Saturday 27 September 2014

The Touring Thread

Over the years, I've done a lot of motorcycle touring.  Figured I should get some thoughts down.

Those that know me know that I'm a fan of the sportier side of touring.  I ride sport-touring bikes, and find them comfortable for 12+ hour days if my schedule demands it.

So far, these are the bikes I've ridden over decent distances:

1992 Suzuki Katana 750

The '92 Katana 750 was my first bike.  I think I got it around July 2004 I think, had it for about 2 years.

It is a pretty heavy beast, but it was cheap, and widely available in the used market.  I got mine for a steal, and it was the perfect bike to learn on.  Maybe a little fast, but it was stable, fit me perfectly, and it could take a beating.

I commuted with this bike constantly from Oakville.  I would often get up at 05:30 to check the weather, to decide if I wanted to get on the road before 06:45 and beat the traffic.  I could just barely stuff the work laptop into my Joe Rocket Blaster tank bag, but this gave me the freedom of not having to wear a backpack.

Besides provincial rides, my first big ride was to Winnipeg for a week.  Soft tail bags, tank bag.  Perhaps about 4500km or so, no rain.  The ride went excellently and in the end, I was hooked.  

The Katana used a maintenance-required battery, and I had never experienced one of those before.  When I got on the bike on the second morning in Bruce Mines, the bike refused to start.  Nothing.  Not even a rrrr-sound or a clicky from the starter.  Oh crap.

It didn't take long to decide the battery was dead.  Then it hit me, the battery had little screwtops over each cell, meaning it needed to be occasionally topped up with distilled water.  I figured I had cooked the battery, but I happened to have a bit of distilled water in my tank bag.  Poured a bit into the battery and it started!  It worked fine for the rest of the ride.

One negative experience; I had a little electronic clock stuck to the bike's dash, and someone took it while I slept in Ignace (I believe).  Left me a bit miffed.

Unfortunately, that bike didn't last long; I put about 40000km on it before I finally blew its engine.  Not bad for my first 1.5 years though.  Katanae are known to have soft cams.  Also, it is air/oil cooled, and doesn't have an engine temperature meter.  After a couple of oil boilovers that left the engine starved for oil, the cams were shot, the pistons were hitting the valves and one day, *bang*, a valve broke off, jammed the piston head, causing the connecting rod to explode out the side of the engine block.  I still have the valve head on my keyboard at home, after pulling it from where it got embedded in my fairings after the explosion.  :)

I also drained its battery a handful of times.  I understand that motorcycles often don't generate enough amperage at idle to charge the battery, Toronto's rush-hour traffic causes a lot of idling, and my GPS is always playing something.  I became quite intimate with bump-starting bikes.

GPS:  Garmin Vista (useless), Garmin Quest (destroyed 3 through vibrations), Garmin Zumo 550.
Soft saddle bags:  First Gear
Tank bag:  Joe Rocket Blaster

1998 Suzuki Katana 750

I went without a bike for most of a season, then got a beater Katana from a friend of mine around July 2006.  It really was a beater; he had previously ridden it into a guardrail and had reassembled it.

I put maybe 8000km on the bike in the year I had it, and no really noteworthy trips.

The bike was never very reliable.  I always had a fluctuating power delivery problem that drove me nuts.  I kept pouring more and more money into it, but finally had to give up on it when I realized I couldn't trust it for long trips.  I saw an opportunity for a ride to Winnipeg (and with vacation time, perhaps more) and had to sort that out.  And thus:

2000 Honda VFR800FI

This bike changed everything.  Fuel injected, water cooled, modern, good aftermarket support (including hard luggage options), excellent power (for me, at the time), etc.  I picked it up in June 2007.  It had about 14000km on it, and was about twice the price of my Katanae, but so worth it.

Within weeks of buying the bike, I did my first road trip.  It was utterly random; I had little idea where I was going or what I was doing.  I was still sporting soft bags, I didn't bring any rain gear, I was just "going east".

I ran into a couple friends at a couple service stations around Cornwall, and ended up following them on a "Chowdah Ride" to Bangor, Maine.  Twice a day, Chiller, the lead rider, would ask "Are you going to stay with us or go off on your own?", to which I would smile and shrug.  Stuck with them through the whole ride, though I admit part of that was because their route happened to miss a lot of rain through Eastern Canada.

The passion I felt for this bike was beyond anything I was prepared for.  I HAD to ride. Every waking minute, I felt like I was letting myself down by not riding.  

The big ride came in August; I lit out of home on August 24th, bound for Winnipeg.  I had hard luggage by now.  I was feeling a financial pinch, so I camped out roughly 50% of the time.

After a week of work in Winnipeg, I took a couple west-coast friends up on their offers for places to stay.  Rode across Canada along the Yellowhead highway, up through Grand Prairie AB, over to Mackenzie BC, then down through Hope BC and onto Vancouver.  

After a couple days at one friend's place, I took the ferry from Tsawwassen to Victoria, then rode west to the Pacific Rim National Park and Tofino.  Camped out in the park for a night, then headed back to Vancouver.

After staying at another friend's place in Vancouver, I took the Trans-Canada highway back home.  Met with some cold weather through the Prairies and then some drizzling rain, and had to don the rain gear just to cut the wind.

I had a lot of things on my mind for that ride; though I had 4 weeks vacation available, I only took 3 weeks.  I suspected I was going to quit my job soon after getting back, and knew with pro-rated vacation days and only 3/4rs through the year, I didn't really have the full 4 weeks to consume.  

I got to think a lot about leaving my job during the ride, and the entire ride was an expression of selfishness; if I found myself thinking about my book while I rode, I pulled over and read my book (always handy in my tank bag).  Then when I found my thoughts wandering to the open road while reading, I'd put the book away and get back to the ride.  

By time I arrived home, I felt like I had achieved something significant.  I had a spectacular ride, I saw things I had never dreamed of (Vancouver, Vancouver Island, the Prairies, etc etc etc) and I didn't feel like I NEEDED to ride again for a week.  I felt completely calm and centered.  

This trip was just the beginning.  
  1. June 2008 - Orlando for my first Cisco Networkers
  2. August 2008 - James Bay Hydro Electric Project in Quebec
  3. September 2008 - PEI and Halifax
  4. June 2009
    1. San Francisco for Cisco Networkers Live, 
    2. up to Fort Bragg and then down to Santa Maria, 
    3. over to Arkansas, then home
  5. August 2009 - PEI and St. Johns Newfoundland
  6. June 2010 - Cisco Live ride
    1. Las Vegas for Cisco Live
    2. down to San Diego
    3. every inch that I could of coastal highways (1, 101, etc) up to Vancouver
    4. Vancouver Island, then the Sunshine Coast
    5. back across Canada
  7. September 2010 - Chowdah and then random ride
    1. Bar Harbor Maine, 
    2. down along coast, then the Blue Ridge Parkway, Deals Gap,
    3. Atlanta, then home.
  8. July 2011 - Cisco Live ride
    1. Las Vegas for Cisco Live
    2. beeline up to Hyder Alaska,
    3. back down into the US, finish off my 49 States
    4. visited Aerostich in Duluth Minnesota
    5. home through Michigan
At this point, I knew the VFR was getting a big old; it now had over 160000km on it, and I expected its maintenance was going to start hurting.

It should also be mentioned that I had countless drained batteries with the VFR as well.  

I had always felt an attraction to the Honda CBR1100xx Blackbird, and I found one for a good price out in Cobourg Ontario.  Once I brought that home though, the VFR was just collecting dust, so at the end of 5.5 years, I parked the VFR at a logistics joint in Orlando in February 2012 to get it ready for my European love affair.

Now things start to get complicated, as I have two bikes on two continents.

