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Anyone know of a builder or kit for GS1100E hardtail conversion?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Sojourner
  • Start date Start date
I'll be the first to tell you, I've been looking at GS's for sale for over two months. Every single ad posted.

You are absolutely correct when you say that a bone-stock machine is the exception, not the rule. There's enough hacked up, destroyed bikes out there to fill Heinz Field to the brim. And they all want thousands of dollars for the junk they've created.

What you have there is THE baddest machine created in it's time, and you got it for a song and dance. It's a g-d work of art and deserves to be treated as such.

Restore it to factory original and then add some tasteful, reversible modifications to suit your tastes. Properly maintained and treated well, the bike will outlive you. That said, you will not own the bike until you die, I assure you. Save it for someone else down the line to enjoy the experience it provides. Pure, raw power and exhilaration.

Pretty soon I'm going to make it my life's work to save these beautiful machines from the hands of hacks.
 
And in response to your last post, if the 'look' is your thing, take a look at some pics of my 750L.

No irreversible mods, rode like a Cadillac, looked phemomenal, and gave the next owner the same thrill. All on less than 1000 dollars.

Some pics:


6prhv9.jpg


2qi19xw.jpg


2ivh7w2.jpg


2vmzuxl.jpg


etwgwo.jpg


Proof positive that you can get the look you want and not destroy it. The bike was able to be put back to stone stock in less than 2 hours with the exception of some of the painting, and none of the parts painted were offensive.

Good luck man.
 
No worries, it's all good info Old_Skool. :)

I had an L for a while, an '82 GS1100L to be exact. I opted for the E this time around for two reasons: A) $650 for an >1000 bike that runs and the rubber's not dried out on is a steal. B) Since it was a chain drive, I thought I could always bob it if the subconscious call for rear slant got to be too much.

I like to look. That being said, I'm not sold on the idea of riding a nut-masher over dips, bumps, and potholes. That's why I was suggesting the shorter throw rear shocks. I'll look when I get home and see what kind of tire clearance I have in the rear, and I want to look at the forks and see if I can slide them down a touch in the trees to increase the rake.

One more off-topic question- Is there a gearing difference between the E's and the L's? I don't remember my old L stretching my arms in 2nd and 3rd. Kind of gave me a big ole' grin when it happened on this E. ;)

GRoundShock- That's one nice looking 750! I'd still like the rear to come down farther on my 1100, based off your third pic. I was thinking of flipping the engine color. Trying to paint the ends of the fins black and leaving the main a silver/aluminum. <$1000? Seriously?
 
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I like the looks of that 750, if its a bobber look you want. Take that bike, put on lower shocks, mini apes and pull the front fender and you have a bobber that is rideable.
:)

Maybe thats what i'll do with my 1100L.
 
I had an L for a while, an '82 GS1100L to be exact. I opted for the E this time around ...

One more off-topic question- Is there a gearing difference between the E's and the L's? I don't remember my old L stretching my arms in 2nd and 3rd. Kind of gave me a big ole' grin when it happened on this E. ;)
I am thinking that your 1100L must have been a shaft-drive with a 2-valve head.

Your current bike is a totally different animal, it is chain-drive with a 4-valve head.

There is more than a gearing difference that is causing that grin. :D

.
 
Not really interested in mini apes. In another appearance thread I was looking for suggestions. I think I've narrowed it down to Nighthawk or LTD bars. *EDIT* - Or a set of Buckhorns. Found a couple of POV pics and they look like they'd fit the bill nicely.

http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum/showthread.php?t=198762

Buckhorn bars:
images


Looks like I'll be shopping for shocks next. Going to play with the stock ones first to see if I can save some $$. And no, not cut them or anything!! Don't want anyone having another cow! ;) :D ;)

Oh, and Steve- yes it was a shafty. Couldn't tell you about the valves. It came and went in a single season- our first kid was on the way and the toys had to play elsewhere.
 
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I've seen plenty of shocks on ebay that will do the job. Pull them off what you have now, measure eye-to-eye (or clevis) and find a set that measures what you want.

I really planned on dropping the rear end a bit more on it, but along came a buyer...
 
For a bigger guy, lowering the tail is not the best idea. Keep in mind that the back end lowers itself when you sit on it, so if you lower when it's unloaded, you're going to be close to zero travel once you sit on it. When you add that you live in 'pothole-ville' right next to 'frost-heave town', I can't see why you think this would be a good idea.

Just my own .02, the bobber stuff that people seem to be into, the whole 'build not buy' routine is bull-poo. It's like when I was a kid, all the punk kids were anti-establishment and anti-conformity, but they all wore the same clothes and had the same bad haircut. You're not standing out anymore, you're just conforming to a different crowd.

I would suggest that a super-clean 30 year old superbike is far more rare than any bobber/cafe/cheaop custom out there. I would also suggest that mods made for sake of being 'cool' that comprimise the functionality of the bike are the height of non-sense, and the furthest thing from cool.

Despite what some may say, suspension is a very good thing on a motorcycle in terms of safety. Maintaining tire contact with the road, and allowing fore/aft weight shift for traction in braking and accelerataion are high on my list if priorities.
 
Buckhorn bars just suck. Uncomfortable on your wrists and back. The LTD or E bars are way more comfortable.
 
You like standing out in a crowd you say???? Get the bike stock and fresh and youll stand out in the crowd as "that dude with the badass Zook that was up at bike night last night"
 
There was someone here a year and a half ago by the name of brandon25 that pretty much did what you are wondering about, here is a link to his thread: http://www.thegsresources.com/_forum/showthread.php?t=174452&page=7


The guys here are really great and will point out things that you might not have thought about when it comes to safety or re-engineering pitfalls however, there are also those that will condemn you for even thinking about it.

Just remember this, IT'S YOUR BIKE! You can do whatever you want to it!

Read through the thread, it has a lot of good information about what you will be getting into, it might even give you a couple ideas.

Hope this helps.
 
very nice bike, I like clean looking factory bikes that aren't all cut up to s$$t!

And in response to your last post, if the 'look' is your thing, take a look at some pics of my 750L.

No irreversible mods, rode like a Cadillac, looked phemomenal, and gave the next owner the same thrill. All on less than 1000 dollars.

Some pics:


6prhv9.jpg


2qi19xw.jpg


2ivh7w2.jpg


2vmzuxl.jpg


etwgwo.jpg


Proof positive that you can get the look you want and not destroy it. The bike was able to be put back to stone stock in less than 2 hours with the exception of some of the painting, and none of the parts painted were offensive.

Good luck man.
 
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