{"id":55298,"date":"2020-05-13T09:43:21","date_gmt":"2020-05-13T13:43:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/motorcyclemojo.com\/?p=55298"},"modified":"2020-05-13T09:48:03","modified_gmt":"2020-05-13T13:48:03","slug":"bmw-f900xr-motorcycle-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/motorcyclemojo.com\/2020\/05\/bmw-f900xr-motorcycle-review\/","title":{"rendered":"New\u200c \u200cGenre,\u200c \u200cNew\u200c \u200cModel"},"content":{"rendered":"

A crossover that bridges the gap between off-road-capable and hard-on-the-body sport bike.<\/p>\n

Methinks BMW likes inventing new vehicle classifications. Maybe they really do think they are inventing something all-new. Perhaps it\u2019s just the hubris of sales success that makes them feel like they\u2019re the market leader among motorcycle manufacturers. Whatever the case \u2013 and whether it\u2019s two wheels or four \u2013 the company just loves coming up with what they think are catchy new segment \u2026 umm \u2026 segmentations.<\/p>\n

On the car side, BMW\u2019s \u201cultimate driving machine\u201d division believed that traditional sport utility vehicles didn\u2019t quite capture all that is Bayerische Motoren Werke\u2019s version of the SUV, the appellation simply too pedestrian, I suspect, and not, according to the company\u2019s marketing mavens, capturing the true essence of the Munich company\u2019s engineering. Thus did the X5, which began all this nonsense, become an SAV instead of an SUV, the former the acronym for Sports Activity Vehicle.<\/p>\n

Now you might well wonder what difference the words \u201cactivity\u201d and \u201cutility\u201d profess in what is, after all, just a two-box station wagon with a few extra centimetres of ground clearance. I would have, for example, presumed that something that was utilitarian would include a number of activities, but maybe that\u2019s just me. I suspect that what really got them off was the inventing of a new model designation. That\u2019s why, not content to just invent the Adventure Touring market \u2013 and own it with the R1250GS \u2013 BMW had to come up with something they call Adventure Sports.<\/p>\n

Introducing Another Genre<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"\"Now if you\u2019re BMW, you\u2019ll put out all manner of marketing into how the Sports version of Adventuring is more, well, sporty than the Touring varieties. Officially, you might even describe the subsegment as having \u201csporty riding dynamics combined with upright, GS-like ergonomics.\u201d But considering that the 1250GS boasts a pretty sporting-in-its-own-right 135 hp, the marketing tag line sounds like a whole lotta bull patooties to me. Indeed, as far as I can see, the major difference between an Adventure Sports and an Adventure Touring bike seems to be a 17-inch front wheel (versus 19 inches), a cut-down fairing\/windshield and, were I a cynic, a deliberately less comfortable seat. Otherwise, they look pretty darned similar to me.<\/p>\n

That\u2019s not to say they don\u2019t both suit a purpose. As BMW points out, just as Sport Tourers have gone the way of the dodo bird (supplanted by the Adventure Touring motorcycle), so too have pure sporting motorcycles. Hence, Adventure Sports bikes are the same formula applied to the Supersport category; take the same engines, foist them into something that looks like a dirt bike, massage in a dirt bike-like upright seating position and then render the whole ungainly looking mess as sporty as the superbikes they\u2019re designed to replace.<\/p>\n

A Worthy Change<\/strong><\/p>\n

Complicated \u2014 and perhaps unnecessary \u2014 nomenclature aside, Adventure Sports bikes really do serve a purpose. BMW\u2019s S1000XR, for example, is the company\u2019s superbike made amenable to those with aging lumbars and sore wrists. It\u2019s fast, it handles a treat and, most important, won\u2019t send you to the chiropractor after just an hour of riding.
\nAnd so that same formula has been applied to BMW\u2019s budget F-series. Take one F850, bore it out by two mils to 895 cc, add some very slick bodywork \u2013 impressively similar to the well-received S1000XR \u2013 and one has the new F900XR, complete with the same sporty handling and, unfortunately, similarly uncomfortable seat.<\/p>\n

