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How and what with do you wash the front end of the bike ?
These bikes have famously bad wet weather brakes stock.
After several thousand miles of riding a GS in the rain I never noticed any special problem. Forum members with many times my experience and with extensive experience riding other makes and models haven't complained about any general problem.
BS, no they do not.
+3, pure BS. I just rode my '80 GS850L (slightly G'ed) through massive downpours last weekend, and many other times as well. No brake problems there, same with my '83 GS1100G. Wet brakes have been no problem with either one.+1, pure BS.
Welcome to the 1980s and the sheer crap we had to put up with during wet weather.Got caught in a little rain on my way back from a bike show yesterday. It had only been raining for a couple of minutes and I hadn't ridden through any puddles, but as I turned into my subdivision I realized that my front brakes were gone. Tried to use my back brake to stop but with the wet pavement it locked up and I started to slide. Somehow I managed to recover and avoid hitting the median or laying it down and I managed to make my way home SLOWLY.
Welcome to the 1980s and the sheer crap we had to put up with during wet weather.
Modern pad materials made a huge improvement, even on old caliper and disc designs, but it's only really brought car-type take-it-for-granted braking to bikes in the past 20-odd years. Earlier than that, you have to be a bit cautious in the wet, decent pad material or not.
Part of riding defensively in the '80s was keeping the water wiped off the disc by regularly giving the lever a light touch and hoping you didn't really need to brake hard at any time.
Maybe on Kawasakis and Yamahas.
Never had this problem on GSes. The brakes worked, wet or dry. My only transportaion year round in Seattle was a GS for many years, have ridden in rain once or twice.
I rode solid discs in the late 70s on my 160 mile commute and braking in the rain just wasn't an option. About 1980 along came metallic pads and drilled discs and that was that as they say.
Exactly.
Suzuki (and the other makers) knew they were selling death on wheels to hapless riders who used them in the rain.
Again, BS. The later brakes are certainly better, but the early ones were hardly death on wheels, or I would be dead many thousands of times over. Used the brakes in the rain almost daily, for years and years.
Seattle has a lot of rainy days, I commuted across the city in heavy traffic every day for years.
No death, no falling down even.
There sure are some arrogant asses on board here.
Got caught in a little rain on my way back from a bike show yesterday. It had only been raining for a couple of minutes and I hadn't ridden through any puddles, but as I turned into my subdivision I realized that my front brakes were gone. Tried to use my back brake to stop but with the wet pavement it locked up and I started to slide. Somehow I managed to recover and avoid hitting the median or laying it down and I managed to make my way home SLOWLY.
Awhile back I noticed a small drip of brake fluid coming from the lower part of one of the front calipers. I am assuming that the rain washed some of this down onto the rotors which caused my front brakes to fail.
Actually it is all kinds of roads, freeways, surface streets, the works. How do you think we get across cities?
I really don't care about your mark.
Ride with your crappy brakes anywhere you like.