Great review. I'm looking at the 2023 version but information like this is setting me up to make better decisions (or ask the right questions) for my riding style. Well done guys!
@@MindfulMotorcyclist And .. I went for the Triple Black GS, but opted for only the top box, not the panniers, also the Akrapovic pipe (sounds awesome). It's already had its first service. Thanks again to both of you.
One thing to note is that the economy was best at 100-110kph motorway cruising but at 130kph it took a nose dive. It’s a difference from 4K to 5k revs and it was substantial. If you want to do high speed long distance riding I would get a K1600 or a goldwing with higher capacity engines.
Superb thanks. You mentioned the new chassis, is this on the forthcoming 1300? If on the current 1250 how would I know that the bike has the new rather than old chassis if I don’t buy new. Cheers.
Hi there, I have just bought one of these, 40th Anniversary, and I was very impressed with your informative video. I pick it up next week from the dealer with very similar options plus a Garmin XT and will ride it home through most of New Zealand to run it in. Your video has inspired and excited me for that adventure and I really enjoyed your review. Thank you
Hi Grant, thank you kindly for the comment and support. Congratulations on your new bike and I bet you are looking forward to some spectacular scenery en-route!
Well done guys. Thorough description. It’s the best motorcycle available, and worth every penny. You mentioned or suggested the next year model may have an electric windscreen. It’s a fantastic feature that I have on my K1200LT and a bike of this caliber should have it, as well as one other even more wonderful feature, reverse. Yes it will add some weight, perhaps not a lot, but it would be incredibly great to have it, especially because it can get you out of an off road jam. My GSA weighs a lot, I take it off road often, and I think having a reverser would broaden my off road choices favorably.
Thanks Dave for the comment and positive feedback. I'll be sure to mention to Andy that you found his comments useful. It is certainly Britain's best selling motorcycle year in year out!
So funny 😂 I just ordered a new GSA last week with almost the exact specs, for the same reasons you were telling 🥳 Except I ordered the upper option with different mirrors and caps. And to be totally equal, I ordered the better wind protection for screen (with stabelizer) and handguards. So, well chosen Sir 🤛
Hi Thomas, thank you for your comment. All I can say to this is 'Great minds think alike' haha. I wish you all the best with your amazing new bike. Ride safe.
Great to hear it! Love to hear how you do with the higher screen. I may change out the screen for a touring one if I get to try it and it makes a difference.
@@AndyRhodes As soon as my bike arrive (3 weeks) the first thing I will test is the „Marathon“ screen from Wunderlich. Its not about the difference, more if it is for better. I will report 🙋
I just got my GSA this afternoon. After committing to spend about 22K dlls (great deal on it!) on a fairly well equipped bike (missed the ESA and adaptive lights), I needed reassurance. Hearing what others say helps me feel better about the decision I made. I got "the cradle" for some old Samsung S10 phone I had laying around, (I'll never mount my own daily phone on a bike after three broken OIS on my phones lenses) and the wireless charging, the app with the controls on my thumb, and pretty neat options like finding food and gas either on route, or at destination with a couple of thumb pushes as I'm riding, feels like I don't care about Apple CarPlay anymore! It feels really elegant jumping from controlling the bike display to the second screen (the phone), like in some Tesla or Boeing airplane.. I don't know, but coming from a barebones (no TFT) F850GS from 2019 feels like night and day. The F850GS feels like a tall bike that will fall helplessly if you don't keep it real-straight. The 1250GSA feels like a scooter when you tilt it for such a low gravity center. Unbelievable. And for southern California, normal cruise control (unlike the RT with its fancy adaptive one) is just great. I used to feel strain in my right hand after keeping the throttle open for five minutes, and instead of juggling finger and palm grasps to escape pain, having a lever that keeps the speed is a godsend.
I'm glad you mentioned the heated seats and sticking for the black package. I found that so troubling. BMW can do better. I think Corbin makes a much more comfortable heated seat... but then you'd have to live with a Corbin on an Adv bike.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist Best review i have seen of the GSA so far ( i have seen a LOT ). I have been looking at that bike ( exact same specs ) most of the year. Here, the price is around EUR 54.000,- So it takes a bit of self-convincing🧐
Awww man, that's great to hear. I put a lot of work into this small channel and to get feedback like that really makes it all worth it. Andy will be pleased too. Where are you that a GSA costs €54.000? Can you import one?
