8
80GS1000
Guest
understandable. where my opinion deviates from yours is here:
front forks are trashed and leaking. why spend the time and labor replacing springs/seals on the stock L forks that i hate if i can have a relatively inexpensive upgrade in a 93 1100 front end?
tires are garbage. why settle for standard replacement bias ply when i can have radials, especially since im not crazy about the wheels that are factory trim on the L bike?
rear shocks are murdered. the only viable upgrade here is ebay trash, or progressives. from there we get into ohlins, works, etc.
i like the idea of monoshock rear ends, but i can agree im probably not ready for that much, although i cant see the difference in learning to ride on a traditional twin shock or monoshock swingarm.
I'm getting serious deja vu with this conversation, sounds a lot like convincing newbs on gixxer.com not to get a brand new GSXR 1000 as their first bike 'cause they're not ready for it yet...
Same advice as I'd give to anyone. When starting out, start on something factory and cheap till you gain enough experience to know what's what. There are a lot of little things that need to be done to do suspension swaps on a bike that you wouldn't know about until you're gained a bit of seat time, plus you won't have the feel for what it SHOULD feel like till you've got a few tens of thousands of miles under your belt.
You gotta start somewhere in your learning curve on how to work on bikes. Gotta learn how to walk before you can run...
GS parts aren't nearly as expensive as GSXR parts, trust me on this. Who's to say you wouldn't have to rebuild that GSXR front end anyways?
You already have a set of GS forks. New GS1000 fork springs are about $70, new seals are about $20, fork oil is about $10, you can have my old rear shocks for the cost of shipping (in good shape BTW), and a new set of Avon Roadriders would be about $200. Total in the neighborhood of $300. And you've have it done fast because they're all bolt-ons and learn about working on bikes in the process. You'd then have a solid platform to learn how to ride on.
Good sportbike tires are a minimum of $250 a set, not to mention all the time, effort, money, parts, research and possible pain when things go south when trying to modify a machine you don't even yet know how to operate....
For learning purposes, there really isn't much difference between a twinshock and monoshock rear end. If that's what you want, go buy a Ninja 250 and putt around on that for a couple of seasons then mod your GS1000 like crazy once you've got some more experience.
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