When I was looking to get back into motorcycles I looked at lots of bikes.
I used to roadrace so sportbikes were my 1st choice. Looking at the new bikes I'm impressed with the technology and innovation. The downside is that I would want to start racing againg and I don't think that would be smart or practible at 43 and having 4 kids.
I'm really not into cruisers (but have nothing against those that do like them) so that helped a bit in deciding on a bike.
That led me to dual-sports. They are practicle, relatively inexpensive, and not many on the road around here (I'm a non-conformist). I mulled over the 250's (not powerful enough for anything but around town), the 650's (good for commuting and daylong rides but ungainly on tight trails) and settled on Suzuki's 400cc.
Before I bought it I heard of a woman at work selling a bike. For $60 I brought home my XS1100 that sat for 20 years. I had never heard about the XS1100 back then, I was entirely into smaller displacement bikes when I was doing most of my riding. $400 got it on the road and now after $2500 it's running like a top (but still butt-ugly as those at Big Island Deuce can attest).
I still look at the new bikes but nothing interests me. They're all too single-purpose anymore.
In a few hours I can have my touring fairing, hard-bags, and trunk on the bike and ride 3,000 miles to Canada and back. I currently have the fairing off (it's cracked again), running a small sport shield. We can add dragbars and a wheeliebar on it and go dragracing if desired. Someone had hybrid 'standard/special' forks with clip-ons and was making some rearsets so the same bike can easily become a sportbike.
What new bike made in the last 10-15 years has such versatility?
Looking at the new bikes makes me appreciate my XS1100 all the more. Finding XS11.com led me to this group of fine people and that reinforces my love of this bike. We bought an XS750 from Tkat that my wife rides the hell out of, she likes the idea of his and hers bikes. Hopefully we'll ride together to one of the rallies someday.
Thank you guys and gals for keeping these bikes alive...
I used to roadrace so sportbikes were my 1st choice. Looking at the new bikes I'm impressed with the technology and innovation. The downside is that I would want to start racing againg and I don't think that would be smart or practible at 43 and having 4 kids.
I'm really not into cruisers (but have nothing against those that do like them) so that helped a bit in deciding on a bike.
That led me to dual-sports. They are practicle, relatively inexpensive, and not many on the road around here (I'm a non-conformist). I mulled over the 250's (not powerful enough for anything but around town), the 650's (good for commuting and daylong rides but ungainly on tight trails) and settled on Suzuki's 400cc.
Before I bought it I heard of a woman at work selling a bike. For $60 I brought home my XS1100 that sat for 20 years. I had never heard about the XS1100 back then, I was entirely into smaller displacement bikes when I was doing most of my riding. $400 got it on the road and now after $2500 it's running like a top (but still butt-ugly as those at Big Island Deuce can attest).
I still look at the new bikes but nothing interests me. They're all too single-purpose anymore.
In a few hours I can have my touring fairing, hard-bags, and trunk on the bike and ride 3,000 miles to Canada and back. I currently have the fairing off (it's cracked again), running a small sport shield. We can add dragbars and a wheeliebar on it and go dragracing if desired. Someone had hybrid 'standard/special' forks with clip-ons and was making some rearsets so the same bike can easily become a sportbike.
What new bike made in the last 10-15 years has such versatility?
Looking at the new bikes makes me appreciate my XS1100 all the more. Finding XS11.com led me to this group of fine people and that reinforces my love of this bike. We bought an XS750 from Tkat that my wife rides the hell out of, she likes the idea of his and hers bikes. Hopefully we'll ride together to one of the rallies someday.
Thank you guys and gals for keeping these bikes alive...
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