It\u2019s a pretty impressive ride. In fact, having never really got along all that well with the S1000XR Adventure Sportster (the hyper engine and the relaxed riding position don\u2019t quite gel for me), I have to say that except for the seat \u2013 I will carp on that in earnest a little later \u2013 the F900XR is my new favourite BMW.<\/p>\n

Nominal Boost<\/strong><\/p>\n

First, there\u2019s the engine, which \u2013 thanks to its boost in displacement and its offset crankshaft \u2013 is more rewarding, both physically and aurally. A close look at the specs reveals that outright power is not really much increased. In fact, the peak torque is exactly the same. Also worthy of note is that BMW\u2019s North American F900s only output 99 hp
\n(compared with the BMW F850GS\u2019s 95 hp) rather than the 105 hp European versions boast. The difference is our crappy gas \u2013 96 octane being common on the Continent \u2013 and the fact that BMW\u2019s parallel twin, being its budget engine (perhaps too budget-minded) has no detonation sensor. Retarding ignition timing was thus the only solution to cope with low-octane North American fuel.<\/p>\n

Nonetheless, the extra 42 cc are well worth it. There\u2019s a healthy dose of grunt down low followed by a semi-potent top end. No, the F900\u2019s engine does not rev as hard as some of the segment\u2019s triples \u2013 aka Triumph\u2019s Tiger \u2013 but neither is this the plodding parallel twin of old. It goes good, it feels good and it sounds good, mainly because\u2026
\nLike many current twins, the F900\u2019s crank journals have been rotated by 90 degrees, creating a 270\/450-degree firing pattern rather than the traditional 360-firing order. The theory behind such machinations is that this will make a lowly parallel twin feel \u2013 and sound \u2013 like a more sophisticated V-twin.<\/p>\n

Could Easily Get You into Trouble<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"\"Unlike so many other bike manufacturers that have tried the same trick, BMW has actually made this offset crankpin thing work. Down low, there\u2019s an authoritative rumble that later translates into a pretty energetic roar \u2013 the F900 is the best-sounding stock parallel-twin I\u2019ve tested in a while. However, said offset does cause a little vibration, which BMW counters with twin counter-balancers that quench virtually all the vibes till about 6,500 rpm. By that time, thanks to surprisingly tall gearing, you\u2019ll be well into \u201carrest me now and arrest me now for stunting\u201d speeds.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, a mechanical \u201canti-hopping\u201d clutch is standard equipment and BMW throws in an optional, electronically controlled back torque limiter if you\u2019re really ham-handed at shifting. In other words, the powertrain is well done and, other than the questionable Cheap Charlie-ing in the detonation sensor area \u2013 which, as I said, costs our 900s some six horsepower \u2013 it\u2019s a worthwhile improvement over previous F models, even if there is not a gargantuan leap in power.<\/p>\n

Built to a Price<\/strong><\/p>\n

Like the engine \u2013 again, its lack of an anti-knock sensor \u2013 the F900\u2019s suspension is also built to a price. The 43-mm inverted fork is completely devoid of adjustment and the rear shock is adjustable only for rebound damping and spring preload (although, thankfully, this last has a remote hydraulic adjuster).<\/p>\n

No matter. The XR\u2019s 170 mm of travel front and rear is pretty well calibrated, firm enough to keep things on the straight and narrow when speeds get silly (remember, this is a Adventure Sports motorcycle), yet compliant enough that some of the few bumpy California roads we found were well handled. For those looking for the cheapest, again, Adventure Sports BMW they can find, the stock suspension will be more than adequate.<\/p>\n

Like many BMWs, the F900XR will offer a Dynamic ESA (electronic suspension adjustment) option. Unlike other, more costly BMWs, said electronically adjusted damping will be available in the rear. The front will continue with manual \u2013 actually, there\u2019s no \u2013 adjustability.<\/p>\n

We didn\u2019t test the F900\u2019s ESA system; BMW hasn\u2019t ramped up production yet and so there were no ESA-equipped F900s available to ride. Therefore, I can offer no concrete evaluation of those bikes. However, I will say this: the stock suspension was adequate enough that should I were riding mostly solo, I might forgo the expense of the ESA system. Were I, however, often riding with a passenger, I might fork over the $910 BMW Canada wants for the Comfort package \u2013 which also includes Keyless Ride and a centre stand \u2014 mainly because the standard preload adjuster is a bit hard to reach.<\/p>\n

