HARLEY-DAVIDSON XR1200 (2008 - 2012) Review

At a glance
Owners' reliability rating: | |
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Annual servicing cost: | £80 |
Power: | 90 bhp |
Seat height: | Low (30.5 in / 775 mm) |
Weight: | High (551 lbs / 250 kg) |
Prices
Overall rating
Next up: Ride & brakesIt looks great, sounds awesom, is bang on fashion in 2017 thanks to its flat-track styling and air-cooled engine and actually rides really well.
Is it worth the sky-high prices dealers are currently asking? That's up to you but the good news is that prices are unlikely to plummet when fashions change as used Harleys hold onto their residual value.
Ride quality & brakes
Next up: EngineThe Harley-Davidson XR1200R’s riding position is upright but comfortably neutral and the steering is sweet and true (helped by decent Dunlops and the fact that all that weight is carried low).
The suspension is set firm and the ride is purposeful rather than classy (the forks and shock may be sporting but they’re by no means sophisticated).
Engine
Next up: ReliabilityThe Harley-Davidson XR1200R’s engine is a familiar pushrod V-twin based on that of XL1200 Sportster but with high compression 10.0:1 pistons a raised rev ceiling of 7000rpm, an all-new downdraught electronic sequential port fuel injection system and an upswept, high volume 2:1:2 exhausts.
The result is 90bhp and 74ftlbs, compared to the Sportster’s 60-odd, and although suffering slightly from a slack throttle at low revs, it is, in the midrange up to the 7000rpm redline, brisk enough for an old school V-twin with a certain hunger to be thrashed.
Reliability & build quality
Next up: ValueFor a Harley-Davidson, the XR1200R has simply horrid build quality and detailing. With a Ducati Sport Classic you can lose yourself for hours in the garage just gazing and admiring the detailing and quality.
With the XR1200 the opposite is true. There’s little to admire and the more you look the more you find that offends. It’s as if it was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The pegs, sidestand and exhaust bracket look like offcuts from a shipyard.
The cable and wiring routing is, to be blunt, appalling and only Harley could make a new, lightweight aluminium swing arm or wheels look so heavy. Harley have been building the Sportster engine for an age now and the motor is bulletproof. They even had a one-make race series using completely standard engines!
Value vs rivals
Next up: EquipmentUsed prices have steadily been climbing for the last three years. They are rare on the used market and as a result a tatty one will go for £6000 and minters can go for close to £10,000.
Equipment
As it’s inspired by a racing bike, the XR750 flat tracker, it’s no real surprise that Harley-Davidson’s XR1200R road version is pretty basic, too. Clocks are a slightly disappointing standard Harley fare tacho with a fairly tacky LCD speedo tacked on the side.
Switchgear is Harley’s usual, bulky cruiser stuff, complete with oddball separate-switch-on each-bar indicators. The mirrors are crude and barely passable, there’s a grab strap but no rail for pillions and the much trumpeted aircraft fuel filler was probably from a Sopwith Camel rather than a stealth fighter. Otherwise, that’s yer lot.
Specs |
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Engine size | 1202cc |
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Engine type | Air-cooled pushrod, 2v V-twin. Fuel injected, five gears |
Frame type | Tubular steel double cradle |
Fuel capacity | 13.3 litres |
Seat height | 775mm |
Bike weight | 250kg |
Front suspension | 43mm Showa, USD forks, no adjust |
Rear suspension | Twin rear shocks, adjustable for preload only |
Front brake | 2 x 292mm front discs with Nissin four-piston calipers |
Rear brake | 260mm rear disc with single piston caliper |
Front tyre size | 120/70 ZR18 |
Rear tyre size | 180/55 ZR17 |
Mpg, costs & insurance |
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Average fuel consumption | 45 mpg |
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Annual road tax | £117 |
Annual service cost | £80 |
New price | - |
Used price | £16,000 |
Insurance group |
14 of 17 How much to insure? |
Warranty term | Two year unlimited mileage |
Top speed & performance |
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Max power | 90 bhp |
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Max torque | 74 ft-lb |
Top speed | 125 mph |
1/4 mile acceleration | 12.42 secs |
Tank range | 120 miles |
Model history & versions
Model history
2008: Harley-Davidson XR1200R launched.
Other versions
None.
Owners' reviews for the HARLEY-DAVIDSON XR1200 (2008 - 2012)
13 owners have reviewed their HARLEY-DAVIDSON XR1200 (2008 - 2012) and rated it in a number of areas. Read what they have to say and what they like and dislike about the bike below.