GPS:  Zumo 550, quickly replaced with the Zumo 660.
Luggage:

  • Givi Wingrack II,
  • 2 x Givi 21l cruiser side boxes,
  • Givi 33l Trekker side boxes, (final)
  • Givi 45l E45 top box,
  • Givi 46l Trekker top box, (final)
  • Joe Rocket Blaster tank bag (worn out)
  • Rapid Transit Big City magnetic tank bag (final)

2003 Honda CBR1100xx Blackbird

In late 2011, I bought a used Blackbird.  I lusted over this bike for years, and my driving record was finally clean enough that I could afford insurance on one.

One of my first trips was probably a Deals Gap run for the May 24 weekend 2012.  The ride back was brutal; my seat broke my butt.  I promptly bought a noname "touring seat" online, and it made a world of difference.

Then the problems started with the bike.  There is an electrical fault somewhere on the bike that was causing the engine to cut out and the battery to drain all the time.  I never really figured it out.

I was faced with dead batteries so often on the Blackbird that I resorted to carrying a spare fully-charged battery in my top box.

On one ride down to Deals Gap, the bike completely died in the middle of nowhere in Virginia.  Whatever electrical fault I'd been having, it was now completely killing the bike to the point that it couldn't even start.  My GPS searched for nearby shops with "Honda" in the name and their phone numbers, and the first one I called dispatched a pickup to come and rescue me.

The lead technician at the shop checked things out, and discovered a bad wiring job by the previous owner; when he cut the old rear signal leads to put on the Givi Wingrack, he did a pretty bad re-splicing job.  Whenever the brake and/or signal lights were used a lot, it would warm up the wires, cause a break, corrupt the ground, and that caused the engine's tilt sensor to believe the bike was upside down, thus shutting down the engine.  He resoldered the connections and ran a clean ground back to the lights, and I was on the road again.

Throughout, the Blackbird has enjoyed lighting up its FI (fuel injection) fault light.  That has not gone away.  It might take 4 hours before it comes on, or it might take as little as 2 minutes.  Restarting the engine might make it go away for 4 hours or 2 minutes.  Every minute that light is on, I expect the bike to die miserably.

This was no way to live.

Then one fateful December 2012 day, I rode the Blackbird to the manufacturer motorcycle show once hosted at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre.  Of course, I had to swap batteries before that ride.  Then, in the last 2km or so to the show, the bike died.  Once on the Spadina off-ramp, once along Lakeshore, and once just as I was turning left into the ringed driveway in front of MTCC South, with hundreds of motorcycle enthusiasts taking note of the Winter rider with the dying bike.  I was angry.

Walking into the show, just a little to the right of the entrance, was a new 2013 black BMW K1300S.  I threw a leg over it, and the bike felt just like my Blackbird.  It was wonderful.  It was a sign.  It was hurting my wallet.

I wandered in a somewhat zombie state for about 30 minutes until it hit me; I didn't remember hooking the custom ground wire for my rear signals when I put the battery back in.  That was very likely the reason the Blackbird was so miserable.  Whew, I was saved from a spontaneous purchase!  For a while, anyway.  I never forgot how good it felt to sit on that BMW with a warranty.

In November 2013, I rode the Blackbird down to Orlando as the next European bike.  (Finally bought the BMW K1300S in July 2013)

But I'm getting ahead of myself, because the VFR story was far from over.

GPS:  Zumo 660
Luggage:

  • Givi Wingrack II
  • 2 x 46l E460N boxes (rarely use, came with the bike)
  • often used the 21l cruiser boxes
  • 1 x 52l E52 Tech top box

2000 Honda VFR800FI, the continuing saga

The place I worked has a cool policy; after every 4th year with the company, you get an extra 4 weeks "sabbatical" to use.  I banked all the regular vacation I could, and planned a 7 week vacation of riding around Europe.  Then I had to sort out my ride.  Do I rent, buy, or ship a bike over?

