I think they will always try to bend you over when trading stuff in. Do have a ring around and see whats available as other dealers may be more willing to do deals. I think the 2018 RR is exactly the same as the 2017 but very slightly more expensive so why wait. The 2019 one is looking different again but also looks ever so small in the pictures I have seen. By the way for 2018 they seemed to have dropped the Sport thing and instead you add two option packs and it adds up to more so a 2017 bike probably saves you a few quid.
In terms of the bikes, I have an XR that is around 18 months old and has 11k miles on it. Its a fantastic bike and a fab commuter (my typical commute is a 100 mile round trip with fast dual carriageway and slow filtering in equal measure.
I get my RR this Wednesday as an addition to the XR rather than instead of. I too was blown away on the test ride and it was way better than I expected in every way. That said I am interested to see if I can filter on the RR without getting frustrated. which I never could manage on my Aprilia. The RR is certainly easy and comfy to ride so it ought to be fine. My thought is the XR and RR do quite different but overlapping jobs exceptionally well.
Commuting in the rain and cold is an XR job with my laptop and bag nice and dry in the top box (its a GS Vario that fits like it was made for it). If its dry and I want to take the long way home then the RR. I also do lots of long European trips to GPs and plan to split it between the two bikes as I fancy it. I have done Mugello, Misano and Valencia on an Aprilia RSV-R so know the RR will do great, so it won't just be the XR that sees European action.
Go on, get an RR you know you want to!!
In terms of the bikes, I have an XR that is around 18 months old and has 11k miles on it. Its a fantastic bike and a fab commuter (my typical commute is a 100 mile round trip with fast dual carriageway and slow filtering in equal measure.
I get my RR this Wednesday as an addition to the XR rather than instead of. I too was blown away on the test ride and it was way better than I expected in every way. That said I am interested to see if I can filter on the RR without getting frustrated. which I never could manage on my Aprilia. The RR is certainly easy and comfy to ride so it ought to be fine. My thought is the XR and RR do quite different but overlapping jobs exceptionally well.
Commuting in the rain and cold is an XR job with my laptop and bag nice and dry in the top box (its a GS Vario that fits like it was made for it). If its dry and I want to take the long way home then the RR. I also do lots of long European trips to GPs and plan to split it between the two bikes as I fancy it. I have done Mugello, Misano and Valencia on an Aprilia RSV-R so know the RR will do great, so it won't just be the XR that sees European action.
Go on, get an RR you know you want to!!