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So let me get this straight, my grey hair and love for the 80's means I'm no longer cool? Yeah, right. Next thing you'll be telling me is that Faster Pussycat is no longer together...
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Yeah! Nicely put, that definitely sums it up.
I wanna make a replica of a 60s inline four GP (CR) bike using that motor, with four open megaphones. My neighbours will love it! :-D
I used to own a GV1200 Madura. It looked very "eighties" and sucked on ergonomics. The compromise between apearance, style and function was frustrating. It had the ability to hit 100 mph at a stunning rate ( I regularly had sore forearms from a brisk ride) but riding position meant my helmet rode up annoyingly with wind coming up the chest. I loved the power and tried to find a way to get a better riding position. This is what I came up with:
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I do, and it's not just because I own one.
Like I said, some people actually like these things. It'd be interesting to know why though. So far I'm getting a list of reactions ranging from:
"Man you must be ****ed off/crazy"
to
"I like GSs"
Lets see some reasons why you like them.
Just to preemptively dispense with a hypothetical: "I don't have to justify why I like my bike to you. You're just a crazy ass."
Just for the sake of debate, lets do it anyway.
I've owned two of the things, and I love the bikes, but seriously they're pretty ugly. I'll note that the comments in this thread largely pertain to L models.
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What IS that thing? The guages are too high above the handlebars, the headlight is too high in general, it has a chrome grab handle/sissy bar/oddity on the back, some of them have these grotesquely anatomically correct scalloped butt cheek seats, and more, which I'll get to in a minute.
Some of them aren't ugly. Those bikes are called modified GSs. They're slightly tweaked in a lot of little areas.
80GS1000's bike is a nice example, though I've always had a thing against the wes cooley "fairing" up front, which is just this giant plastic lantern frame around the headlight.
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Ditch the toolbag and so's Tracy Borchert's
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What strikes me as bizarre about thegsresources (however much I love this place), is there are so many people obsessed with polishing and restoring these 25 year old time capsules from an era of hideous, wretched excess. Scroll through the "Appearance Mods" forum, and the vast majority of the threads you see will be about polishing chrome, getting rid of rust, how to bolt the cam end caps back on, or something as mundane as how to add saddle bags. It's a rare pleasure to find a thread that's actually about appearance mods.
Remember the bike Peter Fonda rode in Easy Rider? It was stretched out, lowered in the back, longer, rising toward the handlebars. It was a caricature of a motorcycle.
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That inspired the rising to the right styling of the GS L models. The front wheel is too big. The rear is too small. It apes the classic chopper down to the joke pullback handlebars, minus any of the character or throbbing v-twin sex appeal. The fenders are chrome of all things, while the rest of the bike is painted. It's a design that shouts at you, only it's not one loud shout, it's a whole bunch of little ones from every ill-matched part all vying for attention of the eye.
As I'd hinted at, they didn't do all this to copy a Harley and try to steal the magic of a terrible motorcycle that had to be financially rescued by tariffs. They did this all wrapped around a japanese high revving four cylinder, making a confusing melange of ingredients all the more disturbing to the senses.
They're a GREAT platform for a chopper, bobber, streetfighter, cafe racer, etc, but stock, they just don't do it for me.
:-s Thanks guys I guess?
I like the look of blue Madura. It sort of reminds me of a Vmax. When you think about how long a style of bike hangs around they really don't change all that much thru the years. Look how long the Vmax has been around or the Honda Rebel on the other end of the bike scene. I bought a new 1998 Yamaha Vstar 650. Nine years later the bike is nearly the same. In the past week I have thought of selling both my 80' GS1000L and my 84' Honda VF750 Interceptor in order to get one newer cruiser model,but I'm 53 years old now and I find my GS to be very comfy and easy to ride even on long rides.
Dennis
man, I havent read all the posts here yet,but let me say FINALLY! Finally somoen here feels tghe same way i do about these bikes.I own a 1000 L and after I got rid ot the schwinn bicyle chrome fenders,the buckhorn handlebars,the king and queen seat,it is slowly becoming what a motorcycle is supposed to look like.It is all about the engine.If these engines were not so phenomenal i would gve up on mu bike.But after soem investment I will have a sort of retro modern day cool looking bike.An abomination to the purists,but it is MY bike and I am changin' it too look like it had the potential to look.Now,I will return to the rest of the posts here.
n the works: Engine rebuild. Frame bracing. GSXR 1000 monoshock conversion.
frame bracing? How are you going to do that? I am interested in knowing that.I have never been a knee dragger,but the flexiflyer name these bikes earned for a reason.
n the works: Engine rebuild. Frame bracing. GSXR 1000 monoshock conversion.
frame bracing? How are you going to do that? I am interested in knowing that.I have never been a knee dragger,but the flexiflyer name these bikes earned for a reason.
Well, the GS frame is actually pretty stiff, but the extra load I'm putting on it by the monoshock conversion and an offset front sprocket with a wide rear tire warrants a bit of bracing. Excellent info here: http://oldskoolsuzuki.info/patrick/hardcorekats/articles/gsx_frame_stiff/index.htm
The flexy flyer moniker could really be given to the Kaw Z1, the GS1000 frame was/is pretty rock solid by comparison.Go watch "They Call Him Fast Freddy" and you'll see what I mean - the Kaw frame was flexing all over the place, while the Yoshi GS1000 frame was stiff.
The weave/wobble you find when leaned over hard on these bikes in stock form is mostly due to flexing of the stock forks and swingarm, but that problem can be corrected with some upgraded parts.
Thats the same reason I love my L model. I was riding yesterday and I stopped to take a short break. I was looking at my bike and I thought around 1995 my 1980 L model was just a little goofy looking old bike. Here it is 2007 and my bike is now a really nice looking CLASSIC motorbike.I could walk into any dealership and pick a bike off the showroom floor, but I like my L because it's classically styled......it's safe, powerful, and predictable......and for cruising along the lakeshore on a warm day, it's a great ride. It's a motorcycle in the motorcycle tradition, meaning that it has chrome and a distinctive lack of tupperware. It makes no excuses for what it is. It's not meant for blazing along at 100 mph in stock form, it's not meant for being loud and garish either. There's still some of us left who don't want either.
My .02