I typically ride solo. I can pick up my T-Rex-equipped FJR in good conditions (e.g. flat, hard ground), but dropped it last summer on the side-slope of a steep asphalt incline (Hells Canyon Dam access road). It fell to the downhill side and I could not pick it up. On level ground, the crash bars hold the FJR up at about a 20º angle, so I only have to bring it up the last 70º or so. For this incident, the bike was close to horizonal, so I would have to raise it up from the 90º point. Just couldn't do it. I wound up dragging the back end around - rotating it 180º - to get it in position where I could get it upright. Fortunately, there was no damage that a file and a rattle can couldn't fix. But it made me think about what I'd do in less-ideal conditions. Subsequently, I bought a MotoWinch.
Two weeks later, I was riding my 450-lb Tenere 700 in the mountains and lazily dropped it in deep gravel on a logging road, right up against a steep hillside. Normally, the T7 is easy for me to pick up, but there was no room for me to get down low between the bike and the hillside so I could use my back and legs. My only grab-point was from the hillside above the bike. I did not have the arm and shoulder strength to pick it up from above.
I had just started dragging the bike out to rotate it like I had the JFR, when a truck towing a horse trailer came up the road. The driver stopped and helped me get the bike upright.
I hadn't thought I'd need a MotoWinch for such a (relatively) light bike, but it sure would have come in handy that day. I carry it on both bikes now.
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