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I've had the Yam Super Tenere (750 twin), ridden a few big old XTs, and almost bought the XT660X but what put me off was that it was a little asthmatic and at 177Kg for a single, needs to go on a diet! Fuelling is terrible on these, with many reports of surging on the crap fuel injection.
The older super Ten' was a better bike but needed careful looking after as it had some valve issues and regular oil changes were a must too. Modern Yams are more reliable but I reckon the older Super Tens were better to ride.
I ended up with KTM Duke II which is better than anything I've ridden from the Yam stable. It's been super reliable since I've owned it, handles brilliantly, and now (derestricted) kicks out about 60BHP and weighs just 140Kg so runs rings around the Yam for handling and getup and go. Cruises all day at 80mph and in "Adventure" trim has a large tank.
I average 48mpg from mine ridden quite hard (up-jetted) giving me a 120 mile range and that's on the standard Duke II tank.
Motorways are not its natural domain but it'll comfortably cruise at 80 to 85mph all day if you wanted to. 70 more practical as you're not having the wind blast trying to separate your head from your shoulders although the bullet fairing takes a surprising amount of wind blast away.
Servicing needs to be regular but it's all DIY stuff.
I cannot recommend the Yamaha, although some find it a decent enough commuting bike. I can recommend the KTM. Build quality is better (imho), performance is better, handling is better, suspension is better (White Power front and back) and it stops better (same Brembo stoppers as used on the RSVR!). Only downside is that KTMs tend to be more pricy to buy, but stick with an older 640 (625cc) carb model Duke II and a mint one can be had for a little over £3K.
Newer 690 is mental, plain bonkers, but more complex and has a few niggling issues which need sorting (easy fixes though). It has insane performance for a single but is way more pricy than the Duke 2.
990 or newer Superduke are pretty nuts things to ride (wheelie everywhere!) and will rip your arms from your shoulders. Bigger and more expensive to buy and run though.
For a simple to service, cheapish to buy big single, the KTM 640 Duke 2 is still the King 
------------- Ducati 950S Supersport
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