Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
- weeksy
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Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
Not in terms of "i watched XYZ racing this...." but in terms of person attachment to bikes you've owned etc
For me it has to be the KTM 990 Superduke.
DSC00874 (2) by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
It's what took me from Sportsbikes into a whole new 'me' in terms of bikes. I still recall going to Dorset way to collect it with gsxr-ian and @crust , then coming home and half of me loving it and half thinking "WTF have you done here" but it changed my riding massively for the rest of my riding time. With trackdays, trips, tours, i had more than a few 990SDs.
For me it has to be the KTM 990 Superduke.
DSC00874 (2) by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
It's what took me from Sportsbikes into a whole new 'me' in terms of bikes. I still recall going to Dorset way to collect it with gsxr-ian and @crust , then coming home and half of me loving it and half thinking "WTF have you done here" but it changed my riding massively for the rest of my riding time. With trackdays, trips, tours, i had more than a few 990SDs.
- KungFooBob
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
First trackday, first wheelie, first stoppy, first knee down, first telling off by the plod.
Long summer evenings thrashing the tits off it riding with my mates.
Oh to be 19 again...
Long summer evenings thrashing the tits off it riding with my mates.
Oh to be 19 again...
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- ChrisW
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
Being truly nostalgic it'd be this RM80Z.
I absolutely loved it & it was an order of magnitude better than anything I'd had or ridden up to then. I still clearly remember the first 50 yards on it.
I absolutely loved it & it was an order of magnitude better than anything I'd had or ridden up to then. I still clearly remember the first 50 yards on it.
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
Oddly enough,I've no hankering to own bikes I had in the past,but I do have an urge to own some I passed by. I missed the whole Kawaski triple thing,finding myself with Suzuki and Yamaha strokers,so there's an itch that hasn't yet been scratched. I know they are shit bikes in almost every way,but still I only need to hear or see one and I go all misty eyes for a past that never was.
"Be kind to past versions of yourself that didn't know what you know now."
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Walt Whitman
https://soundcloud.com/skub1955
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
My much modified R100GS. I didn't do that many miles on but I really enjoyed the bits I made to fit. The engine internals were the only parts I left alone.
- Yorick
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
This one. Bought it 3 months old. Only raced once.
1982 and 83 were the best years of my racing times.
Too many great moments. We did 40 meetings in 83. Usually 4-6 races at each. Sometimes 8 or 10 if we went silly. Bike was perfect all season.
1982 and 83 were the best years of my racing times.
Too many great moments. We did 40 meetings in 83. Usually 4-6 races at each. Sometimes 8 or 10 if we went silly. Bike was perfect all season.
- Rockburner
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
I tend to hang on to bikes for a while, so I do a lot of mileage on each one, which means that each bike becomes attached to good (and bad) memories which of course generate emotional responses, which (to complete the cycle) become associated with the bike(s).
So I have lots of history with most of my bikes:
The ZXR400 I had for something like 12 years, from '96 onwards, so it was the bike that did all the VD stuff: the trackdays, the rideouts, the "events", the parties. It was the first "modern/fast" bike I'd had, so I learnt a huge amount from riding it, and gained a huge amount of confidence from it's very solid handling, and "flat-out" riding style.
There's no way in hell I'd be able to curl myself up onto it anymore, but I really, really miss that bike.
Both Mirthcycles (550Zephyrs) were so much fun to ride and I did the "Hacks Tours" on them, Once a couple of minor mods were done they handled fine on back roads and rewarded "enthusastic" riding far more than anyone would have expected. I still remember dropping one in mid-winter and knocking a dink into the lower frame rail from the crash bars (Couchy came to pick me up!), funnily enough it handled even better after that!
Before that, the Ducati TL600 I had was the first bike I had a major crash on, the first bike I rebuilt, the first bike I got the "That thing's quick!" compliment on from a fellow Ducatisti.
Post-crash reassembly:
Rebuilt
I also have fun memories and history with Dad's old bikes, the Matchless G80 that he made up for a friend was one of my favourites, the Matchless G3 that we still have holds lots of good memories:
Ironically, the JAPton is the bike that I have the "least" connection with of Dad's old bikes: I only rode it once or twice before it was fully "finished" and I missed it's glory days of Classic Days at Spa and hillclimbs at Kop Hill etc, but it's the one I now have in the garage and will keep my memories of my father with me.
