The Best Adventure Bike Is Right Around the Corner

Most riders are waiting. They’re waiting for the manufacturers to build the perfect adventure bike. Waiting for the next model year. Waiting for more horsepower. Waiting for longer suspension. Waiting for the marketing department to tell them they’ve finally arrived. I have news for you. The best adventure bike is not five years away. It’s right around the corner. Its platform might already be sitting in your garage.

Stop Looking for Bigger. Start Looking for Better.

The modern adventure bike industry has convinced riders that bigger equals better.

    • Bigger engine.
    • Bigger fuel tank.
    • Bigger seat height.
    • Bigger electronics package.

But adventure riding is not about size. It’s about balance.

A true adventure bike must do three things exceptionally well:

    1. Be manageable at low speed
    2. Be comfortable for long distance
    3. Be forgiving off pavement

Most of the 1200cc+ machines fail the first test before you leave the driveway.

Adventure begins where confidence lives. And confidence lives in geometry, weight distribution, and predictability, not in horsepower charts.

Honda NC 750X fully clothed

If You Own a Honda NC750X, You’re Already Halfway There

Let’s talk rider-to-rider; the Honda NC750X platform is one of the most misunderstood motorcycles on the market.

    • Low center of gravity.
    • Forward-leaning engine.
    • Under-seat fuel tank.
    • Neutral ergonomics.
    • Excellent fuel economy.
    • Long service intervals.

It was designed around balance.

The problem? It was never finished.

Honda built the foundation. They left the refinement to us. That’s not a criticism. It’s an opportunity.

Three Modifications That Change Everything

You don’t need to redesign the bike. You refine it.

    1. Improve the Front Suspension

The conventional telescopic fork introduces stiction and fatigue, especially under braking and on washboard surfaces.

You can:

        • Upgrade internals
        • Re-spring properly for your weight
        • Or, in my view, explore alternative front-end concepts that reduce dive and increase rider endurance

Fatigue is the enemy of adventure. When the front-end stops punishing you, the whole ride changes.

    1. Raise It — But Thoughtfully

Most adventure riders want more ground clearance. That’s fine. But raising a bike without respecting steering geometry ruins handling.

The NC’s low engine placement gives you room to:

        • Add slightly longer suspension travel
        • Fit a 19-inch front wire wheel
        • Use proper adventure tires

Done correctly, the bike becomes more stable in loose terrain without sacrificing road manners.

Done incorrectly, you’ve built a tall touring bike that falls over easily.

Geometry matters.

    1. Reduce Unnecessary Plastic

Adventure bikes carry too much decorative bodywork.

        • Strip weight where it serves no function.
        • Protect what matters.
        • Keep it serviceable.

A motorcycle designed for travel should be easy to maintain on the side of the road. If you can’t reach it, you can’t fix it.

The Secret Most Riders Miss

Adventure riding is not about conquering terrain. It’s about endurance. Your body is part of the machine.

When weight is carried low, when the front suspension doesn’t bind, when the seat allows movement, when the controls are neutral, you ride longer with less strain.

That’s the difference between surviving a ride and enjoying it.

Honda NC-series: The Best Adventure Bike Bones

 

Why the NC Platform Works So Well

The engine in the NC series leans forward aggressively. That lowers the center of gravity dramatically.

When you add a properly tuned suspension and slightly increase travel, the result is something unusual:

    • A mid-size machine that feels lighter than it is.
    • Stable on pavement.
    • Predictable on gravel.
    • Manageable when loaded.
    • Easy to pick up.

This is not theory. It’s mechanical truth, and it’s sitting in dealerships everywhere.

The Best Adventure Bike Is Built, Not Bought

Manufacturers build for the average customer. You are not average.

The best adventure bike in the world will not roll off an assembly line fully formed. It will be tuned, carefully, by someone who understands balance more than branding.

If you already own an NC750X, you’re ahead of the curve.

If you own another mid-size adventure sport machine, you can apply the same principles:

    • Lower center of gravity
    • Reduce rider fatigue
    • Improve suspension efficiency
    • Increase functional ground clearance
    • Remove unnecessary weight

Do that, and your bike transforms from showroom model to true travel machine.

The Best Adventure Bike

Right Around the Corner

People keep asking me when the perfect adventure bike is coming. It’s not coming. It’s being built. One thoughtful modification at a time.

If you want the complete blueprint, geometry considerations, suspension philosophy, wheel sizing logic, rider fatigue analysis, and design corrections, it’s all laid out step by step in my book, The Best Adventure Bike, available in bookstores and on Amazon.

Because the best adventure bike is not a rumor, it’s right around the corner, and it might already have your name on the title.

