A few more thoughts...
What sort of bike do you have? I'm trying to picture which braking system it is. IIRC, most or all of the 80-85 GS bikes used the same brake system, so we would have directly comparable results. With stainless lines, you should get no more than 16-21mm of lever travel. Period.
You can't really compare lever travel with modern 4 and 6 piston calipers and different master cylinders. Apples to oranges. The amount of force you'd apply to stop a GS moderately would be enough to lock the wheel and send you into the weeds on a modern sportbike. They need more level travel to give you the needed degree of feel fine control, so the master cylinders are sized differently.
On a GS, the single-piston calipers and relatively large master cylinder diameters mean that you have to give the lever a manly squeeze to get good stopping, and that it's not going to move very far between "whoa" and "OH %$#@!!!!".
What sort of bike do you have? I'm trying to picture which braking system it is. IIRC, most or all of the 80-85 GS bikes used the same brake system, so we would have directly comparable results. With stainless lines, you should get no more than 16-21mm of lever travel. Period.
You can't really compare lever travel with modern 4 and 6 piston calipers and different master cylinders. Apples to oranges. The amount of force you'd apply to stop a GS moderately would be enough to lock the wheel and send you into the weeds on a modern sportbike. They need more level travel to give you the needed degree of feel fine control, so the master cylinders are sized differently.
On a GS, the single-piston calipers and relatively large master cylinder diameters mean that you have to give the lever a manly squeeze to get good stopping, and that it's not going to move very far between "whoa" and "OH %$#@!!!!".