I have no issues with any brand, really.  My biggest regretted
"no-purchase" was 3 years ago.  A 76 Honda CBR750a (14000 miles) with
a Texas Sidecar for $3K.  Great condition, ran well, etc.  The "a" had
an automatic transmission while was evidently fairly bulletproof.  I
had convinced myself to buy it but changed my mind.

On Sat, Sep 8, 2012 at 9:22 PM, Mark Roberts <[email protected]> wrote:
> Steven Desjardins wrote:
>
>>On Sat, Sep 8, 2012 at 1:46 PM, Mark Roberts <[email protected]> 
>>wrote:
>>> Steven Desjardins wrote:
>>>
>>>>That's what Kawasakis are for:  Parts.
>>>
>>> Ooh, that's a bit harsh! Watch tomorrow's World Superbike Championship
>>> races (Germany) and you'll see what a Kawasaki is good for in the
>>> hands of someone who knows how to use it! (Go Tom Sykes!)
>>>
>>>>Nice Upgrade, BTW.
>>>
>>> The original calipers always had problems and no amount of bleeding
>>> could achieve a good, solid brake lever feel. These are much better.
>>> Lever effort is a bit high and if it doesn't improve as the pads bed
>>> in I'll try different pads. If that doesn't achieve braking nirvana
>>> I'm told a master cylinder from a Suzuki Hayabusa works a treat! (Now
>>> *that's* a squid bike that's only good for parts!)
>>>
>>I would have said the same thing for Honda.  I can't pick on Suzuki
>>because Debbie has one.
>
> I *loved* my 1986 Honda VFR. Wish I'd been able to keep it in addition
> to the Triumph but it just wasn't possible. Honda made every redesign
> of that bike worse after 86-87: More and more electronic gizmos,
> linked brakes, pseudo VTEC valve system... and now it's a 1200cc
> behemoth with shaft drive. Oh yes, and they got uglier every year
> after the 86-87 model.
>
> The only Honda I ever lusted after was the RC-30 but I'm glad I was
> never able to afford one because they apparently were better race
> bikes than street bikes: the hand-laid fiberglass was beautiful but
> much more porous than the cheaper machine-made fiberglass (or ABS
> plastic), so the paint bubbled and peeled after a few years; two-ring
> pistons are nice for getting minimum friction/maximum horsepower but
> they let the bike burn oil at a prodigious rate.
>
> I'd love to get something silly like a Royan Enfield for tooling
> around Boston.
>
> --
> Mark Roberts - Photography & Multimedia
> www.robertstech.com
>
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Steve Desjardins

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