Handles Well<\/strong><\/p>\n

Either way, the 900XR will handle a treat. Light weight always being a virtue, the F900 is easy to bend into bends \u2013 there are plenty, as you\u2019ve read, in California \u2013 the XR tracking precisely, neither falling in or requiring extra effort to keep on an intended line. That\u2019s helped by reasonably sized (at least, by today\u2019s standards) tires \u2013 a 120\/70R17 on the front and a 180\/55R17 on the rear \u2013 and the leverage offered by the wide Adventure-style handlebar. If you\u2019re looking for a reason, besides cost, to opt for 900XR instead of its monstrous 1,000 cc sibling, this fleetness of foot is the F900\u2019s best foot forward.<\/p>\n

As for comfort, the F900\u2019s success is dependent on your outlook. If you\u2019re comparing it with an adventure-touring bike \u2013 say, a R1250GS or even an F850GS \u2013 then wind protection is lacking and the seat uncomfortable. Of the two, the latter is more problematic. There\u2019s the standard shield \u2013 there is a no-cost short \u201csport\u201d shield available \u2013 and, in its lowest position, it offers a decent balance between coverage and lack of turbulence.<\/p>\n

The seat, on the other hand, may be the firmest plank ever offered on a stock motorcycle. Seriously, its sculpted shape isn\u2019t altogether bad, but why BMW thought that foam with the consistency of concrete might be a boon to posterior comfort remains a mystery. One clue is that the naked F900R bike, despite having almost 40 mm less suspension travel only has a 10 mm lower seat height, the difference made up by the XR\u2019s thinner perch. Whatever the case, if you\u2019re looking for the difference between Sports and Touring versions of BMWs Adventure bikes, look no further than their seats.<\/p>\n

Sophisticated Brakes<\/strong><\/p>\n

As for features and gadgets, BMW is, as you can tell by the suspension options, really trying to keep the price of the F900s down. That\u2019s not to say there are no high-tech features; simply, they are Spartan. All F900s get LED headlights and Bluetooth connectivity. Anti-lock brakes are also standard issue and quite a sophisticated example of the breed. Not only are the front calipers four-pot affairs, but the hydraulics modulating all the ABS-ing are quite unobtrusive, it being extremely hard to feel the hydraulic pressure cycling even when you know the anti-lock electronics are doing their thing.<\/p>\n

There is quite a long list of high-tech options, the most useful of which \u2013 at least, the ones I think are useful \u2013 are a keyless ignition system ($315), adaptive cornering lights, the aforementioned Dynamic ESA system ($910 in the aforementioned Comfort package) and BMW\u2019s very well-engineered Gear Shift Assistant Pro (part of the Dynamic package, which costs $850).<\/p>\n

Other options, less useful for anyone other than the person who needs everything, are ABS Pro (for those wanting to ABS deep into corners), dynamic brake control (to prevent the truly clumsy from accidentally hitting the gas while braking hard) and traction control (unless it\u2019s really slippery, the 895-cc twin won\u2019t be taxing the rear 180-mm section rear tire enough to warrant its inclusion). Ditto for the Riding Modes Pro option ($475), which adds Dynamic and Dynamic Pro modes to the standard Road and Rain. This is a little hubris on BMWs part, charging for what is simply a software upgrade; the hardware and much of the software, save a couple of additional algorithms, are already built into the standard bike. Besides, I preferred Rain mode to Dynamic anyway.<\/p>\n

Somewhat cynical options lists and stiff-as-a-plank seating aside, the F900XR is the best bike I have tested from BMW in quite some time. Fast enough for all but the truly power-mad, it handles a treat, has a most excellent riding position and decent suspension. And, for the final coup de gr\u00e2ce, it\u2019s quite affordable, the cost-cutting I may have lamented before actually resulting in its competitive \u2013 by BMW Adventure bike standards \u2013 MSRP of just $12,800. It\u2019s the BMW I would buy were I determined to ride German. It might even be enough to convince me that Adventure Sports is really a thing.<\/p>\n