For note, buying a bike in Europe is very difficult.  In general, you need insurance to buy a bike, and insurance requires a permanent address.  Wheatwhacker from Ireland can help buy a bike for you, if you like.  

However, I found a company called Knopftours in Germany.  Many people on online forums had raved about Stefan Knopf.  They take care of shipping, storage, maintenance, shuttle bus service from Frankfurt airport, insurance, roadside assistance, bed&breakfast, and everything else motorrad.  My VFR was collecting dust, and this seemed utterly perfect.

Over the 2012 family day long weekend, I rode the VFR down to Orlando Florida to have it shipped to Europe.  Flew back to Toronto, and waited for my vacation to start.

Stephan has a shipping container in Orlando that he fills with bikes every spring and floats over to Heidelberg around April, then floats it back in October.  His rates are excellent, about USD1300, as long as you understand you aren't getting your bike back any time soon.  In my case, I was going to leave the VFR over there until it finally died.  He then charges a piddling USD300/year for storing your bike.

So in July 2012, I flew to Germany to give my VFR some more love.  And much love was given.  

In approximate order:
  • Germany
  • Switzerland
  • Germany
  • Switzerland
  • France
  • Switzerland (to visit CERN, got into an above-ground tour)
  • France
  • UK (went for a group ride with Charley Boorman, visited Misha and Basia)
  • France
  • Belgium
  • Luxembourg
  • Germany
  • Austria (visited Michael)
  • Italy (little ride through the Alps)
  • Austria
  • Germany
  • flew back to Ontario for a family reunion weekend, 2 days
  • Germany
  • Denmark
  • Sweden (visited Jorgen)
  • Norway
  • Denmark
  • Germany
  • Czech Republic
  • Austria
  • Slovakia
  • Austria (visited Michael again)
  • Hungary (visited Barna)
  • Croatia
  • Slovenia
  • Austria
  • France
  • Spain
  • Andorra
  • France
  • Germany
  • and after about 16000 km, flew back home in September 2012.
In the following year, I managed to accrue another 7 weeks of time off.  Off to Europe I went again!
  • July 2013 - 
    • Germany, 
    • France, 
    • England, 
    • Scotland, 
    • Wales, 
    • England, 
    • France, 
    • Belgium, 
    • Germany, 
    • 2 weeks
  • Sept 2013 - 
    • France, Spain, Portugal, 2 weeks
    • Germany, Oktoberfest
    • Germany.  VFR died, put to rest.  Rented a 2008 BMW R1200GS
    • Switzerland, France, CERN OpenDays 
    • Germany.  GS died.  Rented a 2013 BMW 318D Diesel.
    • 4 weeks total
  • December 2013 - rented a 2013 F800GT from IMTbike.com
    • Spain
    • Portugal
    • Gibraltar
    • Spain
    • 2 weeks.

2013 BMW K1300S

In July 2013, I took delivery of a new black 2013 BMW K1300S from Budd's Motorrad in Oakville..  It took about 6 weeks to come in, and that was because it was already booked to come to Canada.

Due to my self-inflicted unemployment, I haven't had the time or the finances to do many big trips.  The only trip I've done so far is San Francisco in May 2014 for Cisco Live.

The K1300S is a wonderful bike.  Powerful, stable, smooth.  

The stock front wheel is really soft, and quickly developed a couple flat spots.  And when I had new rubber put on the bike at 10000km, Rider's Choice forgot to balance the rear (being so distracted by the flat spotted front), causing my 10000km San Francisco ride to be 7500km of ridiculous vibrations,  I had Woody's Wheelworks in Denver tend first to the front wheel, then to the rear when they discovered the misbalancing.

I can't say my experiences with the typical BMW service agency in Canada has been spectacular either; Budd's Motorrad is seriously under-staffed and under-spaced; when I called in for my 20000km mandatory maintenance in May, they told me they were taking bookings for end of July at that point.  Since I was already over 20000km, they were basically telling me not to ride the bike for 2 months through the summer.  Fortunately, Wolfs BMW in London Ontario only had a 1 month wait on bookings, so I had the bike taken care of there.