 

Herb Uhl at the 50th Annual Idaho Vintage Motorcycle & Bicycle Rally & Show

I’m honored to share that I’ve been invited to serve as keynote speaker at the 50th Annual Idaho Vintage Motorcycle & Bicycle Rally & Show, hosted by the Idaho Vintage Motorcycle Club in Caldwell, Idaho.

At 97 years old, I’ll be speaking about the subject of my newest book, The Best Adventure Bike: How to Own the Best Adventure Bike Now, and why the adventure category is ready—once again—for a reset led by riders, not marketing departments.

This event holds special meaning for me. Idaho has been home for much of my life, and the vintage motorcycle community understands something that modern industry often forgets: the best motorcycles were built when design served riders first.

The story I’ll be sharing isn’t about nostalgia. It’s about design fundamentals, real-world riding, and how the same thinking that led to the original Honda Trail Bike applies directly to today’s adventure motorcycles. The bones are already there. The question is whether we’re willing to see them—and act.

Event Details

50th Annual IVMC Rally & ShowCaldwell, Idaho | March 21–22, 2026

Saturday — March 21, 2026Rally Day (Free Ride – Open to Everyone)

1:30 PM – Informal gathering at Union Motorcycle Classics
17969 Can–Ada Road

3:00 PM – 30-mile ride north of Nampa

5:30 PM – Dinner at Union Motorcycle Classics

Special Guest:
Herb Uhl
Off-road pioneer and author of
Smaller Adult Motorcycles: Long-Awaited New Market Segment
and
The Best Adventure Bike: How to Own the Best Adventure Bike—Now

Sunday — March 22, 2026

Vintage Motorcycle & Bicycle Show

Location: O’Connor Field House, 23rd & Blaine

8:30 AM – Exhibitor setup opens

11:30 AM – Setup closes

12:00 PM – Show & Swap Meet opens to the public

4:00 PM – Awards presentation and show closes

Admission:

Adults: $5.00

Children under 12: Free with adult admission

One free admission per exhibitor

Sweepstakes Bike: 1971 BSA B50SS

For full event details, visit:
👉 www.idahovintagemotorcycleclub.org

I hope to see riders, builders, and thinkers there—people who understand that motorcycles are tools meant to carry us forward, not wear us down.

Best Adventure Bike Book

Some of the best ideas in motorcycling history didn’t come from factories. They came from riders who paid attention.

That conversation continues in Caldwell this March.

Herb Uhl

 

The Best Adventure Bike: How to Own the Best Adventure Bike Now

What if the best adventure bike already exists—just not the way the factories sell it?

For more than forty years, motorcycle manufacturers have tried to define the “adventure bike” by adding more of everything: bigger engines, taller suspensions, more electronics, more accessories, and more marketing. The result has been motorcycles that look adventurous but leave many riders exhausted, intimidated, and fighting their machines long before the ride is over.

That didn’t sit right with me.

I’ve spent over eighty years riding, racing, selling, importing, and redesigning motorcycles—not from behind a desk, but from the saddle and the shop floor. Long ago, I took an ordinary Honda commuter motorcycle, stripped away its city clothing, and turned it into the original Honda Trail Bike. Honda adopted that design, and it went on to change motorcycling worldwide.

Today, I see the same opportunity again.

The Best Adventure Bike Book

In The Best Adventure Bike: How to Own the Best Adventure Bike Now, I explain why most modern adventure bikes are really just street bikes in disguise—and why true adventure riding demands a different way of thinking. This is not a book about brand loyalty, spec sheets, or the latest models. It’s about fundamentals: balance, fatigue, leverage, comfort, and real-world usability.

Adventure riders have never been asking for more horsepower or more complexity. They’ve been asking for motorcycles that are comfortable enough to ride all day, stable enough to inspire confidence, and honest enough to do what they claim—especially when the pavement ends, and the miles add up.

This book covers:

    • Why low center of gravity matters more than horsepower
    • Why engine cylinders should point forward, not high in the frame
    • Why independent front suspension dramatically reduces fatigue and improves control
    • Why seat height adjustability is essential, not optional
    • Why true utility can only be designed by riders with thousands of hours in the saddle

Rather than attacking manufacturers, I point out something more interesting: in at least one case, the factory is already almost there. Just like in the 1960s, the bones of a great adventure bike already exist—waiting for riders to see past the factory façade and finish the job.

Most importantly, this book doesn’t ask you to wait.

It shows how riders can apply these principles right now—by understanding platforms, recognizing good engineering when they see it, and choosing or modifying motorcycles intelligently rather than emotionally. The goal is simple: ride longer, ride farther, and arrive with energy left.

If you’ve ever thought an adventure bike felt promising at first but became exhausting over distance, this book is for you. And if you’ve ever said, there has to be a better way to design this, you’re probably right.

This book explains why—and shows you how to own the best adventure bike now.

Herb Uhl

👉 Available now on Amazon