I couldn’t configure heated seat options online but I have found rally options with heated seats online. If the configuration does not allow it, it’s good to ask the dealer directly. ua-cam.com/video/60vkj60AeLA/v-deo.html
These bikes cost a fortune. I cant afford to by a new one and risk dropping it in the dirt. Even the regular GS is huge. I can't push it up even a slight incline. I can just pick it up by myself off-road. I bought a used 1200 GS rigged and ready for of road. For a bucket list ride. Nice but half the price. Not so worried about dropping it. Serviced it, Dunlop Trailmax Misions on it. And set of on a 15000km trip up to The Arctic Ocean round Alaska and back. Still haven't managed to clean all the calcite of it. The bike had no issues. Despite well over 1000miles of mud, rocks, dirt, gravel and calcite. The Trailmax are still good. From the last gas near Dawson City It's 250 miles of dirt mud rocks and gravel to the next gas in Eagle Plains. My regular GS made it on its 20 liter tank. I took 19.5 to fill it. Then another 200 ish to Inuvik If you can point out a road anywhere in the UK or Western Europe where there is more than 250 miles from one gas station to the next. I'l eat my helmet. And admit you might need a GSA. Its one heck of a nice bike. you can go almost anywhere on in comfort. It has all the fancy features but I find I except for the heated grips and changing from road to enduro for of road I never used any them.
I would consider a 650gs for a similar sort of adventure. 1250 is huge and too big for me, but an older lighter bmw adv bike would be my choice. 15000km is no small trip, super cool!
@@MindfulMotorcyclist I did see a quite a few KLR and the 750 or 800 GS. The smaller bikes were probably better on the off road sections. There was a lot of long highway miles just to get there. Where the big heavy bikes were probably the best. A mid size ADV would be a good choice.
I'm a beginner bike rider, just recently passed bike test. I'm planning on doing a lot of touring, hence the reason for this bike. I'm quite a big guy, so do you think this would be biting off more than I can chew for a relative newbie? Also the fact that this has so many safety features also draws me to this bike . What do you think ?
Well firstly congratulations, you are now in a fairly elite club as the majority cannot ride motorcycles. I personally wouldn't have a GS 1250 as my friend Andy is very very strong and he finds it difficult to move around on rough terrain. Middleweight adventure tourers are very popular too... think of the Yamaha Tenere or Tracer, Suzuki 800DE (really new bike), Honda Transalp. Depends also if youre going to spend most of your time on or off road. Typically 21inch front wheel is for those who go on the rough a little bit more.... 19 inch for road focused
As a new rider. If you want to get comfortable riding MC do not by one of these as your first bike. Lots of these bikes can be found a few years old with little or no mileage. People don't ride bikes if they are not comfortable riding them. No point point in buying a bike which you do not feel comfortable riding. Get a midsize bike, lots of good popular options. At reasonable price and good resale value. Get some miles, Do a lot practice. Next season if you want one of these. The regular GS is the better option in my opinion.
When is too much, too much? I always judge a bike on "user ability". By that i mean, does it suit your overall life style, rider ability etc. Is it something you live with every day, of do you have to put it away, till you're in holiday mode, and ride something more practical for your every day needs. I guess that's the question we all have to ask ourselves aye?
Hi Kevin, thanks for the comment. I agree here, two bikes which I would say are outside my 'comfortable' as in just hop on an ride user ability are 1) big ADV bikes over 230kg and 2) 1000cc sports bikes. I'm happy to ride smaller and lighter bikes, just as much fun!
Make absolutely sure you know how expensive all BMW motorcycle service is, especially the labor rates and price of fluids, filters, tire changes and all other parts, BEFORE you go and buy a BMW car or especially their motorcycles.
To be honest, I wouldn't buy a GS. Not because it's not a super motorcycle but it's too much money tied up in some metal and I don't need all that power, tech and complexity even before expensive servicing comes into it. Thanks 👍
Yep. Seat options once you go rally is ridiculous. And no the dealer can’t do anything about it. Other than you eating lots of money to buy things twice basically.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist yeah anyone can see what I’m saying or what he was saying. If you choose rally it will essentially remove any and all other things you add. You have to go rally then buy every thing after. But especially when it comes to the seat you can’t change anything once you go rally. The solution is to do the factory low suspension with the low seat and then add all the rally options without picking the full rally package. Which will get you 90% of the way there
Hi Buy accident, I didn't actually ride his bike as we ran out of time. The GS would comprehensively outperform my bike '500DSX' in every category except perhaps price. This video is perhaps aimed at potential GS buyers and my bike is just there to make the shot look more interesting 😎
@@MindfulMotorcyclist yes, it was very good and in depth video. It would be good to know if say after 1h of driving each bike you could "feel" the $10.000 difference. All the electronic and gadgets aside, just pure driving, how different are they. That would be a good comparison video that i would love to see as well.