The 2020 BMW F900R<\/strong><\/p>\n

\"\"Take one 2020 F900XR, shorten the suspension, remove all the bodywork and then alter the riding position to quasi-caf\u00e9 racer and you have BMW\u2019s latest R, the F900.<\/p>\n

Since the R\u2019s engine is the same 895 cc of offset-crank parallel goodness as the F900XR, it fairly sings at high rpm while also generating lots of user-friendly low-end grunt. The engine is also fairly smooth, thanks to twin counter-balancing shafts that pretty much eliminate all vibes up to 6,500 rpm \u2013 by which time, in sixth gear, you\u2019re hanging on for dear life against a pretty strong wind blast.<\/p>\n

The handling \u2013 the R rides on essentially a lowered version of the XR\u2019s frame \u2013 is unsurprisingly sprightly. Equally impressive are the brakes, with the four-pot front calipers squeezing substantial 320 mm discs. Plus, like all BMWs\u2019 brakes, they\u2019re controlled by antilock braking electronics, making all that \u201cWhoa!\u201d power compatible with relatively inexperienced riders.<\/p>\n

And there will be quite a few F900R riders with minimal \u2013 even no \u2013 experience. BMW states that, amongst other statistics, 15 per cent of all F800R owners bought this surprisingly large BMW as their first bike. A third of those rank novices were women. Yup, fully five per cent of the people who bought F800Rs were women who had never owned another motorcycle. And I thought they were the sensible sex!<\/p>\n

It\u2019s not a certitude that the F900R will keep that novice-friendly appeal. It is more powerful (although, admittedly, just a smidge) and has a decidedly sportier \u2013 that should be read as \u201cuncomfortable, aggressive and less novice-friendly\u201d \u2013 riding position. On the other hand, the engine, when just poodling along, is a pussycat; there are available safety features galore; and the R\u2019s seat, being deeper than the XR\u2019s, is both more comfortable and lower.<\/p>\n

Even the F900\u2019s one weakness \u2013 suspension that is either too crude or too stiff, or both \u2013 may lend it some big-bike bona fides with the novice set \u2013 the tendency to feel every bump and crevasse in the road is the type of thing novices expect from a \u201creal\u201d motorcycle. \u201cIf I can\u2019t handle it, it must be a genuine monster\u201d is the kind of self-deprecating admission that allows too many people \u2013 everyone from owners of original whaletail Porsches to the people who \u201clay down\u201d their Harley because the brakes are so crappy \u2013 to mistake flaw for attribute. In fact, the R\u2019s major problem is that there\u2019s about 40 mm less travel than the XR and when you\u2019re talking \u201cbasic\u201d \u2013 neither the R nor the XR offer much in the way of adjustability \u2013 more suspension travel is always better.<\/p>\n

One more reason I suspect the F900R will continue to be popular with completely novice riders is its modest $10,350 MSRP. That\u2019s smack dab in the middle of the middleweight naked segment \u2013 more than enough to remain popular with those new, or almost new, to riding motorcycles.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

A crossover that bridges the gap between off-road-capable and hard-on-the-body sport bike. Methinks BMW likes inventing new vehicle classifications. Maybe they really do think they are inventing something all-new. Perhaps it\u2019s just the hubris of sales success that makes them feel like they\u2019re the market leader among motorcycle manufacturers. Whatever the case \u2013 and whether […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":55299,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[366,1842,1883,1853,1852],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\n2020 BMW F900XR Motorcycle Review | Motorcycle Mojo<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"In the June 2020 issue of Motorcycle Mojo magazine, we take a look at the newest motorcycle from BMW; the 2020 BMW F900XR. Click here to read about it.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/motorcyclemojo.com\/2020\/05\/bmw-f900xr-motorcycle-review\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"2020 BMW F900XR Motorcycle Review | Motorcycle Mojo\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"In the June 2020 issue of Motorcycle Mojo magazine, we take a look at the newest motorcycle from BMW; the 2020 BMW F900XR. 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