New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
My first high-mileage road bike was my '72 bronze and black Yamaha R5 350. Even with the TLS drum brakes, it was a MUCH better all-round motorcycle than the '73 - '75 RD series. I guess Yamaha did what they felt like they had to do in turning a nice solid motorcycle into a peaky nickel rocket like the RD350, but they sure fixed all that when they came out with the RD400!Lannis
I rode my '69 CB350 in '70 through '71 from Cleveland, Ohio to Lima, Ohio every weekend, a 360 miles round trip, to see my collegiate girlfriend. I thought the bike did just fine screaming at 70 mph on I-90 or 50mph+ on US30. I don't think I'd do it again these days because I'm not 17 years old and 120lbs. anymore. I do have a cl350 that I'll run 60-80 miles on for a vintage night meet, etc. but no touring! The CB & girlfriend are now fond memories.
I had a '74 Honda 550/4 (first year) that I rode all over the place. I really like it, but eventually got a 750/4. Should have kept them both. And yes, I did have an Oldsmobile Vista Cruiser. virtual diceSorry for the picture quality. The old Polaroids don't hold up real well.
That would be a 500 Four, would it not..?
No, it was a 550 four. Honda sold them from '74 to '78.
With all the faults and buzziness of the little two-stroke twin put aside, I was just happy to be "In The Wind" and traveling on two wheels...
That's the way we all were, once. How'd we get so jaded and "particular" and worried about not enough dealers and horsepower-conscious ... and OLD!Can we go back? I'm thinkin' about it ....Lannis
Not "all". I never trusted any of my first couple of bikes more than 100 miles from home.
So, not a lot has changed - I'm still riding a Convert, riding as often and as far as my life/lifestyle will allow. Think what you want about my early days and reluctance to torture myself by riding some buzzy little bike to Timbuktu.
Boy howdy, see how things can turn around in just part of one lifetime.Here you were, not riding any of your bikes far because you didn't trust them or know how to fix them ... and NOW you can take a bike apart down to the big-end bolts and put it back together better than new.
Lack of mechanical ability was not one of the reasons - my father was a welder/fabricator by trade, but also an excellent machinist, good mechanic, passable carpenter, plumber, electrician, etc. Along with friends and relatives, he built the house I live in and the shop I work out of. My brother and I were out in the shop working with him as soon as my mom would let us - probably around age 5 for me. We each learned a lot from my father before he died way too soon at 60 years old. But, we developed mechanical skills a bit beyond his at a fairly young age. We would scavenge old bicycles, mowers, boat motors, etc. from the local dump and learned to fix them. That lead to buying old "barn find" motorcycles (Hondas, Suzukis, Kawasakis, Yamahas and even a Zundapp) that we spotted on our paper route, tearing them down, fixing what needed fixing, reassembling them and then selling them off and moving on to the next. Sometimes we'd need to combine three Honda Mini-Trails to make one good one. We started fixing other peoples bike in our early teens. So, it wasn't a fear of something breaking far from home and not being able to fix it. My brother has traveled much more than I, starting much earlier than I. Looking back I was content to ride the area backroads and never really felt the need to roam. My parents were/are both that way, so perhaps I take after them more than him. I was always the more responsible/reliable brother, "wise beyond my years" according to an uncle. Like I wrote earlier, '83 was the year things changed somewhat, perhaps because I was making good money, had more days off, paid vacation, etc. and had been exposed to a lot of people outside my usual social circle. Some were even well known adventurers (Sir Edmund Hillary for one) and maybe they sparked my interest in traveling a bit more.
Maybe next year, I'll "go back in time" and do a multi-day tour on my Sears Allstate SR250. Maybe down the Skyline Drive and BRP a ways, over into WV on the way home. Got to get it registered soon so I can "work the bugs out" of it before Winter.
Just got to Take Your Time, not get in a hurry, ride like it has 1960s brakes and suspension; the roads you'll be riding on haven't changed since the bike was new, and neither has most of the traffic in those parts. At reasonable speeds, they don't even buzz, rattle, or break down! Lannis
You don't need to tell me. <guy who rides '69 V700 here>
Ever ridden a Sears/Puch 250? At pretty much any speed, it buzzes, rattles, intake honks loudly and a bunch more sounds. With present gearing 50 mph is about all the faster it seems to like. I plan to go up one tooth on the front sprocket which gives a little less frantic cruising, yet doesn't kill it's hill climbing ability.
I managed to ride a Suzuki 380 two-stroke triple from Kansas City to LA back in the late 70's. I was young and didn't know (nor could afford) any better. Just a Bates windshield bolted to the handlebars. I remember pushing headwinds in Arizona that forced me to downshift as far as 3rd gear to just barely maintain 55-60 mph and leaving a trail of blue smoke behind me.