Review your HARLEY-DAVIDSON XR1200 (2008 - 2012)
Summary of owners' reviews |
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Overall rating: | |
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Ride quality & brakes: | |
Engine: | |
Reliability & build quality: | |
Value vs rivals: | |
Equipment: | |
Annual servicing cost: | £80 |
Version: XR1200
Year: 2008
Annual servicing cost: £50
Best = Style Worst = weight
Standard seat gets uncomfortable after 3/4 hour, Corbin good replacement, but expensive. Brakes are good, but made awkward by the fact it's 1" handlebars, so if you got small hands forget it.
It preforms quite well for a HD, once you get a PC5 and set it up, standard it's a bit flat!
Had it 6 years the only failure is the neutral switch!
Easy to service, just engine oil & filter evry year and transmission every 2 years
Very basic equipment, although I do use the throttle lock cruise control. Best tyres seem's to be the Pirelli Angel St's
Buying experience: Private, good deal
Year: 2008
Negative not a bike to carry a pillion with really. Positive's a plenty 😁 Very effective nissan 4 pot calibre brakes, and no silly rider aids....just like things used to be!. Meaty and raw engine, with addictive sound track from the exhausts. Fun in the twisty roads, with more than enough speed and power, to keep an insane grin on your chops. The Xr oozes character,soul and feel good charm. Hd didnt sell a bucket load in the UK, as most at the time after a hd bought a cruiser from them. The upside to that is at any bike meet there probably wont be another, unlike say Bonnie's/interceptor's etc. Definitely a very unusual and Quirky bike to own these days, that sets you apart. As these were sold in low numbers, and because the evolution sportster has now been discontinued never to return, prices of Xr1200's are going skywards. I bought a Mirage orange version relatively recently, and dont ever plan to sell it.🍻🏁 Thanks.
Buying experience: Dealer
Year: 2008
looks good, handles well, brakes patter,sounds glorious with asbo endcans, awful build quality, mine is getting complete strip & rebuild.
good for a mid sized run out, arseache after about 120 miles, tank capacity pathetic, needs refill after approx 130m so you need to keep resetting trip, good for A roads, twisty country lanes can be a pain ( she"s a big heavy girl), best between 50-80, after that usual vibes.
lots of torque which i love, just roll on the throttle and she makes that roar that knocks granny"s false teeth out, over 80 vibes get really bad,120 and your fillings drop out, she can trundle along or move well for a big lass.
a lot of corrosion on frame & alloy parts, mostly down to being uncared for by first owner, beware of rusted bolts, you WILL BREAK star bits trying to remove them, i had to drill out & retap 75% on mine, starter relay failed & i had to refurb starter solenoid ( at 15k ???), replaced 1 injector.
do my own servicing, its very easy, dont go near dealers (bandits), buy parts you need online, running costs average , comparable to my old zrx1100, download a pdf manual and improvise special tools !!, its common sense.
dont like digital speedo, feels like an afterthought, oilcooler placement clumsy, steering lock less than my old zrx11, makes maneuvering in tight spaces doubly awkward, decent brakes, like belt drive, no messy chains, dunlops good for handling, avoid tacky squawking budgie aftermarket add ons (for saddo"s).
Buying experience: bought private from 2nd owner, he put right a few things from first owner neglect, paid £3.900 with 15k on clock and have had lots of fun on the beastie.
Version: XR1200R
Year: 2008
Annual servicing cost: £100
Ive had this for 2 years now following a five year spell with a Dyna Superglide, (with which I spent an enjoyable day with Trevor franklin at MCN doing the Thunderbird release readiest a few years back), and have to say to me my XR is what bikes are to me. When I started riding some 44 years ago, there were road bikes and the odd trail bike, nowadays every bike seems to need a pigeon hole, adventure, touring, sports, off road, cruiser, custom etc. etc. etc. Why? Are you telling me that I can't tour on my XR, can't have an adventure, can't cruise? to me it is what is commonly now know as a naked and all the better for it, it may be a bit heavy and not as fast as many contemporary bikes, but for the roads today and enjoying riding for ridings sake, what more do you really need. Yes I like me XR, it does all any other bike I've ever had does in the real world and its a bit different to to the rest.
Rear was a bit harsh but fitted later X model piggy back shocks.
Character, torque, economical, fast enough.
Seems fine nothing fallen off or broken in my ownership
Do it all myself so its just the cost of consumables, oil, filters etc.
Fairly basic but has all I need.
Buying experience: Exchanged my 5 year old 45k mile Dyna for it at the local dealer, no problems.
