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New GS1000G Owner in Oregon

  • Thread starter Thread starter KillRamsey
  • Start date Start date
K

KillRamsey

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Hi folks. Excited to find you.

Me: Grew up riding dirt bikes and 3 wheelers. First road bike was an 82 GS300L, and I feel pretty horrible in hindsight about the way I treated that bike. I didn?t know anything about maintenance, so I got something like 2,000 miles out of the old thing before it just stopped trying to please me anymore. Then a 2004 Kawi Vulcan 500, which was kind of an awesome little cruiser. I put around 7k on that I think. In 2007 I bought a brand new (gasp) Yamaha FZ6, and I have to give Yamaha credit ? owning that bike for 9 years was an amazing experience. Did all the maintenance myself, got 52,000 trouble free miles out of it commuting to work around Boston and blasting to VT. Bike would keep pulling hard well north of 100, and would easily get high 40s mpg. Sold it when we moved west, to Hood River Oregon, thinking ?I?ll just get another bike right away?.?

Fast forward 2 and a half sad, moto-free years, and my wife surprised me with this.

KBRY8225P by gordopuggy, on Flickr

KBRY8229P by gordopuggy, on Flickr

?81, 1 owner, 27k miles. Aftermarket seat (obviously), some engine crash bars, and those awesome old Shoei side bags, but basically bone stock. Long term plan is to mate it to a sidecar, so I can take the Mrs and the daughter with me at one time. They?re very into it. Meanwhile I?ve been getting to know it, taken my daughter to school 3 times, blasted around the orchards here a bit, short interstate stints.

THE GOOD: Almost everything is good. Bike fires up pretty easy with choke, idles steady and smooth, pulls like a demon, sounds amazing. This motor is ? I didn?t expect it to be SO good. Transmission is perfect, brakes feel fine, all lights work except the #5 gear indicator light. Those Shinko tires don?t look old, and while I don?t trust the brand, they feel fine.

THE BAD: I get oil in the air box when I do short cold rides. I?ve talked to a cousin who works on bikes a lot (translation: Harley owner of several decades), and he thinks it?s oil getting past the rings, but nothing to be alarmed at. Given that my airbox gaskets on both sides are cracked (I took them off to inspect), oil is seeping out the left side on kickstand and pooling lightly on the engine. We?re talking about a thimble of oil, not a shot glass. I?d like that to stop, but not if it means a full top end job.
 
You should get your wife a bouquet of flowers, sir :) Enjoy your new bike!
 
Welcome! I come up your way at least once a year to visit my son across the river. Great place! Very nice bike. I have it's slightly bigger brother the 1100g. Your oil problems are most likely something you can over come. I hope you plan on wrenching on it yourself.
 
Welcome! What a great post, and a nice suprise by your wife. Birthday, or just because?

My wife sort of gave me my 850G as a birthday gift a few years ago.

Shinko are really pretty good tires, if they're not old.
 
Yet another welcome from a fellow shafty rider. :encouragement:

Those Shinko tires don’t look old, and while I don’t trust the brand, they feel fine.
Easy enough to check their age. Look for the DOT number on the sidewall. There should be an area at the end with four digits. Those digits are the week number and the year. Example: if you see "4316", that would be the 43rd week of 2016, or about the end of October. It is preferred that they are less than 4 or 5 years old, especially if you don't know their history, but don't worry about "the brand", they are very good tires. They just happen to be very inexpensive, but are very good tires. The Shinko 712 that you have and its slightly heavier-duty sibling, Shinko 230 Tour Master are generally well-liked here. They don't last as long as some others, but they have remarkable handling for their price, and they are remarkably consistent all the way to the wear indicators. Other tires (especially the cheap ones) tend to turn evil as they wear, Shinkos don't.

.
 
All very good to know!

