Back in '84, we had a couple ride into our shop in south Texas that had been around the world on one of these. It had a Windjammer and bags. He was a tall, dark haired Swede, and she was a multi lingual Japanese woman. They said the toughest part was crossing the Sahara. He said they only ate about 20-30% of their normal caloric intake, while drinking so much water to stay alive. He said they had to get off and push multiple times per day in the deep sand. I just can't imagine doing that on that heavy of a bike. He said their ride through North America had been a piece of cake. They needed a seal to stop a minor oil leak, and new tires. We called the newspaper, and they did a nice story on them.
IT, that is a really nice bike. Hopefully someone will want it when it warms up.
Somewhere on ADVrider, there's a more recent very long account of a guy from S Korea who flew to the USA, bought a Fiddy, and rode all over the USA with it...... even a non-rider should be impressed with what some people manage to pull off, on application inappropriate wheels.....
Those '84 riders...... seriously tough or crazy.... likely both. I read of a fatality in Oz from the heat - lone rider middle of nowhere, eventually found sitting at the side of the road in all his gear - desiccated. Water always matters, but it's way too easy to underestimate what you need in those temps.
I have vivid memories of the smaller version of that XS, 500 IIRC. Friend's sister's boyfriend had one.... always liked the paint scheme on those. I'm pretty sure the 500 had dual points...... my buddy held a
huge party at his parent's place - I stayed afterwards, to help clean up b4 his parent's got home...... 6:00am rolls around, and sis's boyfriend goes to leave for work......
Long ago, but I still remember well that morning. Owner comes back in.... couldn't kick it over...... TWO of us end up pushing the bike down the street
with him on it, in gear, before it would finally fire !
Not picking on Yammy..... twas a nice bike for the day..... all points needed regular service, and a dual-point setup could be challenging for a backyard wrench.
Rgds, D.