So I have lots of history with most of my bikes:
The ZXR400 I had for something like 12 years, from '96 onwards, so it was the bike that did all the VD stuff: the trackdays, the rideouts, the "events", the parties. It was the first "modern/fast" bike I'd had, so I learnt a huge amount from riding it, and gained a huge amount of confidence from it's very solid handling, and "flat-out" riding style.
There's no way in hell I'd be able to curl myself up onto it anymore, but I really, really miss that bike.
Both Mirthcycles (550Zephyrs) were so much fun to ride and I did the "Hacks Tours" on them, Once a couple of minor mods were done they handled fine on back roads and rewarded "enthusastic" riding far more than anyone would have expected. I still remember dropping one in mid-winter and knocking a dink into the lower frame rail from the crash bars (Couchy came to pick me up!), funnily enough it handled even better after that!
Before that, the Ducati TL600 I had was the first bike I had a major crash on, the first bike I rebuilt, the first bike I got the "That thing's quick!" compliment on from a fellow Ducatisti.
Post-crash reassembly:
Rebuilt
I also have fun memories and history with Dad's old bikes, the Matchless G80 that he made up for a friend was one of my favourites, the Matchless G3 that we still have holds lots of good memories:
Ironically, the JAPton is the bike that I have the "least" connection with of Dad's old bikes: I only rode it once or twice before it was fully "finished" and I missed it's glory days of Classic Days at Spa and hillclimbs at Kop Hill etc, but it's the one I now have in the garage and will keep my memories of my father with me.
non quod, sed quomodo
- Taipan
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
First legal bike on the road.Went out at midnight ass it clicked over to my 16th birthday and came home when it went onto reserve.No 24 hour garages round our way back then. Happy days!
- MingtheMerciless
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
The KTM 950 SM was a cracking bike as well. And of course the ZH2 for just being bonkers.
"Of all the stories you told me, which ones were true and which ones weren't?"
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"My dear Doctor, they're all true."
"Even the lies?"
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
My GSX-R750 that I used for commuting on for 8 years and some 160,000 miles. Killed by a u-turning Transit in 2003
Bought this a couple of weeks later as its replacement.
Hated it, nothing like the bike I had ridden most days for 8 years. The only ride I did on it was the 60 miles into work. Sold it a couple of days later. Never want another
Bought this a couple of weeks later as its replacement.
Hated it, nothing like the bike I had ridden most days for 8 years. The only ride I did on it was the 60 miles into work. Sold it a couple of days later. Never want another
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
As we can only post one bike it would have to be my 250LC
Mine looked very different to that one ^^^
It's the bike that I had the most varied experiences on,lots of happy memories.I threw it down the road both on & off track,rode it to Le Castellet for the Bol D'or,even did a few cheeky laps of Circuit Paul Ricard on it.That said,the experiences I've had with my FZ750 runs it close.The FZ's still in the garage awaiting a resto
Mine looked very different to that one ^^^
It's the bike that I had the most varied experiences on,lots of happy memories.I threw it down the road both on & off track,rode it to Le Castellet for the Bol D'or,even did a few cheeky laps of Circuit Paul Ricard on it.That said,the experiences I've had with my FZ750 runs it close.The FZ's still in the garage awaiting a resto
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
The only bikes I want to own again. No hope here, as never seen either model for sale. Local KTM dealer said he and his mechanics have never seen one in the flesh.
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
Only ever rode an RC8 once.
Friend of mine purchased one and took it to Snett, he just couldn't get on with it ands asked me to ride it. I loved it.....