Having changed bikes so many times in the last four years I decided to look at a Harley (never owned one before ) I'm not into all the chrome etc so went straight for the XR1200 what a revelation Looks great, sounds better, and it has two types of riding style cozy and laid back typical Harley, or fun and fast ( for our roads ) round the twistys. Yes it is a Harley so do not expect the exotic looks of an Italian bike etc, But it is practical the engine is bullet proof the gearbox works AND it attracts Looks like a top model ( because it is different ) at last i have found the bike that i really love just getting out of the garage to ride cause its such fun, and that's what bikes are about........
This is a real fun bike. It's a bit basic for the money, but that seems to be what you get with a Harley. You could pick a lot of faults that Jap manufacturers have refined over time on their bikes, but this bike has an engine of character, capable handling and is as much fun as anything I've ever ridden.
I bought a Black XR1200 and love it! I had it modified for racing at the dealership even before taking delivery. The stock XR1200 is a good bike, but I wanted a great bike and installed a Dynojet Power Commander V that's for closed circuit racing. I replaced the heavy, inefficient exhaust with a SuperTrapp race exhaust system that's 20 pounds lighter. This increased my engine horsepower by 20% and 20% at the rear wheel. My buddy who is a Ducati rider liked the bike even though he's not a fan of Harley. With my mods, he gave is a 9.5 out of ten, which shocked me. It's a "Naked Bike" with a retro look. If you're into oldschool and want a little American rumble and speed--buy one and modify it for race.
Test rode one today for an hour, found it initially wobbly and awkward, gears stiff, engine reluctant and indicators a pain!! Headed out of town and it all comes together better, less gear changes needed as I was using the torque instead, easy handling that belies it's weight and a pleasant ride. The handling is OK, no sports bike as others have stated and I didn't expect one! The clocks are OK, I quite liked the layout although the idiot lights are small. The other controls are not ideal, the levers are too close to the bars for me as are the mirrors but I got used to it. As for the experience, well, things are harder to enjoy. I found it took thought at times, the indicators, the way it doesn't really stop and creeps forwards when you pull the clutch in, the way the stand is about 6' long and difficult to get out it all led me to enjoy riding it but not consider buying one.
I have a Sportster. The build quality is absolutely apauling. Here goes: 1. The front wheel has huge rust spots that are not just cosmetic. 2. The rear wheel has lost ALL its chrome plate. Fell off like tin foil! 3. The belt guard is rusty. 4. Paint has fallen of in chunks from the rear mudguard. 5. The side panel does not stay on. I ordered new fixings and was told they were a new design (wonder why) and guess what...they don't work. Back to cable ties then. 6. Oil comes out of the air filter! 7. The mirrors have 100's tiny bubbles of corosion. 8. The black finish on the engine cases is falling off. 9. The horn is useless. 10. The exhaust grounds out on the mildest of right hand bends and roundabouts are no go areas. 11. It wont pull top gear bellow 50mph! 12. The carburation is shite 13. The seat was awful 14. The laquer on the fork sliders has gone and the alloy is corroding nicely. I could go on but I wont. If you buy a Harley Sportster expect to replace everything for a better item including: seat, starter motors, horns, exhausts, air filter, etc etc etc. Shite, shite, shite, shite, shite, shite oh and more shite.
Fact Number 1 :- I adore flat trackers and the new trend in biking (IMO will be sizable in 5 years) - The Street Tracker. there are a few around already and are very cute indeed! Fact Number 2 :- Street trackers are Light, Single or Double cyl and Vibey to buggery! Fact Number 3 :- the best ones look half-finished. My problem with the bike itself stemmed from a harley-rehash to what is quite unfairly forgotten or dismissed, the most sucessful racing vehicle in history!!!! the XR750 generations have pertty much dominated the oval since they came out in the late 60's!!! So with racing lineage such as this, and a future customer base, it would of been obvious that a bike as Americana as a Chopper, would make a european entrance. Sadly however, despite my actually wanting for a HD (which takes a lot, i hate nearly all of them), I was left feeling quite unenchanted after a 4 hour demo lease ride. I got out on a nice warm day, and I havnt seen any of the rust problems a lot of people mention, and the off-colour of the pipes is a high nickle composite alloy plating, if you need to know!! I come from my beloved SV650s, basic, but brilliant if ridden with no brain, and i was sort of expecting the same. Never riding a HD before, the first thing that shocked me was the weight of the thing, it feels more than 250kg i can tell you, add the tank weight and the rest, it'l prolly push 275kg. I wanted to know about the so-called twisty-road-fun, as a knee/toe/peg-down SV nutter i wasnt expecting the world, but the riding position makes life shocking if you like to move your body around on a bike. I didnt mind the weight, it was just how to hadle the bike round (although i took the chicken strips back a full 2 inches on the rear 180 section hahahah), it just couldnt gel. The actual load-out was, IMO, good. HD have used a lot of features, with a euro-twist to make an inspired attempt, the duck-tail