Cycle Cat rearsets as well? The previous owner didn't spare any expense.
If the rear sprocket is still a stock 39T do yourself a favor and replace it with a 41T when it's time for a new one. IMO that really makes a difference in riding around town and you only gain about 200rpm at 70mph. I also think a Sargent seat makes for a much more comfortable ride.
There wasn't much I hadn't gotten to yet on that bike, a few standouts, but I think that Young Nate will have fun making the final changes himself, to really make it "his" bike.
It's my feeling that most Ducatis need to be geared up a few teeth, my 999 was useless in 1st gear below say 20mph at first.
Nice find. The last three words of the film, "an incredible mess" fit perfectly! Not sure the R75 needed improvement, but the dude certainly has skills and a shop to support them.
Nice find. The last three words of the film, "an incredible mess" fit perfectly! Not sure the R75 needed improvement, but the dude certainly has skills and a shop to support them.
As a R75/6 owner, I'm appalled...what a waste of a nice classic bike
As a R75/6 owner, I'm appalled...what a waste of a nice classic bike
Hey, that looks just like my bike, but mine is the R60 model. I don't have the R90 bikini fairing on mine or a CC Products fork stiffener/fender mount or the deep oil pan, but everything else looks the same. I've owned many motorcycles, but those old boxers in the 600/750 displacement really hit the sweet spot. For riding on winding roads at 40-70 MPH, they just feel right.
Hey, that looks just like my bike, but mine is the R60 model. I don't have the R90 bikini fairing on mine or a CC Products fork stiffener/fender mount or the deep oil pan, but everything else looks the same. I've owned many motorcycles, but those old boxers in the 600/750 displacement really hit the sweet spot. For riding on winding roads at 40-70 MPH, they just feel right.
Exactly right. Two lane rides up Rt 100 in VT are just perfect. She's closing in on 125k now.
For higher speed use (or cooler weather), her younger sibling R100RS get the nod...
Exactly right. Two lane rides up Rt 100 in VT are just perfect. She's closing in on 125k now.
For higher speed use (or cooler weather), her younger sibling R100RS get the nod...
I had a 1979 R100RS (the Blue and Silver w/Orange pinstripes colorway). I bought it used in 1988 and sold it two years ago. I put over 160,000 miles on that bike. I sold it for more than I paid - good investment. It was geared for autobahn use and begged to go fast, but for two-up breezing on some winding road, it was out of its element - always switching between 2nd and 3rd gear and under those conditions, the bike was either lugging or over-revving. I believe the later RS got a final drive gear change for better low-speed use.
Nothing really wrong with a UJM, though. I feel that way because I have a UJM.
Haven't been on a bike in a good long while, but a true UJM, an old 1983 KZ1000, took me on a wandering cross-country trip, among others, without a fuss. It could run too.
Saw this recently in the lobby of the Iron Horse Hotel in Milwaukee. I'm not for sure exactly what this is but I want to ride it. Fast. Around a race track. untitled-1.jpg
It's a small Honda air-cooled twin (maybe a CB350?) motor in a custom frame.
Anybody from Milwaukee know the story of this machine?
Boulder, CO to Lake Oswego, OR to Stuttgart, Germany to Lake Oswego
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Re: Motorcycles.
An early 2000 Honda VFR800a will be about $2500 and is a great motorcycle. Can put hard cases on it. It's got ABS brakes for added safety. I love mine, and would only sell it to get a Ducati 848 or 1098.
Some are born to move the world to live their fantasies...
"the fun outweighs the suck, and the suck hasn't killed me yet." -- chasea
"Sometimes, as good as it feels to speak out, silence is the only way to rise above the morass. The high road is generally a quiet route." -- echelon_john
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