Otherwise, I've been using the bike for commuting, and lots of runs around Ontario.  It loves getting tickets.

GPS:  Garmin Zumo 660, now replaced by Zumo 590LM
Luggage:
  • SW-Motech top box mount and Givi adapter aluminum plate
  • Givi removable tubular sidebox mounting kit
  • Givi 52l E52 Tech top box
  • 2 x Givi 21l cruiser boxes
  • thinking about getting the new Givi E22 22l side boxes, would suit the bike better.
  • BMW large fitted tank bag (not what I wanted, Budds screwed me.)
  • Bags-Connection Electric Quick-Lock EVO Micro tankbag, excellent

Garmin Zumo 590LM install and my PDM60

I managed to get the Zumo 590LM mounted on my BMW K1300S.

I also finally installed a PDM60 power distribution module to, obviously, distribute power to my (currently only one) accessory.

The PDM60 is a pretty neat little bit of kit; (up to) 60A of switched power, completely solid state, across 6 power feeds.  There is a little pseudo-rs232 (I suspect) on the back of it, allowing you to program the ports for max amps and the hows and whens that they get powered, using their dashboard software.  No fuses; if you trip a circuit, you just need to reset the PDM60 by turning your bike off and back on again.
  • Note, their PDM60 cable is actually a USB-serial adapter, so you need to hit file/options, select the PDM60 cable, then pick the com port.
The PDM60 is best served when powered directly from the battery.  It has three options (or a mix therein) for powering each accessory lead; ignition trigger, external switch trigger, or always powered.

By default, the PDM60 needs the ignition trigger, essentially just something that gets 12v applied when the bike is started.  On the K1300S, this was pretty simple; there is a CAN bus accessory plug just behind the steering yolk under the battery cover.  I bought the BMW CAN bus plug (BMW part number 611656), and tied the PDM60's ignition trigger wire into wire 3 (12v).  I did not connect the other two CAN bus plug wires to anything.

The space under the K1300S fairings is a bit tight.  I chose to mount it on the right side, as that's the "up" side when on the kickstand, giving better visibility, etc.  This may bite me in the butt later, as that may also be the "hot" side, but we'll see.

There is a small visible area between the upper and lower fairings, near where my right knee would be.  This is where I stuck the PDM60.  I had to cut away some of the PDM60's housing to make it fit. 


I ended up routing the PDM60 wires a bit forward, then under and around the air inlet.  This brought the wires up right head of the positive battery terminal.

The PDM60 has a 7 second delay after ignition before it powers its accessories by default.  It also keeps your items powered for 60 seconds after you turn off your bike, by default.

I now have a couple more electrical things to wire to the PDM60, including my Bags-Connection electrified tank bag, and perhaps a dedicated USB plug for either my phone mount or my Garmin VIRB Elite camera.  I'll get around to that some day!

3G Router at the Cottage

I've been spending as much time as possible this summer at a friend's cottage near Lake St. Peter, Ontario.

My laptop usually runs long-lived connections (upwards of a dozen SSH sessions in particular, perhaps a VPN or two in support of those SSH connections, an RDP or two, etc).  Once upon a time, I had its mPCIe slot filled with a nice Gobi 4000 LTE modem, but in my undying quest for more local storage, replaced it with a Crucial M500 240GB mSATA module.  So these days, I'm depending on my iDevices' hotspot feature.

Unfortunately, there are compromises and annoyances with this approach, as each device (iPhone 5, iPhone 4, iPad 3) has a particular role in my life.  iPhone 5 is my auxiliary brain on iOS 6, iPhone 4 is running a couple iOS 7-only apps (like Ingress), and the iPad is an auxiliary visual cortex with a lot of games and also iOS 7.

Having to reestablish those connections after using the iDevice for other things is tedious.

