But at that price you could buy 3 and drag them along for spares. Wouldnt hurt the reliability at all...
The 851 was a pain in the ass. No one could service it, there were almost no dealers in the US at the time and to even get the valves adjusted it was a throw it in the truck, drive 4 hours to FBF, leave it there and then pay a small fortune. Great to look at, a nightmare to own and ride. I originally picked it up because I was offered an insane deal on it since I was the only person to ever come into their shop and even look at it. It was a dirty bike shop in Joisey that specialized in enduro and cross country bikes and the story was they had to take x number of Ducatis in order to get their other brands (Cagiva comes to mind). The Guzzi shop went all nutso over it when I stopped and offered me the Daytona (that had been sitting there for years) and basically what I paid for the 851 in cash. So, I got rid of the 851 for what I had paid and a free moto guzzi.
Having worked on one of the first 851s that hit the US (a TriColore) and numerous Guzzis, if I had the money I'd have the Ducati to look at and the Guzzi to ride. And, yes, RE made a diesel single cylinder bike. I saw one at the Spencer classic bike show last April.
I know a guy who recently did an around the world trip. While in Mongolia he met a young guy from Israel who had flown to Mongolia and bought a brand new motorcycle (150cc made in China) for $600. That included taxes and insurance. His plan was to spend a month riding it around Mongolia. That seems like a pretty cheap adventure.
The Boyer on my Bonneville made that bike insanely reliable. Always started easier than my Honda in the spring. Btw....I did race an Enfield for a weekend.
New RE's are nothing like the old RE's. New tooling, fuel injection, electronic ignition, etc. Trust me I know - I have 12+ BSA's . . . . . That said, you're not going anywhere quickly on that RE. 28 hp at the rear wheel or so, I believe. But for the trip you describe, as long as you are in India, the Himalaya's and west of Burma (oh, I forgot, Burma no longer exists, someone changed its name), you're probably ok. Once you head into Thailand, Vietnam, Malayasia, you'd probably be better off with something small Japanese. But, what the Hell, it's an adventure. Go for it. And, let us know what happens - pictures are a pre-requisite. Cheers, Dave
Just watched this the other day. These guys did something like that. Yeah I’ve read about some much tougher rides in India and elsewhere, but not a bad show to kill a few winter hours. https://www.amazon.com/Tough-Rides-India/dp/B07DZP7WG2/ref=nodl_
I meet a guy bungee jumping in Nepal that had rode his all the way from Kerala, India up to Nepal when I meet him. That's some serious miles one way, he was going to stay there a month then take the long trek back. Funny timing because I just saw one yesterday parked at the Marina in Key West where our boat is for a couple of days. First one I have seen in the states!