XR racing seat unit is excelent and the suspensions are good enough for peg-down if you really want to. My only gripe with equipment is those frigging gay-ass lights HD think look cool... A Bandit gives off more light!!!! Not cool. The best bit was the engine! It was fairly smooth and the clutch (after slacking it a bit) made short work of the vast torque which lay throbbing away, and oh boy, does that bike made vibrations!!! In the end, i feel like HD tried to make a fairly cheap version of a bike they should of made into a 150kg single for £5000, they would of sold more than you could beleive and really made street trackers super cool, but its the opposite, the XR trundles off to its normal boring 55 y/o semi-retired male traditional market and try to put a bit of cool into something that really, is just a "tries-too-hard" bike. However, if you want one, its a market of its own, so maybe it is just what your looking for ..... Oh, and who keeps original cans on a bike... come off it :-P
I've owned the XR for three weeks, and loved every minute of it. This bike is in my opinion aimed at anyone who wants a Harley they can get out and have some fun on. (and by that, i don't mean sitting in the local HD dealers car park on a Sunday afternoon comparing bling) Before i bought the bike i took a dealers test bike up into Derbyshire for about three hours, thats the sort of roads this thing was meant to be ridden on. And if you are gonna test ride this bike plan a route that takes you out onto some decent roads, it aint no good ridding this thing around town/city, you wont get a proper feel for it. And once i got my head round it (which didnt take long) i pretty much fell in love with it, it was in its element on the winding Derbyshire roads (Castleton, Edale, Snake Pass and such). I've been ridding Harley's for twenty two years or so and i like to ride quick and as you will possibly know Harley's aint the best handling bikes on the planet, that's where the XR comes into its own. Most road tests are done buy guys who usually ride sport bikes and they are always gonna come down a little hard on Harley's, thats the way they are, but this bike is fun by the bucket load if you like Harley's, but if you are into "the look at me shinny bits syndrome" this aint gonna do it for ya. I can sort of put it in a nutshell, i smoke and every time i pull up for a cig i smoke it in three drags cos i cant waight to get my arse back on it and have more fun. It goes well (for a Harley0 it stops well (for a Harley and it handles amazingly (for a Harley) just dont go there looking for a Jap sports bike, cos it aint......I love this thing! But i would strongly advise anyone considering buying any bike to test ride it first.. Your Honor, i rest my case!
I had a couple of hours on one of these new XR1200 machines from Harley yesterday (12/July/2008). The first thing that caught my eye was the rust on the exhaust exit covers. Less than 500 miles on the clock and rusting already? Not a good indication of how it will look in 2 years time methinks? I have ridden a Buell in the past and that was a fun experience but this is the first time I have ever ridden a Harley so I did not expect the almost agricultural vibrations at tick over. My old dad had a Massey Ferguson 35 tractor on the farm that vibrated less than this! After a while they did get a bit aggravating and would keep the revs slightly higher to avoid them and relieve the pain in my butt and hips that they caused through the strangely shaped seat. Oh yes and those damned foot pegs they need to be sprung loaded they nothing less than a bloody liability!! The throttle response seemed to have a slight delay - possibly because the bike was not fully run in - I would need another test drive after it had done 5000 miles to see. I do like the style of this bike, I have often though about owning a flat tracker and this is the only Harley that I have ever actually been interested in. However riding it was just an OK experience quite a let down in fact. Somehow I did not feel connected to the bike the way that I had expected to. The handling was quite good, the brakes were good and the engine seemed to do everything that I asked of it - but - the link between rider and bike just seemed a bit woolly. Perhaps it was because the bars were a bit too wide and they had to be moved too far to get the desired effect or it might have been the fact that the throttle response had that irritating lag or that my butt and hips were getting sore after only 70 miles or it was these scabby footpegs. I just cannot put my finger on the reason but suffice to say the connection was not there for me. Before I rode it I was ready to open my wallet and put the deposit down on a new one. It is really unfortunate because I really wanted to like the bike and be full of enthusiasm for it but I'm sorry to say this but my bell was not rung and I am really glad I had a test ride before I parted with any cash!!!
Orderd my XR in March picked it up yesterday, I have coverd 238 miles so far and my only complaint is the riders footpegs which tend to catch on the riders leg as you lift your feet to move of they stay up as there not spring loaded, the build/finish on mine is good and the instuments are clear and minimal the handling is great it goes round bends well with no problem and feels very light for such a heavy bike. I had not seen an XR in the flesh before yesterday so was a bit worried I might have bought the wrong bike for me, well after having done some miles I can honestly say I am not disappointed, hope to have the first service soon then I can have some real fun.