It would be grand if my iDevice wireless hotspot capabilities were stable, but they're not.  Regardless of which iDevice, both iOS 6 and 7 stop serving over wireless after some random period of idleness, requiring restarting the hotspot function, bringing another wave of manual reconnections.  Meh.

Anyway, I finally thought of something I could try.  I've had a Bell MC998D HSPA+ USB modem forever, but I could never get it working on my laptop.  I figured it was simply DOA off eBay.  With this terminal thought in mind, I checked eBay for another option to try things again, and found an overlooked Bell U679 LTE USB modem for pocket change.

When I got the U679 in, I tried it on the laptop and it worked!

Then I realized, I have a now-unused ASUS RT-N66U wireless router still in my kitchen's ceiling.  Checked online and found that though it doesn't list supporting either of my 3G modems, it does support some.

Upgraded the router's firmware to the latest, and gave the 3G modems a go.  To my surprise, I found the opposite condition; the router can't seem to bring up a connection on the U679 LTE modem, but it brought up the MC998D HSPA+ modem with relative grace.

I brought the router and both USB modems with me to the cottage, and couldn't get either modem going again.  It was frustrating.  I did some research all over again, and after repaving the 3G WAN configuration on the router again, managed to get the MC998D connected.

I'm using a spare Bell LTE micro SIM with an adapter to work in both the MC998D and U679.  These are the settings I used that finally got things going:

Location:  Canada
ISP:  Rogers (yeah, I know, I'm on Bell)
Network Type:  Auto (other options are 3G, 4G, both, etc)
APN service:  pda.bell.ca
Dial Number:  *99#
PIN, Username, Password all empty
USB Adapter:  Auto (other options are 3G modems I don't own)

In particular, that dial number seems important.  I might play with that more before I leave, but I don't want to mess with it and possibly ruin the good thing I've got going right now.

Older guides called for pda2.bell.ca, and I'm sure I had that working in Mississauga, but it didn't work up here.  Under USA, there's a Bell Mobility option, but I never got that working either.

At this time, I've got excellent wireless connectivity throughout the cottage and area, and it has been rock solid for 2 days now.  Very handy.

The ASUS GUI also tells me how much data I've consumed, which is very handy to monitor how close to my 5GB cap I'm getting.  A couple visits ago I tried Netflix on the iPad and in the space of about 4 hours, I managed to consume 9GB of data without realizing.

Saturday 9 August 2014

Garmin Zumo 590LM

At long last, Garmin came out with a new flagship motorcycle GPS, the Zumo 590LM.

My old GPS was the Zumo 660, bought in 2009.  Before that was the Zumo 550, bought in 2007.  Last night, I bought the 590LM.

First off, the Zumo series are motorcycle GPSs from Garmin.  Vibration proof, weatherproof, gasoline proof, reasonably sun proof, and bloody tough.  I vibrated three Garmin Quest II GPSs to death (under warranty) on my old Suzuki Katana before I dropped serious coin on the Zumo 550, and I never looked back.

The Zumo 550 was a great GPS.  Did most things well, and the bluetooth support was seriously improved over 2 years of firmware updates.  Then days before a ride to San Francisco, it blew out one of its audio channels.  Thus the Zumo 660 entered my life.

The Zumo 660 has some nice features over the 550, including 3D display (as opposed to looking straight down on the map), bigger screen, Lane Assist (tells you what lane to be in for an upcoming decision), and 3D Lane Assist (shows you upcoming lanes and ramps, and puts an arrow on the lane/ramp you need to take).  I'm sure there were more features, but I've forgotten.

Unfortunately, the Zumo 660's bluetooth is useless.  Yay, they added A2DP for stereo goodness, but broke their phone audio gateway function into oblivion, and years of firmware updates did nothing to solve it.  I eventually gave up hoping, and fortunately I didn't have a job with pager duty that required me to be callable 24/7 anymore.

