1 Hello from a new old (or is that old new) member Fri Jan 19, 2024 6:05 pm
stevefzr
New member
Hi Folks. It's taken 21 bikes, not counting a couple of parts bikes, but I've finally bought my first K bike, a 1991 K1. I started riding at 17 in 1974 and commuted on motorcycles for the next 35 years, at which point I swapped to a push bike. My first bike wasa Honda CB250 and I progressed through Laverdas, Moto Guzzis and every brand of Japanese bike, with my last commuter being a Suzuki TL1000. I've always preferred a sportier riding position as I'm fairly tall at 188cm, and I find wind pressure tiring on upright naked bikes. I didn't last long without a bike and my son was asking about buying and restoring old bikes to make money. I explained that you'd never make enough to cover the hours you'd spend fixing them up, and to prove it, I'd buy an old bike and restore it. I bought a 78 R100S BMW off ebay for $2300AUS (about 1400 euro) and proceeded to restore it. I spent a lot of time restoring the fairing and tin work when I should have just bought new stuff. When it came time to paint it, I went for the R90S colours because that was the scheme I had loved since they first came out. To me, the best looking bikes were built in the early 70s, with the pick being the Guzzi LM1, Laverda SFC, BMW R90s and Ducati 750SS. The only one fairly easy to find is the R90s, however I preferred the R100S. You see, back in the 1970s, the best race in the world to indicate what was the fastest production motorcycle was the Castrol 6 Hour held at Amaroo Park just outside Sydney. Bikes had to be 100% stock and race for 6 hours. BMW had tried to win it with their R90s and failed. The Japanese were just unbeatable. Then, in 1977, they did it with their R100S. I was there to see it, and loved the R100S ever since. So, while I loved the look of the R90s, I wanted an R100S, hence an R100S with an R90S paint job. At this rate, I'll be here forever, so I'll skip ahead to how I came to buy a K1. Back in 1990 I was working in Sydney and commuting across the harbour bidge on a Kwaka GT750 that cost me $700 (420 euro). I was struggling with 18% interest on my mortgage and that was all I could afford. Someone in the office where I worked commuted on a K1. That was close to $20,000, or 12,000 euro! I just couldn't imagine how someone could justify spending that much money on a bike when the best bikes coming out of Japan were half of that. But, I just loved the way it looked. I just couldn't believe BMW had produced such a wild looking bike. From that time on, the K1 joined my dream-list of bikes. My K1 is a 91 model with the boring black paint scheme, but I will add silver decals to jazz it up a bit. It hasn't arrived yet, so I have never ridden one. Here's hoping it's not a disappointment. I'll be selling my 75 GL1000 to make room fo it, so it needs to be better than that. I know most of you will think that won't be a challenge, bt the 75, first year of the goldwings, was the best. It was a naked bike, sort of like a honda 750 on steroids, before they tamed the motor for touring. It's the same weight as the K1, has a motor that feels like a turbine, and has pretty good brakes for its age. Compared to the R100S, it had a better motor, much better brakes, but not as good a seating position. I'm sure the K1 will feel a lot better, but I doubt it'll come close to that turbine motor feel. The K1 I've bought was owned by a pretty successful BEARS racer. I'm hopeful that a personal bike of someone like that will be well maintained and sorted. Apparently it's had the exhaust and chip upgraded, but I'm not buying it for horsepower, so that doesn't really matter. Fingers crossed I love riding K1s as much as I love looking at them.
I'd planned to add pix of the R100S and K1, but at the bottom it says NO PICTURES.
Regards
Steve C
Melbourne Australia
I'd planned to add pix of the R100S and K1, but at the bottom it says NO PICTURES.
Regards
Steve C
Melbourne Australia