GS400 / 425 head machined for oversize valves 38 / 32. Ready for the porting department for blending.
These heads really respond to this mod as, stock, there is quite a restriction where the port meets the seat.
Is this a customer's bike you are working on?
Is it a vintage race bike?
Or just a hot rod?
Thanks for the additional inspiration/motivation, Big Jay!
Just seeing this and reading your 2 topics in this twins forum on these has really rekindled my desires to build a 500cc GS400/425 with a street port job, .410" lift street performance cam, big valves, big bore, braced frame, wide rims, and top notch suspension...
Running out of cornerning clearance on the big cc (wide engines) GS fours was the other big motivating factor after my 2nd 2020 trip to the Eastern US mountains, ripping a modded GS750 through all the twistiest roads and mountain passes that I could make it to....
Yoshimura prepped race bikes ran a cut down stator cover with the bottom angle milled and a plate welded on for extra cornering clearance, and a custom low profile magneto setup for the ignition, as well as extending the length of the fork tubes by welding extensions onto the tops of the forks to be able to run a taller ride height...
my GS750 is around 465lbs with 2.5 gallons of gas, which is about the same as what you can get a GS1000 down to.
The GS400's aren't featherweights, but the dry weight (w/o fluids) is 133lbs less than my '77 GS750B started at, 378lbs dry weight stock with spoked wheels (382lbs for E models with mag wheels),
so I think I can probably get it down to ~335lbs dry weight after mods:
*wider alloy rims and wider tires but also going tubeless (same weight as stock)
*2-into-1 exhaust and alloy muffler can (-14lbs)
*centerstand delete (-8lbs)
*lighter weight modern 310mm single disc rotor and twinpot brake caliper up front, swap drum rear for underslung GSXR rear disc (same weight)
*smaller bars than stock, or alloy clip-ons (-1lb)
*GS400X gauges to eliminate the center indicator light cluster, alloy bracket, Tomaselli style headlight brackets and rubber isolators, drilled out chaincase cover, additional Yoshimura-style holes and divots drilled into head/cooling fins (-1lb)
*lighter modern chain + alloy rear sprocket (-2lbs)
*alloy rearsets from a Hayabusa or aftermarket + passenger footpegs/frame delete (-4lbs)
*lighter deltabox style chromoly swingarm or GS1100E longer aluminum swingarm (-2lbs)
*Airbox delete - K&N pods added, Mikuni RS34 custom twin rack'ed carbs or GS500 CR33 Keihin smoothbores (both significantly lighter than the zinc-aluminum alloys used in OEM carbs, -2.5lbs)
*Lithium Iron Phosphate battery and starter motor/gear/drive delete (-10lbs)
*bigger cylinders and pistons, but hollow core cams (same tradeoff)
*Will be adding longer shocks (Fox Factory Shox) and bigger forks (GS500 in GS1100E triples, or CBR600F4 in VMax 1200 triples), so some mods add a slight bit of weight... (+3lbs)
*add bronze-welded chromoly frame bracing (+2lbs)
*minimal turn signals (-2lbs)
Lots of little weight savings here and there... approximately 40-45lbs there.
340lbs dry weight + massive engine power upgrades should make this thing quite the screaming sleeper...unsususpecting! When I was still planning on building this out of my stock GS425, I had gotten a nice set of GS400-badged side covers, thought that would really make it even better, someone seeing 400cc model designation on the side after seeing how fast it was... But now I've got a '77 or '78 GS400 frame to build this out of, and a GS450 wiring harness and a crate of GS400 and 450 parts from a tear-down, since I really wasn't needing much stock that I don't have spares of already, or significant upgrade parts in lieu of the stockers.
I have 2 or 3 of the highly sought after GS450S knee dent tanks on the shelf, and a GS400 Guiliari aftermarket seat... GS400 badged side cover, and a GS400/425 tail section and inner fenders to cut down...
I actually have pretty much all these parts, but would just need to buy some new tires (Pirelli Sport Demons 130/80-18 & 100/90-18), cylinders re-sleeved and bored for 72mm pistons, pistons lightened (they're ancient MTC forged pistons, a bit heavy), cylinder head work, custom cam regrind... a little custom machining with my home shop mills and lathe here and there, maybe a lighter rear rotor and a custom center for it. And of course all new engine gaskets, seals, cam chain, and some fresh piston rings (I ran these pistons in a GS750-920cc until a shoddy valve job by a car machine shop caused severe detonation, ruining my #4 piston and combustion chamber).

2017-03-02 23.09.33 by
chuck_lambert78, on Flickr

2017-03-02 23.32.44 by
chuck_lambert78, on Flickr


2017-03-02 23.29.26 by
chuck_lambert78, on Flickr


2017-03-02 23.11.33 by
chuck_lambert78, on Flickr
I actually may build up a second one of these as as more budget build and retain rear drums and stock cylinder sleeves, since I have two bikes worth of parts now (1 complete stock 79 GS425E). 449cc Wiseco K844 GS750 pistons and stock GR650 Tempter (Suzuki twin, same cam fitment but substantial lift for more street torque).