@@buyaccident Agree, 100%. Unfortunately, there was only limited time for this video as we had to head into Reims to meet other friends. Andy is based in Germany and I am based in the UK. In between we were also dodging the rain. That said, the Voge as specified (with hard aluminium luggage) is £5,999 and the BMW is £21,485. Is it better, sure but is it over 4x better. That is more up for debate.
I would say one advantage of the DS is that it is significantly lighter. You can actually manoeuvre the bike on tricky off road sections. Of course, it’s best to compare the DS with the smaller BMW GS bikes.
Hi Rajab, thanks for the question. Using the configuration tool on BMW own website its £15,780 as standard with no options and with the options shown here it's £21,485. Thanks.
It is definitely not an investment, as soon as you roll it out of the dealership you have lost a couple thousand pounds just in a few minutes. 8 or 9 years old the bike is worth half the initial price. Bike and car prices will return to the normal depreciation curve when the supply of chips is resolved, in fact second hand cars are reducing in value due to economic conditions (7.6.22), potential recession looming this year.
Hi Jean, thanks for your comment. I agree that you lose a lot of value as soon as the motorcycle (or any vehicle) becomes '2nd hand'. The loss of value of the bike over 8-9 years is I guess the cost of having the modern bike with the power/performance/reliability etc over those years. If it was me looking for a bike at this level I would probably look at one 4-5 years old with low miles. However, the supply of chips won't be resolved anytime soon, TSMC are constructing another foundry but this is scheduled to come online in 2025. In the meantime you have everything from smartphones to smart appliances to Nvidia ramping up its 4000 series production. All this creates a lot of chip demand with a stable supply level and further to this auto manufacturers are low on the priority list. On the final point a recession is probably coming so I agree with that! Thanks for the comment.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist Just remember you can’t take it with you, enjoy life while you can, you never know what is around the corner, have fun with the new bike, be safe.
So I was looking for a 1 year old GS before I bought this one. The price was only a 1-2k euro saving from a new one and it didn’t come with the new lights etc. so due to the supply chain issues due to covid, right now, it made sense to buy a new one and the price drop after 1 gear is not as substantial. Just my 2 cents
@@AndyRhodes I’m finding out the same myself. I guess if I could find a used one set up already and save on that cost, that would be nice.. but I’m leaning towards new as well
Great review. I'm looking at the 2023 version but information like this is setting me up to make better decisions (or ask the right questions) for my riding style. Well done guys!
Thanks, I have to say this was all Andy! He really researched prior to his buying this bike!
@@MindfulMotorcyclist And .. I went for the Triple Black GS, but opted for only the top box, not the panniers, also the Akrapovic pipe (sounds awesome). It's already had its first service.
Thanks again to both of you.
The surprising thing with this behemoth GS is the handling..Those are fantastic touring bikes for long distances..
Agreed, you can use them as touring bikes with some off road capability.
One thing to note is that the economy was best at 100-110kph motorway cruising but at 130kph it took a nose dive. It’s a difference from 4K to 5k revs and it was substantial. If you want to do high speed long distance riding I would get a K1600 or a goldwing with higher capacity engines.
@@AndyRhodes Even on smaller capacity bikes which you would expect to sip fuel start to increase consumption after 100kph
Superb thanks. You mentioned the new chassis, is this on the forthcoming 1300? If on the current 1250 how would I know that the bike has the new rather than old chassis if I don’t buy new. Cheers.
Hi there, I have just bought one of these, 40th Anniversary, and I was very impressed with your informative video. I pick it up next week from the dealer with very similar options plus a Garmin XT and will ride it home through most of New Zealand to run it in. Your video has inspired and excited me for that adventure and I really enjoyed your review. Thank you
Hi Grant, thank you kindly for the comment and support. Congratulations on your new bike and I bet you are looking forward to some spectacular scenery en-route!
It is so encouraging to hear you made a decision without regret!
Andy is delighted with his GS, I've not heard him mention a bad word about it!
Well done guys. Thorough description. It’s the best motorcycle available, and worth every penny. You mentioned or suggested the next year model may have an electric windscreen. It’s a fantastic feature that I have on my K1200LT and a bike of this caliber should have it, as well as one other even more wonderful feature, reverse. Yes it will add some weight, perhaps not a lot, but it would be incredibly great to have it, especially because it can get you out of an off road jam. My GSA weighs a lot, I take it off road often, and I think having a reverser would broaden my off road choices favorably.
Thanks Dave for the comment and positive feedback. I'll be sure to mention to Andy that you found his comments useful. It is certainly Britain's best selling motorcycle year in year out!
Fantastic interview and commentary from an owner. My future bike.
Thanks John, appreciate the good feedback. Ride safe...
Great video straight forward to the point.
Possibly should add few shots of extras and features to emphasise and support the description given.
Thanks Spyros, appreciate the feedback. Next time I will add more b roll of the features we are discussing 👍. Thanks 😊
So funny 😂 I just ordered a new GSA last week with almost the exact specs, for the same reasons you were telling 🥳
Except I ordered the upper option with different mirrors and caps.
And to be totally equal, I ordered the better wind protection for screen (with stabelizer) and handguards.
So, well chosen Sir 🤛
Hi Thomas, thank you for your comment. All I can say to this is 'Great minds think alike' haha. I wish you all the best with your amazing new bike. Ride safe.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist Thank you. Always a pleasure. 🤛
Great to hear it! Love to hear how you do with the higher screen. I may change out the screen for a touring one if I get to try it and it makes a difference.
@@AndyRhodes As soon as my bike arrive (3 weeks) the first thing I will test is the „Marathon“ screen from Wunderlich. Its not about the difference, more if it is for better. I will report 🙋
@@thomasbrauner5463 Thank you, that would be super useful
Great interview, down to earth, thanks
That's very kind of you to say Bryan, I'm not an interviewer normally so pleased we pulled this format off! Thanks
I just got my GSA this afternoon. After committing to spend about 22K dlls (great deal on it!) on a fairly well equipped bike (missed the ESA and adaptive lights), I needed reassurance. Hearing what others say helps me feel better about the decision I made. I got "the cradle" for some old Samsung S10 phone I had laying around, (I'll never mount my own daily phone on a bike after three broken OIS on my phones lenses) and the wireless charging, the app with the controls on my thumb, and pretty neat options like finding food and gas either on route, or at destination with a couple of thumb pushes as I'm riding, feels like I don't care about Apple CarPlay anymore! It feels really elegant jumping from controlling the bike display to the second screen (the phone), like in some Tesla or Boeing airplane.. I don't know, but coming from a barebones (no TFT) F850GS from 2019 feels like night and day. The F850GS feels like a tall bike that will fall helplessly if you don't keep it real-straight. The 1250GSA feels like a scooter when you tilt it for such a low gravity center. Unbelievable. And for southern California, normal cruise control (unlike the RT with its fancy adaptive one) is just great. I used to feel strain in my right hand after keeping the throttle open for five minutes, and instead of juggling finger and palm grasps to escape pain, having a lever that keeps the speed is a godsend.
I just got one without ESA too. I think that will prove to be a mistake when it comes time to sell it.
What an amazing review !! 5* no gimmicks just what you want to know ! Many thanks
That's very kind Thank you Vacey 🙏😊
I'm glad you mentioned the heated seats and sticking for the black package. I found that so troubling. BMW can do better. I think Corbin makes a much more comfortable heated seat... but then you'd have to live with a Corbin on an Adv bike.
There's been conflicting info on this, some have said the Rally colour option does permit it and some say it doesnt...
This was brilliant. Very informative.
Thanks to both of you👍
Thanks Soren for your kind words. Certainly lucky to have Andy on to share his experience.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist Best review i have seen of the GSA so far ( i have seen a LOT ).
I have been looking at that bike ( exact same specs ) most of the year. Here, the price is around EUR 54.000,- So it takes a bit of self-convincing🧐
Awww man, that's great to hear. I put a lot of work into this small channel and to get feedback like that really makes it all worth it. Andy will be pleased too. Where are you that a GSA costs €54.000? Can you import one?
Thanks! I’ll throw a wild guess and say Denmark?
@@AndyRhodes That´s right.
25% VAT, 150% registration tax and only one dealer🙄
Wow loved the vid thank you much learned about the bmw gsa
Hi Binghum, thanks for the comment and great feedback. Much appreciated. Cheers 👍
Regarding heating on the rally version, you can order the same seat features also for the rally version, you can handle this with the dealer.
