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Sharing my 1982 GS750T

jstedmanb

Forum Newbie
I have lurked these forums for years and used the massive archive of knowledge to keep my bike happy and running. I bought it when I was 18 years old and I have done quite a few things to it since. I have ridden other newer and faster bikes but just can't get over what a joy this one is to ride. Plus, its quite the looker.

faceless bike.jpg

A few of the things done to it:

Progressive springs front and rear
Valve Adjustment
Dropped a tooth on the front sprocket
New Tires
New Master Cylinder
New Starter
Braided Steel brake lines
Charging system sorted out
Spark Plugs and other basic maintenance
Superbike bars (not shown in photo)
Delkevic 4-1 exhaust (arriving tomorrow)


P.S. What happened to CycleOrings.com???
 
P.S. What happened to CycleOrings.com???

Sadly, a health issue caused Robert to cease operations.
 
Join date Sep/2019 and this is the first post?

Interesting.

Pics of your "T" requested!

Ed

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Join date Sep/2019 and this is the first post?

I have been around for awhile but never posted. Additionally, I lost the password to this account for quite a while haha. I am having trouble getting the photo function to work with this reply.

I see you also have a TZ, do you happen to know exactly what the T means? Is it just an appearance package type thing? Thanks
 
attachment.php
 
Welcome and THanks for making an introduction.

The T is mostly a standard (flat seat, flat bars) (not the stepped seat, not the pull back basrs, not the small teardrop tank of an L), but does have more chrome, and has the more sporty engine (16 valve).

.
 
Last edited:
Join date Sep/2019 and this is the first post?

I have been around for awhile but never posted. Additionally, I lost the password to this account for quite a while haha. I am having trouble getting the photo function to work with this reply.

I see you also have a TZ, do you happen to know exactly what the T means? Is it just an appearance package type thing? Thanks

I have this article from photo album in my profile

attachment.php


I think I typed it up one time but I don't have the link for that right away.

Ed

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Welcome to the club. There are a few us T owners here. Posting good photos is a bit tricky. Instruction for using the most popular photo sharing websites is in linked in my signature. Here?s my T:

e00zckAh.jpg
 
Very interesting read, about strained my eyes doing it though.

Hell, I'd give my left nut to see more 40-year-old articles about 40-year-old motorcycles. Do we know what mag it came from?

I was about to say not Cycle World, then I saw it's written by Paul Dean. And I didn't even genuflect before I read!

I'm doomed! One little slip like that could cause the Great Pumpkin to pass you by.
 
Very interesting read, about strained my eyes doing it though.

I should have found this earlier...I typed it up a while ago on this thread that you should post your "T":

https://www.thegsresources.com/_for...n-Thread-(My-2nd-Thread)-3rd-Overall-(I-think)

Post #174
To Suzuki, the GS750TZ is more than another new model, it's a solution. In the final analysis it might not prove to be the solution but for now it's at least a solution to a dilemma that the entire Japanese motorcycle industry, not just Suzuki, has been stuck on the horns of for the last few years: how to design factory-custom motorcycles to have precisely "The Look" that is so vital to their sales success without having them all look alike.


A Catch-22 situation, indeed, and the GS750TZ is Suzuki's response to it. The TZ is a decidedly conservative approach to the problem, though, not just in a way the bike looks but in the fact that it will be the only model in the company's entire 1982 lineup styled in this fashion (all the other customs will be in the usual L-model configuration). Apparently, Suzuki wants to test the waters of acceptance for a new generation of factory-custom motorcycles by cautiously dipping in with just one toe rather than jumping in feet-first. And instead of breaking any all-new styling ground, the TZ simply attempts to split the difference between customs and standard models. The styling still captures the essence of The Great American Street Cruiser, but some of the more practical ergonomic elements have been lifted from the standard-issue Suzukis.


What emmerges from this marriage made in Hamamatsu is a clean, simple, unpretentious motorcycle that almost looks more "classic" than "custom". There is, in fact, more than a hint of Triumph, circa late sixties, in the TZ lines.


Much of that Britbike look is no doubt due to the particular profile of the TZ's 4.5-gallon teardrop tank, especially with its Triumph-like color-contrasting knee cut-outs. But the overall effect of being a latter-day classic might be the result of the bike having an unfamiliar (for this day and age) combination of familiar pieces. The gas tank, for example, has the requisite custom-bike shape and the handlebar is conventional (read: not high-rise pullbacks) fare, but the two usually aren't found on the same motorcycle. Likewise for the stepped seat, fat 17-inch rear tire and simple rear fender (all custon-bike traditions); but the seat is not radically stepped, the fenders are not bobbed short and the front fork is not--and doesn't even look to be--extended (all standard-bike traditions). The difference, therefore, between this bike and the usual factory customs is that the TZ resembles a vintage Triumph before customizing, not after.


Mechanically, the TZ offers no such controversies, being essentially an E-model GS750 with major cosmetic differences and a few mechanical dissimilarities. Most of the latter are obvious (single front disc, drum rear brake, no anti-dive mechanism on the fork, different spoke pattern on the cast wheels), and the instrumentation was lifted directly from Suzuki's L-series street customs. Otherwise, everything else is identical to it's E-model counterpart.


That should assure the GS750TZ of being an extraordinary fast, fine-handling boulevard cruiser; but the issue at stake here is not how quickly it will move in the showroom. Suzuki believes, obviously, that the custom-styled market simply has to expand and that this is one of the directions it will expand in. It's our belief that there is a growing number of riders out there who will agree with Suzuki's philosophy. And for them, it can't happen a day too soon.

Ed

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Thanks for that article. It kind'f says what I've always thought, a very tasteful mixture of a standard & a cruiser. Personally I would have never bought a "Disco Cruser" bike, Suzuki "L", a Kawa. "LTD", a Yama. "Special", nor a Honda "Custom", but I could have been perfectly content with a "T". Very tastefully design...Model info., on this site, shows a GS650G"T", from "81" & up. I don't think I remember a 650GT. Was there such an animal???
 
Thanks for that article. It kind'f says what I've always thought, a very tasteful mixture of a standard & a cruiser. Personally I would have never bought a "Disco Cruser" bike, Suzuki "L", a Kawa. "LTD", a Yama. "Special", nor a Honda "Custom", but I could have been perfectly content with a "T". Very tastefully design...Model info., on this site, shows a GS650G"T", from "81" & up. I don't think I remember a 650GT. Was there such an animal???

I'm glad you read through the article...I enjoyed re-typing it!

As for the 650GT...anyone have insight?

Ed

****
 
Thanks for that article. It kind'f says what I've always thought, a very tasteful mixture of a standard & a cruiser. Personally I would have never bought a "Disco Cruser" bike, Suzuki "L", a Kawa. "LTD", a Yama. "Special", nor a Honda "Custom", but I could have been perfectly content with a "T". Very tastefully design...Model info., on this site, shows a GS650G"T", from "81" & up. I don't think I remember a 650GT. Was there such an animal???

yes of course. GS650 GT 1981 to 1983. But you may not have seen them in the USA and the differences from a 650G are probably pretty subtle.
If you look here, you'll see that the sidecovers even had a badge that said so.
https://www.cmsnl.com/suzuki-gs650g...-24-25-26-34_model13489/partslist/FIG-56.html
 
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