adventure / default rider 183 cm
BMW R 1100 GS vs Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT ergonomics
BMW R 1100 GS and Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT land within a few ergonomic points for the default rider, so the better choice comes down to posture preference and bike category.
Fit verdict
BMW R 1100 GS
95Comfortable
All contacts reached
Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT
95Comfortable
All contacts reached
The two bikes are close enough that posture preference matters more than the overall score.
Rider fit: reaching the ground
The BMW R 1100 GS has a 840 mm seat; the Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT sits at 840 mm, within a few millimetres of each other. As a rule of thumb you flat-foot a bike when your inseam roughly matches its seat height: about 84 cm for the BMW R 1100 GS and 84 cm for the Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT.
Geometry snapshot
| Spec | BMW R 1100 GS | Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT |
|---|---|---|
| Seat height | 840 mm | 840 mm |
| Wheelbase | 1,509 mm | 1,520 mm |
| Wet weight | - | 250 kg |
| Displacement | 1,085 cc | 1,043 cc |
Posture metrics
Knee angle
- BMW R 1100 GS
- Sport (65.5 deg)
- Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT
- Sport (65.6 deg)
Hip angle
- BMW R 1100 GS
- Neutral (100.7 deg)
- Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT
- Neutral (100.4 deg)
Elbow angle
- BMW R 1100 GS
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
- Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT
- Relaxed (143.3 deg)
Torso lean
- BMW R 1100 GS
- Neutral (10.0 deg)
- Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT
- Neutral (10.2 deg)