Also, I didn't mention it, but the long term plan is to put a side car on this thing. I wanted something with enough motor and brakes to do it, and ideally black (since most of the Ural or Steibs etc out there are gloss black). Now that I'm getting used to the height and weight of this old thing, I'm beginning to be a little sad about that. This thing boogies through corners respectably! I do miss the FZ6's suspension sometimes.
 
Welcome aboard. Great bike you’ve got there. Put some Sonic straight rate springs up front, emulators too if you’re wanting the best and some Icon shocks in the back and you’ll be amazed at the cornering ability. It looks like someone had a Vetter fairing up front at some point as your headlight isn’t stock, easy enough to find on here if your interested. Great pictures keep them coming.
 
Welcome aboard. Great bike you?ve got there. Put some Sonic straight rate springs up front, emulators too if you?re wanting the best and some Icon shocks in the back and you?ll be amazed at the cornering ability. It looks like someone had a Vetter fairing up front at some point as your headlight isn?t stock, easy enough to find on here if your interested. Great pictures keep them coming.

Iiiinteresting. I didn't realize the light wasn't stock! I'm fine with its appearance. Haven't actually ridden this thing in the dark yet to see how well it works. But it does run.
 
Welcome from Vernonia. Your oil leak is probably the gasket under the oil sending unit. When they leak it runs down through the drain hole in the starter housing and looks like it comes from the shift lever, give it a check. Will be attaching a Ural sidecar to my 83 1100 G soon for a trip in July, I am 5'9" and my grandson who is going with me is 6'4" and may be 6'7 by then at the rate he is growing so he gets the sidecar.

Very good roads up this way.

V
 
Great looking bike!

Welcome. For some reason...chrome headlights seem to be the choice in swapping headlights.

My "T" came with a chrome headlight but the stock headlight is not chrome.

Great story about your acquiring this bike. My wife would not have taken that route...you are fortunate.

Thanks for beautiful pics!


Ed
 
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Welcome from Vernonia. Your oil leak is probably the gasket under the oil sending unit. When they leak it runs down through the drain hole in the starter housing and looks like it comes from the shift lever, give it a check. Will be attaching a Ural sidecar to my 83 1100 G soon for a trip in July, I am 5'9" and my grandson who is going with me is 6'4" and may be 6'7 by then at the rate he is growing so he gets the sidecar.

Very good roads up this way.

V

I've biked through there! We bike a lot. You're right, it's gorgeous.

I pulled the airbox covers off, and found that it's leaking from there. When the bike is cold, and does a short ride, it seems to seep past the rings and get sucked into the airbox. When the motor's hot, no issue, no drip. I assume this means an eventual ring job, but nothing pressing.
 
Your wife has excellent taste in motorcycles.

Technicality: I found the bike, forwarded it to her for her input. She went behind my back, emailed seller, said "ignore my husband's email inquiries, I'm surprising him with it." Sure enough, I wrote the guy twice and never heard back. Then my birthday dinner came around, and she and the 9 yr old girl handed me a hand-drawn card with a motorcycle drawing in it...
 
Most likely valve seals for your leak. What is your compression?

V
I've biked through there! We bike a lot. You're right, it's gorgeous.

I pulled the airbox covers off, and found that it's leaking from there. When the bike is cold, and does a short ride, it seems to seep past the rings and get sucked into the airbox. When the motor's hot, no issue, no drip. I assume this means an eventual ring job, but nothing pressing.
 
Most likely valve seals for your leak. What is your compression?

V

Haven't tested it. Don't have a tester yet. Bike runs perfectly, as far as I can tell, makes tons of power, no odd spots in the power band. But I should borrow a compression tester and learn something.
 
My compliments on a beautiful bike (and an amazing wife!) I have a black 80 G just like yours, and I couldn't ask for a more capable all-purpose road bike. I'm sure you'll love it!

Also, keep us posted on the sidecar project. I've been eyeing Urals for years now, and the only thing that has kept me away was the pricetag. Curious to see what it takes to turn a GS into an outfit...
 
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