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XS1100 or XS 650 as cafe project?

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  • XS1100 or XS 650 as cafe project?

    When I was 15 I was over at my grandmothers house, and my dad pointed in the backyard at an old rusted cafe racer with plants growing through it and said "that was my old bike when I was your age". Ever since then I've wanted to build one for myself. I have two old motorcycles suitable for the project. a XS 650 Special II or a XS1100 E.


    -Which would be better to put money into?
    -Has it been done reletively cheaply in the past?

    I own both bikes, and have maybe 800 to dump into the bike. Is this a realistic budget? The 1100 needs a little more work. Of course, building a cafe racer, I want it to be fast, but more importantly I want something that will be fun to ride and cheap to modify.

    Thanks guys.
    Last edited by justaddwada; 03-11-2007, 11:33 PM.

  • #2
    depending on the condition, i think 800 can go a long ways, if you do all the work, all the wok, but be warned, when did you not finished a bag of potaoe chips?
    "a good man knows his limitations" dirty harry
    History
    85 Yamaha FJ 1100
    79 yamaha xs1100f
    03 honda cbr 600 f4
    91 yamaha fzr 600
    84 yamaha fj 1100
    82 yamaha seca 750
    87 yamaha fazer
    86 yamaha maxim x
    82 yamaha vision
    78 yamaha rd 400

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    • #3
      The 650 will have better handleing that the 1100. The 1100 will be faster.
      Pat Kelly
      <p-lkelly@sbcglobal.net>

      1978 XS1100E (The Force)
      1980 XS1100LG (The Dark Side)
      2007 Dodge Ram 2500 quad-cab long-bed (Wifes ride)
      1999 Suburban (The Ship)
      1994 Dodge Spirit (Son #1)
      1968 F100 (Valentine)

      "No one is totally useless. They can always be used as a bad example"

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      • #4
        I my opinion the 650 special is just not the right style for a café racer. When I was younger I had a XS 500 twin done over in full café and it was a light and fun bike. The style was right for the project. That is of course just my opinion. That being said bigger bikes just blew my 500 away unless the entire road was a real twisty bugger.
        Myself .. as big as the 11 is I would do it. There's lots of parts for them out there. The engine is very reliable and easy to work on. Spend some of those dollars beefing up the frame and you will have a nice bike.
        Rob
        KEEP THE RUBBER SIDE DOWN

        1978 XS1100E Modified
        1978 XS500E
        1979 XS1100F Restored
        1980 XS1100 SG
        1981 Suzuki GS1100
        1983 Suzuki GS750S Katana
        1983 Honda CB900 Custom

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        • #5
          I'd have to advise the 650 as well. Still plenty of new aftermarket parts available. Mike's XS has a lot of new (not NOS, but truly new) parts that would make the final build sooooooo much easier than an 11 would be. Reasonable prices, too.

          Go for it!!
          80 XS1100SG
          81 XS400SH

          Some men miss opportunity because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison

          A Few Animations I've Made

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          • #6
            Go 650

            I have both of those bikes too.
            '80 XS11 Special & '84 XS650 Heritage Special.
            I'd say convert the XS650 rather than the XS1100. Yes the XS1100 has appalling amounts of power but a café racer ain't about going in straight lines,
            it's about ear'oling round corners and for doing that the XS650 has the XS1100 beat.
            Bumstop, clip-ons, rearsets, gas tank off a Standard anna paint job should cost a lot less than your $800 budget, but unless you have a seperate budget for new grippy tires, buying those'll take up the balance.
            Or you could blow the entire wad on a custom stainless steel 5 gallon knee-dent style tank from Scotland.
            Fred Hill, S'toon.
            Fred Hill, S'toon
            XS11SG with Spirit of America sidecar
            "The Flying Pumpkin"

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