So, as others have stated, it's your choice, enjoy it. Sure you can do it, but not truly comfortably and I suspect the Super Sport suffers from the same issues too. Ultimately, what I learned was sport bike chassis are just not made to be long distance rides. My back was also a bit stiff from having to alternate from forward stance to upright as well. Matter of fact, rode from Tacoma to San Diego on my 12s with minor issues, but still had a very sore wrist from continued throttling, minimized by adding a throttle lock, used sparingly and only outside of built up areas. When I graduated to a BMW sport bike, K1200s first, then 2 K1300s later, much better ergonomics and able to ride longer periods. Loved them for the raw power and performance in the straights and curves but could not handle them beyond about 6 hours of riding before numbness in wrist and lower back starting to hate the equipped saddles that came with them. I had about 8 Japanese sport bikes over my history of riding. Have you ridden a sport bike before, long distances, as in a long day trip? The comfort is just not there, be it laying on the tank, up upright or switching back and forth.
Click to expand.I wasn't sure what a Super Sport was, so looked it up.