-fz8-review-unexpected-magic/
you want a bike that does everything well - solo touring towards the sport side a 2013 FZ8 should be considered.
Fazer I think is just the faired version
Damn the used ones are going for more than he paid new
http://www.kijiji.ca/b-sport-bikes/ontario/yamaha-fz8/k0c304l9004
The FJ9 seems to have cut some of the rough edges off the FZ9 - kid tried both and liked the ergos on the FZ8 better and it's been an excellent choice for him
The CBF1000 - a detuned Fireblade litre motor in a light sport touring package with good ergos, exceptional brakes, 490 lb with circa 100 HP and a hilariously good torque curve and decent factory bags.
http://www.cbf1000.com
It's fun around town as it's got bags of torque at any rpm so you don't have to thrash the shifter and yet I put 8000 km touring on mine between end of Sept and mid November.
Feels and looks like a mid-sized ..until you wind it out.....nice rush - no sense of losing it.
lean for local riding

and dressed for touring

Never brought into the US....extremely popular in Europe.
There is a few on kiji
http://www.kijiji.ca/b-ontario/honda-cbf-1000/k0l9004
I'd buy this in a heart beat if I didn't have one....Honda inline 4s are good for hundreds of thousands of miles...let alone KM.
http://www.kijiji.ca/v-sport-tourin...0a/1147393473?enableSearchNavigationFlag=true
this is a fun read ...as they learn to love the machine over time.
http://www.visordown.com/road-tests/living-with-a-2006-honda-cbf1000/15631.html
snip
Is it 'sporty'? Yes. Well, no, well sort of. I'll go into this next time. So far, I can tell you the CBF is shaping up to be one of those great all-rounder models, which stays in Honda's range for decades. Its softened Fireblade engine and optional ABS/dual-action brakes give it cred and a talking point in the pub, but what will really win it a place in the world is its price: £5999, or £6299 with ABS. No wonder it's the UK's top-selling sports tourer.
CBF1000: It's French for 'flippin' good bike'. And make no mistake, this is a French bike, I can see Honda selling thousands of them to the Froggies. Already I feel the urge to don the proverbial corduroy jacket, open face GPa and Ray Bans. The CBF is the ultimate street sleeper: looks dull as
dishwater, sees off Porsches.
And really, what's not to like? Suspension that's as plush as a Citroen's Hydractive self-levelling set-up. An engine that makes wonderful yet progressive power from zero to 10,000rpm. A gearbox that's so slick you swap cogs just to repeat the experience. Brakes do the job just fine, and if you had to have ABS - I'm no fan - Honda's version is as sorted as anyone's.
And boy but it handles too. Natural instinctive, assured. The suspension is a bit soft, but ground clearance is the only issue - eventually.
.......
my point wasn't that CBF owners would go track day riding, simply that they could. The CBF1000 is so good I'm looking for new measures of its abilities. So far it's consumed some 6000 miles without so much as a murmur. No oil, no tyres, just fuel. Tim has meanwhile been fussing over Bridgestones, Akrapovics and Power Commanders in trying to get his FZ1 Fazer on the money, so's Jon over his GSX-R6. Even Army John was putting pipes and bars on his now late GSR. But the CBF has just been getting on with it.
Yet when Jon hightailed off on his GSX-R one night it was the CBF that went with him, showering sparks mid-roundabout as the pegs dug in deep, but it was there in his slipstream.
And when ad' boyo Barry blipped his R1's throttle at the lights it was the CBF that wheelied away, top-box waving in the wind, then got the holeshot into the sweep before the roundabout.
Yeah, it goes like the clappers, as it should, but it commutes 100 miles a day without so much as a sniff too. No nonsense, just getting on with the job.
Read more: http://www.visordown.com/road-tests/living-with-a-2006-honda-cbf1000/15631.html#ixzz43IulTUIM
I can finally keep up with my kid's FZ8 ....something that you might consider if you are looking lighter that can still tour.
The 2013 was very highly rate
2013 Yamaha FZ8 Test
Compromise is not a very attractive word. It conjures up a wishy-washy image and implies that the subject in question isn’t very much good in any way at all – but it will do.
So, when I say the new Yamaha FZ8 is the perfect compromise, I think you will expect the worst. That would be a shame, because I have had more fun on this brilliant little motorcycle than I can remember for a long time.
The FZ8 falls neatly between Yamaha’s upright novice-friendly FZ6R and the potent FZ1. As a horsepower snob, it was easy for me to assume that the smaller engine would be a disappointment. Boy, was I wrong.
The 779cc four-cylinder mill spins up incredibly willingly to its 11,500 redline and feels more like a liter-bike with the crazy edge taken off than a peppy 600. The motor is uncannily smooth, and the few vibes it does produce are well insulated from the rider.
https://ultimatemotorcycling.com/2013/06/07/2013-yamaha-fz8-review-unexpected-magic/
you want a bike that does everything well - solo touring towards the sport side a 2013 FZ8 should be considered.

Fazer I think is just the faired version
Damn the used ones are going for more than he paid new
http://www.kijiji.ca/b-sport-bikes/ontario/yamaha-fz8/k0c304l9004
The FJ9 seems to have cut some of the rough edges off the FZ9 - kid tried both and liked the ergos on the FZ8 better and it's been an excellent choice for him
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