George, I hereby dub thee "The Turd-Stirrer"
While I enjoy my V-Strom DL1000 greatly, chain drive was in fact a large demerit when making my purchasing decision. One of the most-requested V-Strom changes (besides a windshield that works) is shaft drive. I ride around 25,000 to 30,000 miles a year, and paying $200 - $250 for a new chain and sprockets almost annually is just plain ridiculous. I merely tolerate chain drive when needed.
The main trouble is that there are simply blasted few shafties available these days. (I refuse to consider a modern-era BMW until they admit to and fix the shameful number of catastrophic final drive failures. Plus, I need more money and a heaping dose of snobbery.) Moto Guzzi and BMW make the only available naked/standard shafties, and both are insanely expensive to purchase, ride and maintain.
The KLR650 is basically a primitive and cheap dirtbike, so it's excused for using a primitive drive system.
You'll note that the newest adventurer on the block, the Yamaha Super Tenere, is shaft drive, and this is widely considered a large plus.
The Kawasaki Concours (new and old), the new Honda VFR, and the Yamaha FJR1300 also use clean, quiet, reliable, and low-maintenance shaft drive systems, and no one would accuse any of these bikes of being slow or suffering from poor handling.
What many of you don't seem to know is that Suzuki was the first to figure out shaftie handling -- GS shafties simply do not suffer from shaft jacking and other handling oddities common to other shafties of the era.
Chains have their uses, such as 10/10 sportbikes and dirtbikes that need to change gearing frequently, but out here in the real world where we have weather and dirt, shaft drive is simply the solution that makes the most sense. Belt drive ain't bad either, until your rubber band snaps some bright morning...
If you think old shafties are slow and don't handle, let's go for a ride...
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