1 Hello! new member from Australia Tue Aug 02, 2022 6:10 pm
gravelsandwich
active member
Hi there,
I'm Liam from Central Queensland, Australia. I've just bought a 1984 K100 RS and looking forward to engaging on the forum and enjoying my new bike. I am the 4th owner(3rd to actually ride it), the bike has been well looked after and it's condition is as you would expect after 38 years and 176k, Cheers......
Back Story:
I'm in my 50's and have always owned a motorbike. I bought my first road bike in the early 90's and it was a 1982 Honda CB900 F1 from a dealer. They also had a Suzuki Katana which I liked better but was dearer so I bought the Honda. I have fond memory's of the CB, beautiful bike to ride, even my cattle dog loved hopping up on the tank and going for a ride.
After a few years I sold the F1 and bought a lovely 1983 Honda CB900 F2 bol d'Or. It was great bike to look at and ride but I actually liked riding the F1 better with it's more naked styling and bikini faring. The F2 developed a few problems after a while, electrical issues and the tank leaking from a previous owners repair(probably got dropped at some stage), so around 1998 I decided to update and went to my local dealer expecting to purchase a more modern Honda CBR or VFR. But I totally and expectantly walked out of that dealer the new owner of a near new 1996 Harley Davidson 883 Sportster. I remember my old man saying to me, quote: "Of all the dumb stupid things you've ever done, you went and bought a Harley". He owned British bikes in the 50's and 60's and Harley engines had a pretty bad reputation back then, but as it turned out he enjoyed riding the Sportster so much that when I wanted to go for a ride I'd have to ring him up and collect it from his place!
So I've still got the Harley after nearly 25 years but recently been wanting something different and do one of these Café Racer builds that seem popular these days. I got looking on Market Place for a cheap old bike or something interesting like a Yamaha Virage or a Honda CX500. That's when a couple of BMW's popped up which pricked my interest, I remember seeing these on the road. I thought they looked nice, a little bland maybe compared to my F2 but obviously well made and expensive.
The few K100's on Market Place were out of my price bracket so I discarded them for now but after doing more research and watching YouTube videos on the K100 my interest grew.
Eventually the one I purchased was on Gumtree, the owner told me he bought it from his 70+ year old work collogue who'd owned it since the 90's, to turn into a Café Racer(he had the same nostalgia virus I had), but said he realized that was the dumbest idea he'd ever had.
So now this beautiful '84 K100 sits in my garage, again not the bike I thought I'd buy or own, waits to see what becomes of it. But after looking at it, admiring its uniqueness, it's total separation from anything Japanese and the pure genius of the German engineers at the time I can do nothing else but restore this beautiful, metallic Red piece of history back to it origin.
The Café Racer will have to wait for something lesser!
I'm Liam from Central Queensland, Australia. I've just bought a 1984 K100 RS and looking forward to engaging on the forum and enjoying my new bike. I am the 4th owner(3rd to actually ride it), the bike has been well looked after and it's condition is as you would expect after 38 years and 176k, Cheers......
Back Story:
I'm in my 50's and have always owned a motorbike. I bought my first road bike in the early 90's and it was a 1982 Honda CB900 F1 from a dealer. They also had a Suzuki Katana which I liked better but was dearer so I bought the Honda. I have fond memory's of the CB, beautiful bike to ride, even my cattle dog loved hopping up on the tank and going for a ride.
After a few years I sold the F1 and bought a lovely 1983 Honda CB900 F2 bol d'Or. It was great bike to look at and ride but I actually liked riding the F1 better with it's more naked styling and bikini faring. The F2 developed a few problems after a while, electrical issues and the tank leaking from a previous owners repair(probably got dropped at some stage), so around 1998 I decided to update and went to my local dealer expecting to purchase a more modern Honda CBR or VFR. But I totally and expectantly walked out of that dealer the new owner of a near new 1996 Harley Davidson 883 Sportster. I remember my old man saying to me, quote: "Of all the dumb stupid things you've ever done, you went and bought a Harley". He owned British bikes in the 50's and 60's and Harley engines had a pretty bad reputation back then, but as it turned out he enjoyed riding the Sportster so much that when I wanted to go for a ride I'd have to ring him up and collect it from his place!
So I've still got the Harley after nearly 25 years but recently been wanting something different and do one of these Café Racer builds that seem popular these days. I got looking on Market Place for a cheap old bike or something interesting like a Yamaha Virage or a Honda CX500. That's when a couple of BMW's popped up which pricked my interest, I remember seeing these on the road. I thought they looked nice, a little bland maybe compared to my F2 but obviously well made and expensive.
The few K100's on Market Place were out of my price bracket so I discarded them for now but after doing more research and watching YouTube videos on the K100 my interest grew.
Eventually the one I purchased was on Gumtree, the owner told me he bought it from his 70+ year old work collogue who'd owned it since the 90's, to turn into a Café Racer(he had the same nostalgia virus I had), but said he realized that was the dumbest idea he'd ever had.
So now this beautiful '84 K100 sits in my garage, again not the bike I thought I'd buy or own, waits to see what becomes of it. But after looking at it, admiring its uniqueness, it's total separation from anything Japanese and the pure genius of the German engineers at the time I can do nothing else but restore this beautiful, metallic Red piece of history back to it origin.
The Café Racer will have to wait for something lesser!