One thing I got into obsessively with the Zumo 660 and my rides is listening to audiobooks.  At first, I tried publicly available MP3 versions of audiobooks, but their volumes were often too low, the audio hissy, etc.  In anticipation of another epic ride, I wanted to sort this out.  The Zumo 550 and 660 ship with an Audible audiobook reader, so I tried out a free book and was seriously impressed, despite my hatred of DRM.

One shortcoming of listening to audiobooks as MP3s is the length of the MP3.  Even if the book is cut into 8 hour chunks (I love epic length 18+ hour audiobooks), missing a couple seconds of a book while concentrating on a traffic event results in minutes of rewind, just due to hitting the rewind button long enough that it doesn't think you're stepping back to a previous file.  Not so with Audible; their reader's rewind button is sensible for the task.

So I eventually started buying Audible books.  Their subscription service isn't cheap, and I dropped a lot of coin on books over the past 3 years or so.  I have a couple dozen books, and I enjoy them so much I tend to revisit them again and again.  I want my rides to rock, and sometimes the risk of discovering I HATE a book during an awesome ride really sours the ride (like Brian Herbert's scatological expansion of the Dune universe).  At this point, I've listened to hundreds, if not thousands of hours of audiobooks while riding.  I rarely listen to music anymore.

I strongly prefer audiobooks, especially ones I've already heard, to podcasts; listening to something that introduces a new idea or concept would take too much concentration, and I'm kinda busy.  Having my audiobooks controlled from my weatherproof touchscreen GPS is awesome, because it only takes a couple of presses in the space of a second to shut off the book, should my environment recommend it.

Over the years, I bought lifetime (of the GPS) map updates for North America and all of Europe for the 660.  I think I wore out about 3 motorcycle cradles due to corrosion and broken wires.  I've cooked a couple GTM12 FM traffic modules, and my last one off eBay (since the GTM12 is long discontinued) turned out to be a clone and Garmin won't license new subscriptions on it.

From the timelines above, you can see I ran with the Zumo 660 for 5 years, reporting over 300,000 km.  I don't normally restrain my technology purchases like that; I've been dying to see a new motorcycle GPS from Garmin for years.

Besides the bluetooth woes, there was nothing really *wrong* with my 660, except that it was just getting old.  The screen is showing the wear of 300,000 km of sunlight, dust, scratches, and abuse.  The CPU is ancient.  Its internal flash (3.7GB) is too small to hold the entire 3D North America map set anymore.  And its feature set is probably 10 generations behind Garmin's Nuvi automotive line. 

So Garmin finally released the Zumo 590LM.  There are some really nice new features, including
  • 800x480 display, vs the old 480x272 display,
  • 3D terrain view (can't wait to see that in the Alps),
  • Tire pressure monitor system,
  • Service history log (hmm, might be interesting),
  • Smartphone Link, to access weather, traffic, traffic cameras, etc.,
  • Supports controlling my iPhone/iPad music player over bluetooth,
  • VIRB camera support (control the camera from the Zumo's touchscreen),
  • Cradle wiring harness adds an audio in, and a USB socket to charge a smartphone on,
  • Curvy Roads routing!
However, there's one missing feature.
  • Audiobook player
Getting traffic reports back will be nice, and weather information on an epic ride is fantastic.  

I'm treating the lack of an audiobook player as a hurtle to overcome.  Garmin says they won't add Audible back (one or both of those companies are jerks), and while the Garmin can control my iPhone's music player remotely, it can't control my iPhone's Audible app beyond pausing a handset-started reading.

Curvy Roads routing is going to be very interesting.   Garmin GPSs usually offer two routing options; fastest, and shortest.  Since both can be boring to a motorcyclist, finally Garmin noticed that TomTom has apparently been making a splash with their curvy road support and added it to their latest motorcycle GPSs.  I can't wait to give that a try, when I've got the time to not want the fastest route.  :)

I haven't even mounted the GPS on the bike yet; I've got a bunch of electrical work I want to do while integrating this, and that will probably take a good chunk of time today.  I have a good ride coming up tomorrow, so at least I'm motivated.