Hi Cube, thanks for that, good to know both Triple Black and Rally can have the same seat features. Cheers
I couldn’t configure heated seat options online but I have found rally options with heated seats online. If the configuration does not allow it, it’s good to ask the dealer directly.
ua-cam.com/video/60vkj60AeLA/v-deo.html
These bikes cost a fortune. I cant afford to by a new one and risk dropping it in the dirt.
Even the regular GS is huge. I can't push it up even a slight incline. I can just pick it up by myself off-road.
I bought a used 1200 GS rigged and ready for of road. For a bucket list ride. Nice but half the price. Not so worried about dropping it.
Serviced it, Dunlop Trailmax Misions on it. And set of on a 15000km trip up to The Arctic Ocean round Alaska and back. Still haven't managed to clean all the calcite of it.
The bike had no issues. Despite well over 1000miles of mud, rocks, dirt, gravel and calcite.
The Trailmax are still good.
From the last gas near Dawson City It's 250 miles of dirt mud rocks and gravel to the next gas in Eagle Plains. My regular GS made it on its 20 liter tank. I took 19.5 to fill it. Then another 200 ish to Inuvik
If you can point out a road anywhere in the UK or Western Europe where there is more than 250 miles from one gas station to the next. I'l eat my helmet. And admit you might need a GSA.
Its one heck of a nice bike. you can go almost anywhere on in comfort.
It has all the fancy features but I find I except for the heated grips and changing from road to enduro for of road I never used any them.
I would consider a 650gs for a similar sort of adventure. 1250 is huge and too big for me, but an older lighter bmw adv bike would be my choice. 15000km is no small trip, super cool!
@@MindfulMotorcyclist I did see a quite a few KLR and the 750 or 800 GS. The smaller bikes were probably better on the off road sections. There was a lot of long highway miles just to get there. Where the big heavy bikes were probably the best. A mid size ADV would be a good choice.
Great video
Thanks Sid, appreciate it 🙏
Hi, thanks for the very informative video. Does GSA from 2022 have any enhancements worth over let's say 2019 / 2020 / 2021?
I'm a beginner bike rider, just recently passed bike test. I'm planning on doing a lot of touring, hence the reason for this bike. I'm quite a big guy, so do you think this would be biting off more than I can chew for a relative newbie? Also the fact that this has so many safety features also draws me to this bike . What do you think ?
Well firstly congratulations, you are now in a fairly elite club as the majority cannot ride motorcycles. I personally wouldn't have a GS 1250 as my friend Andy is very very strong and he finds it difficult to move around on rough terrain. Middleweight adventure tourers are very popular too... think of the Yamaha Tenere or Tracer, Suzuki 800DE (really new bike), Honda Transalp. Depends also if youre going to spend most of your time on or off road. Typically 21inch front wheel is for those who go on the rough a little bit more.... 19 inch for road focused
@@MindfulMotorcyclist most of my time doing long road journeys
As a new rider. If you want to get comfortable riding MC do not by one of these as your first bike.
Lots of these bikes can be found a few years old with little or no mileage. People don't ride bikes if they are not comfortable riding them.
No point point in buying a bike which you do not feel comfortable riding.
Get a midsize bike, lots of good popular options. At reasonable price and good resale value.
Get some miles, Do a lot practice. Next season if you want one of these. The regular GS is the better option in my opinion.
So the bike only has linked brakes when in road mode and not in dynamic mode for example?
I believe the only time they are unlinked is Enduro mode so you can slide the rear wheel in corners.
Subscriber from India❤️
Hi Kiran, welcome and thanks for Subscribing. A trip to India is something I'd love to do! Thanks.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist You are most welcome 🙏🏻😊
It's beast 😈...
At 260kg plus it certainly is!
Thank you for the great interview/review .................
Hi Jo, thanks for your comment. Very welcome I'm glad we talked some sense 😊
When is too much, too much? I always judge a bike on "user ability". By that i mean, does it suit your overall life style, rider ability etc. Is it something you live with every day, of do you have to put it away, till you're in holiday mode, and ride something more practical for your every day needs. I guess that's the question we all have to ask ourselves aye?
Hi Kevin, thanks for the comment. I agree here, two bikes which I would say are outside my 'comfortable' as in just hop on an ride user ability are 1) big ADV bikes over 230kg and 2) 1000cc sports bikes. I'm happy to ride smaller and lighter bikes, just as much fun!