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
My first TDM850. Bought in October 2003, finally killed off in May 2010 having ridden, IIRC, over 100k miles on it. Daily commuting into London two up. Running out of fuel in the Limehouse Tunnel during rush hour. Running out of fuel a couple of weeks later because the main pipe and reserve pipe were connected wrong. High-siding on a Surrey Scramble. Averaging 25mpg because of worn emulsion tubes. @Rockburner getting high on petrol vapour because of the worn emulsion tubes. Learning about carbs, floats and jets whilst replacing worn emulsion tubes. Intermittent wet weather misfires. Oil consumption of 1l every thousand miles. First foreign trips - Norway, France, Germany (including Nurburgring), trackdays. Learning how to strip brake calipers. Watching @maccecht strip the engine to find out why oil consumption was so high (worn valve stem seals). Blowing up the same engine because of a coolant leak - the conrods are now door handles to Maccecht's workshop.
Arguably, I have more history with my second TDM850 but it was all negative.
Arguably, I have more history with my second TDM850 but it was all negative.
Last edited by Beancounter on Fri Jun 23, 2023 2:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
My first RD350 YPVS, it was an 84 bike registered in 85, I bought it in 1990, at some point it had been painted by Dream Machine in a very fetching red Kenny Roberts paint scheme, had Allspeeds, and was the only LC I've owned where the engine number and frame number matched. It was so lovely I kept it for 4 years after I'd stopped riding it, and only sold it to a mate because he pestered me to sell it to him, I don't remember needing the money.
Honda Owner
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
This thing.
It was in much worse condition when I got it. I replaced all the bodywork, the suspension, the clutch, gave it a good shock and got the front end out of a mates 1200 for fitting a set of USDs for him.
It's got 128k on it and I've been all over the UK on it. It's worth sod all apart from breaking but I'll never sell it.
The only problem is finding insurance as its not a 600, it's actually a grey import 750.
It was in much worse condition when I got it. I replaced all the bodywork, the suspension, the clutch, gave it a good shock and got the front end out of a mates 1200 for fitting a set of USDs for him.
It's got 128k on it and I've been all over the UK on it. It's worth sod all apart from breaking but I'll never sell it.
The only problem is finding insurance as its not a 600, it's actually a grey import 750.
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
https://photos.app.goo.gl/FdwMsC76C9SnqDY8A
First bike I played with. Only things I didnt touch were the crank and gearbox!
First bike I played with. Only things I didnt touch were the crank and gearbox!
- mangocrazy
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
I guess it's got to be my RD350LC - first new bike I ever bought, first two-stroke I ever owned, first bike I ever went abroad on, first bike I went to the TT on, first bike I seriously modified.
And I've still got it!
And I've still got it!
There is no cloud, just somebody else's computer.
- Count Steer
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Re: Motorbike nostalgia... what bikes/bike gives you the most 'history'
Only two really*.
A CX500 which was the first brand new bike I'd ever had and it was basically a workhorse - commuter and everything else as the only form of transport for a few years. Not desperately nostalgic about it, it did the job.
R1150GS which took us more miles and on more adventures (and even got me involved in stuff like Visordown/group rides etc etc). I'd like that particular bike back but not fussed about getting a different one of the same model.
I'm not really 'into' bikes. I'd enjoy riding them and going places on them but never bolted anything on that wasn't useful, never really got into 'just going out for a ride' unless it was a social thing, wouldn't think about getting an engine remapped, dumping the cat, fitting an aftermarket can etc or worrying about tyre profiles (ride 'em until the tread is a bit ).
Buy one, ride it. Don't enjoy it, sell it get a different one. I can wax un-lyrical about the ones I didn't like.
* Although having another P&M Panther might be a laugh...if I could start one.
A CX500 which was the first brand new bike I'd ever had and it was basically a workhorse - commuter and everything else as the only form of transport for a few years. Not desperately nostalgic about it, it did the job.
R1150GS which took us more miles and on more adventures (and even got me involved in stuff like Visordown/group rides etc etc). I'd like that particular bike back but not fussed about getting a different one of the same model.
I'm not really 'into' bikes. I'd enjoy riding them and going places on them but never bolted anything on that wasn't useful, never really got into 'just going out for a ride' unless it was a social thing, wouldn't think about getting an engine remapped, dumping the cat, fitting an aftermarket can etc or worrying about tyre profiles (ride 'em until the tread is a bit ).
Buy one, ride it. Don't enjoy it, sell it get a different one. I can wax un-lyrical about the ones I didn't like.
* Although having another P&M Panther might be a laugh...if I could start one.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire