1 Back in the Saddle Thu May 08, 2014 12:45 pm
bignews1and2
active member
Hello All,
I bought a 1985 K100RT 2 weeks ago. The bike was for sale last summer, and I passed it every time I took one of my 3 kids to a sports field in town. Fell in love with the look of the bike then, but no way I could afford it. No matter what the cost.
This year it was out again and since my financial position has improved I inquired. The gentleman explained he was moving and has 2 other bikes. The K bike had 2 previous owners, Father passed to son. The BMW service book had a number of entries in that showed service at regular intervals up to 15k miles but no dates and only one original service invoice from a dealer also confirming mileage . The seller, having met the previous seller, was very comfortable the mileage was accurate. He bought it for $3,500 2 years ago. Wanted $2,500 now. I had a friend who is an auto mechanic eyeball the bike. He gave the green light because despite some white smoke at startup it started and ran well. Everything else including all indicator lights on the instrument panel are working. Cosmetically in very good shape. I picked the bike up for a few hundred dollars less than asking price, knowing I was going to have to put tires on it and look into the white smoke. (I've done my homework, not a side stand issue)
10 years ago I was riding a 1978 Yamaha 650xs. Sold it after my 3rd and 4th child arrived a year apart. No time to ride. While I love the stock look of the RT I also like the Café conversions I've seen on YouTube and what Specialks.com has done with them. I used to be a computer engineer - doing more business development now but the idea of working on this bike appeals to me as I've always enjoyed working with my hands. That being said, I'm a complete newbie to Motorcycle mechanics. If I hadn't found this forum I probably wouldn't have picked up the bike.
My nieces boyfriend is helping me get started. He put new tires on the bike and checked the rear spline. Great news. It looks in great shape! (sigh of relief) Working my way through Ted Verrill's, "So you bought a K-bike, now what...". Looking forward to many years of learning and riding.
Stew
Northern NJ, USA
I bought a 1985 K100RT 2 weeks ago. The bike was for sale last summer, and I passed it every time I took one of my 3 kids to a sports field in town. Fell in love with the look of the bike then, but no way I could afford it. No matter what the cost.
This year it was out again and since my financial position has improved I inquired. The gentleman explained he was moving and has 2 other bikes. The K bike had 2 previous owners, Father passed to son. The BMW service book had a number of entries in that showed service at regular intervals up to 15k miles but no dates and only one original service invoice from a dealer also confirming mileage . The seller, having met the previous seller, was very comfortable the mileage was accurate. He bought it for $3,500 2 years ago. Wanted $2,500 now. I had a friend who is an auto mechanic eyeball the bike. He gave the green light because despite some white smoke at startup it started and ran well. Everything else including all indicator lights on the instrument panel are working. Cosmetically in very good shape. I picked the bike up for a few hundred dollars less than asking price, knowing I was going to have to put tires on it and look into the white smoke. (I've done my homework, not a side stand issue)
10 years ago I was riding a 1978 Yamaha 650xs. Sold it after my 3rd and 4th child arrived a year apart. No time to ride. While I love the stock look of the RT I also like the Café conversions I've seen on YouTube and what Specialks.com has done with them. I used to be a computer engineer - doing more business development now but the idea of working on this bike appeals to me as I've always enjoyed working with my hands. That being said, I'm a complete newbie to Motorcycle mechanics. If I hadn't found this forum I probably wouldn't have picked up the bike.
My nieces boyfriend is helping me get started. He put new tires on the bike and checked the rear spline. Great news. It looks in great shape! (sigh of relief) Working my way through Ted Verrill's, "So you bought a K-bike, now what...". Looking forward to many years of learning and riding.
Stew
Northern NJ, USA