Make absolutely sure you know how expensive all BMW motorcycle service is, especially the labor rates and price of fluids, filters, tire changes and all other parts, BEFORE you go and buy a BMW car or especially their motorcycles.
To be honest, I wouldn't buy a GS. Not because it's not a super motorcycle but it's too much money tied up in some metal and I don't need all that power, tech and complexity even before expensive servicing comes into it. Thanks 👍
Yep. Seat options once you go rally is ridiculous. And no the dealer can’t do anything about it. Other than you eating lots of money to buy things twice basically.
Such a shame, this is one of these reasons not to go Rally. Thanks for your comment bike life 👍
@@MindfulMotorcyclist yeah anyone can see what I’m saying or what he was saying. If you choose rally it will essentially remove any and all other things you add. You have to go rally then buy every thing after. But especially when it comes to the seat you can’t change anything once you go rally. The solution is to do the factory low suspension with the low seat and then add all the rally options without picking the full rally package. Which will get you 90% of the way there
riding comparison between gs and ds?
Hi Buy accident, I didn't actually ride his bike as we ran out of time. The GS would comprehensively outperform my bike '500DSX' in every category except perhaps price. This video is perhaps aimed at potential GS buyers and my bike is just there to make the shot look more interesting 😎
@@MindfulMotorcyclist yes, it was very good and in depth video. It would be good to know if say after 1h of driving each bike you could "feel" the $10.000 difference. All the electronic and gadgets aside, just pure driving, how different are they. That would be a good comparison video that i would love to see as well.
@@buyaccident Agree, 100%. Unfortunately, there was only limited time for this video as we had to head into Reims to meet other friends. Andy is based in Germany and I am based in the UK. In between we were also dodging the rain. That said, the Voge as specified (with hard aluminium luggage) is £5,999 and the BMW is £21,485. Is it better, sure but is it over 4x better. That is more up for debate.
I would say one advantage of the DS is that it is significantly lighter. You can actually manoeuvre the bike on tricky off road sections. Of course, it’s best to compare the DS with the smaller BMW GS bikes.
@@AndyRhodes Do you think the GS310? or perhaps the 750? The DS sits right in the middle with it's
How much is it?.
Hi Rajab, thanks for the question. Using the configuration tool on BMW own website its £15,780 as standard with no options and with the options shown here it's £21,485. Thanks.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist I have not understood by these words, standards and options clarify me boss.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist but do we have those bikes in Uganda?.
As far as I can tell, there is no BMW dealership there but probably a distributor. I suggest Google or contacting BMW directly.
$28K US here in the states, a pretty penny
It is definitely not an investment, as soon as you roll it out of the dealership you have lost a couple thousand pounds just in a few minutes. 8 or 9 years old the bike is worth half the initial price. Bike and car prices will return to the normal depreciation curve when the supply of chips is resolved, in fact second hand cars are reducing in value due to economic conditions (7.6.22), potential recession looming this year.
Hi Jean, thanks for your comment. I agree that you lose a lot of value as soon as the motorcycle (or any vehicle) becomes '2nd hand'. The loss of value of the bike over 8-9 years is I guess the cost of having the modern bike with the power/performance/reliability etc over those years. If it was me looking for a bike at this level I would probably look at one 4-5 years old with low miles. However, the supply of chips won't be resolved anytime soon, TSMC are constructing another foundry but this is scheduled to come online in 2025. In the meantime you have everything from smartphones to smart appliances to Nvidia ramping up its 4000 series production. All this creates a lot of chip demand with a stable supply level and further to this auto manufacturers are low on the priority list. On the final point a recession is probably coming so I agree with that! Thanks for the comment.
@@MindfulMotorcyclist Just remember you can’t take it with you, enjoy life while you can, you never know what is around the corner, have fun with the new bike, be safe.
@@jeanjacques9980 agreed!
So I was looking for a 1 year old GS before I bought this one. The price was only a 1-2k euro saving from a new one and it didn’t come with the new lights etc. so due to the supply chain issues due to covid, right now, it made sense to buy a new one and the price drop after 1 gear is not as substantial. Just my 2 cents
@@AndyRhodes I’m finding out the same myself. I guess if I could find a used one set up already and save on that cost, that would be nice.. but I’m leaning towards new as well
Oh guys come on. If you didn’t speak English, there’d be no way of knowing that you weren’t actually discussing funeral packages.
Thank you for the comment and the engagement on this content. It's all appreciated 👍
Just a bit boring
He's been in Germany for 8 years, what do you expect man 😉 (only kidding Andy)