A
Anonymous
Guest
Got some bad news on my '82 GS650L today. First, the background. It was given to me by a friend last fall in non-running condition. I've been working on it, nursing it back to health. Still needs a carb cleaning, but it runs and I've been riding it. An oil leak has been getting worse and worse, though. Upon finding that it was leaking from where the driveshaft goes into the tranny, I decided this was beyond my ability and took it to the local shop. They opened it up, found a loose u-joint and a worn driveshaft, which needed to be replaced. They scoped out a replacement, and were all set to reassemble and get me back on the road today.
That's when they found that the shaft that the driveshaft itself attaches to - the output shaft from the transmission, I suppose - was sheared off! The outer inch or so of the shaft was just floating around loose inside the splines of that end of the driveshaft. Must've been like that when I was given the bike - I can't think of any riding I've done that would've broken it, nor any way the shop could've done it. They were amazed the bike even moved for me. Seems like that shaft needs to be replaced, which would probably involve an intensive disassembly of the transmission. That's $$$ I don't have growing on trees.
The other other factor here is a *gasp!* Honda CB650, in perfectly good running order, that he's looking to sell for $600. As much as I'd love to finish the restoration project, if it's going to cost more than a bike that already runs well, I'm hard pressed to proceed further. Plus he can return the $200 driveshaft he got for me and not charge me for it. That's 1/3 of the other bike, right there.
These guys are good, but they're not exactly GS experts, so I turn to you for advice. Is damage like this worth having repaired? Or would I be better off snagging the CB650 and cutting my losses on the poor GS? The GS is my first bike, and I haven't even ridden it 1000 miles yet. Right now, I just want something basic that I can actually ride. The CB650 qualifies. But if a fairly simple repair on the GS is possible, I can do that, clean the carbs myself, and ride off into the sunset.
Any suggestions?
I did try to convince the guy to pull the motor out of a GS1000L I saw in the showroom and drop it into my bike, but he didn't seem too keen on that. :twisted:
That's when they found that the shaft that the driveshaft itself attaches to - the output shaft from the transmission, I suppose - was sheared off! The outer inch or so of the shaft was just floating around loose inside the splines of that end of the driveshaft. Must've been like that when I was given the bike - I can't think of any riding I've done that would've broken it, nor any way the shop could've done it. They were amazed the bike even moved for me. Seems like that shaft needs to be replaced, which would probably involve an intensive disassembly of the transmission. That's $$$ I don't have growing on trees.
The other other factor here is a *gasp!* Honda CB650, in perfectly good running order, that he's looking to sell for $600. As much as I'd love to finish the restoration project, if it's going to cost more than a bike that already runs well, I'm hard pressed to proceed further. Plus he can return the $200 driveshaft he got for me and not charge me for it. That's 1/3 of the other bike, right there.
These guys are good, but they're not exactly GS experts, so I turn to you for advice. Is damage like this worth having repaired? Or would I be better off snagging the CB650 and cutting my losses on the poor GS? The GS is my first bike, and I haven't even ridden it 1000 miles yet. Right now, I just want something basic that I can actually ride. The CB650 qualifies. But if a fairly simple repair on the GS is possible, I can do that, clean the carbs myself, and ride off into the sunset.
Any suggestions?
I did try to convince the guy to pull the motor out of a GS1000L I saw in the showroom and drop it into my bike, but he didn't seem too keen on that. :twisted: