5 of the Most Overrated Motorcycles in History

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  • Опубликовано: 18 янв 2023
  • We look at 5 Motorcycles whose reputation is so lofty that no mere vehicle could ever compete.
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @jd6549
    @jd6549 Год назад +80

    Just as a side note I've had my Commando over 40 years it has done over 100,000 miles and is still going strong. I agree it has its faults, but most have been long sorted now.🇬🇧

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      I suppose the big worry is those freshly imported from the US bikes , good condition outwardly but it may have sat for years without improvement or attention, ditto barn finds I expect

    • @pateris
      @pateris Год назад

      I officially hate you. 😁

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      But not out the factory they weren’t.
      How much to make it reliable?
      I expect better Carbs n ignition system would make a massive difference. Then there’s the most important part, a degree of mechanical sympathy. Some all too often lacking when they were new

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +6

      @@bikerdood1100 The 73- 74 850's were good right off the showroom floor when compared to other British bikes of those years. If you run a Commando today you need the Boyer ignition and sleeved Concentrics. The single Mikuni conversion is sweet but has no top end. Plan on rebuilding the Isolastics. Anything older may need some serious sorting, especially the Combat models. They were never the "world beater" they were promised to be, just very sweet bikes if you maintained them meticulously and awful if you didn't.

    • @caribman10
      @caribman10 Год назад +5

      Nothing bettter than having your customers be your field maintenance and updating staff.

  • @gwwayner
    @gwwayner Год назад +87

    The worst problems with British twins like the Bonneville were that they vibrated like paint-can shakers on the highway, and they leaked oil everywhere in spite of your best efforts. But lovely on 50 mph back-roads. And damn, they sure looked good and were a teenage boy's dream.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +9

      Well they were designed for a world before the Highway really, I do find my BSA A10 shakes a whole lot less than our Triumphs did

    • @Hodado
      @Hodado Год назад +6

      Most all of the Tr-6 models leaked which ushered in the smoother Honda’s,Yamaha twin 650,with more power and no leaks

    • @bobmitchell8012
      @bobmitchell8012 Год назад +8

      Honda Twins, like my CB360 were as smooth as butter and. Revved to 11,000 rpm, almost 1hp for each 10cc and just over 100mph with its 6 speed box.......Honda were at the top of their game......the Poms didn’t stand a chance.

    • @buddhastaxi666
      @buddhastaxi666 Год назад +2

      I got my bike liscense in 1970.
      BSA went out of buisness and everyone I met with Bonnie or Commando were waiting on parts and doing them up.
      They were all fantastic to ride when they went.

    • @pashakdescilly7517
      @pashakdescilly7517 Год назад +2

      My 500 Norton is much smoother than any British 650 I have ridden. But not as fast. I have seen 90 mph on it, versus 110mph on the BSA Super Rocket I once owned. Otoh, the handlebar vibes on that got to your hands on a decent ride.

  • @elemar5
    @elemar5 Год назад +48

    9:35 The CB400F was not replaced by the 500/550. The 500 was produced before the 400. The 550 was an update to the 500.
    In the UK those nightmares (2 cyl Dreams) came along after the 4/4.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Yea I no 🙄
      It was the lighter cheaper and more powerful 400 dream which I do show so I not
      The 400f was too darn expensive to build
      Of course the twin came after
      That’s what replacement means

    • @elemar5
      @elemar5 Год назад +3

      @@bikerdood1100 Maybe listen to what you say at the timestamp.

    • @TheVonbond
      @TheVonbond Год назад +9

      @@elemar5 indeed clearly states the 400 was replaced by the 500 then the 550, which is not true

    • @JimChamp
      @JimChamp Год назад +11

      The 6 valve twins, 400 Dream and Super Dream were dull dogs to ride though. Really were. Might have been fractionally better on paper but that was all you could say for it. I worked in the trade back then and have ridden just about the whole late 70s/early 80s Honda range and most of the Yams and Suzukis too. In my opinion the CB400F was the standout bike of the era (well perhaps the Yam 350LC, but that was the next generation). Suffers in modern terms because its low powered to contemporary bikes, but back then it wasn't. One of my favourite 400F moments was when I did some gardening work for a chap a few years later, and turned up on my then rather elderly 400F with probably 40 or 50k on the clock and tatty with it. The chap I was doing the work for had a Kawasaki Z 400 four cylinder, which they made for a while (and admittedly wasn't a standout) . "Is", he asked me "the 400F as good as its reputation?" 'Are you insured for other bikes? Take it out and have a go' He came back about quarter of an hour later with a very glum look on his face. "Its better than my bike". One of the things about the 400F is that it was basically crammed into a 250 sized frame, whereas the earlier 500 and later 550 were more like small 750s. It was funny, because there were a lot of chassis parts in common with the G5 and CJ 250/350s, but in the 400F chassis they just worked better.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      @@JimChamp for Honda as a company though they were a win win. The twin was more powerful, had better torque and most importantly for Mr Honda much cheaper to build. That’s why there are so many mid sized twins around today and very few mid sized 4s.

  • @aeroearth
    @aeroearth Год назад +20

    Had a DB34 Gold Star that I rode every day to work and back for 7 years. Initially in Touring trim I converted it to the full DBD34 Clubmans specification with 1 1/2" GP carburettor, close ratio gearbox, clip ons and rear set footrests etc. Only needed to slip the clutch for 2 to 3 seconds to get it away and I used to ride around town in top. The GP carburettor being a racing design had no idling provision hence the slow blipping technique whilst at traffic lights and roundabouts. Rode it through the centre of London a few times too. Top speed on mine 115 mph. It was an absolute credit to the BSA Development Engineers.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +4

      They were great bikes but at todays obscene prices don’t think anyone is commuting on one today

    • @slowjames6904
      @slowjames6904 4 месяца назад +1

      I also had a DBD34 with RR2T gearbox for years back in the 70's used it for work shopping just riding around every day bike, no way did I have to slip the clutch till it reached 30 or 40 mph, would reach 100 mph on the clock, great bike, also had a BSA A10 Road Rocket another great bike of the day, just two of many Made in England bikes.

  • @stephenburton3876
    @stephenburton3876 Год назад +21

    Good video , I had two 400 4's when they first came out , put ace bars and faring and racing seat on it ,this greatly improved the handling and top speed , as it was very light on the front end as standard , I really thought this was the dogs nuts until one day while going flat out cranked right over on a dual carriageway roundabout one of the new 400 twins came sailing past round the outside , I knew then the 400 /4 had had it's day ! but I've always had fond memories of that bike !

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Sometimes less is indeed more

    • @yorkiecol7973
      @yorkiecol7973 Год назад +3

      with respect flat out, leaned over on dual carriageway is not what these bikes were about I had one 10 years from 1975. used everyday all year round it was a very capable bike lightweight low COG commuter that would do the coast run every weekend with the GF on the back.
      the 4cyl sound from the 4 individual pipes was something else, completely lost when a 4 into one was fitted. later on I got the 550 for more power but it wasn't the same bike.

    • @yorkiecol7973
      @yorkiecol7973 Год назад

      @@bananabrooks3836 good catch typo error bike was new 1975 comment edited. 1985 swapped it for a Kawasaki 305 belt drive also new regretted it after the first week of riding.

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Год назад +4

      @@yorkiecol7973 The 400/4 never had 4 individual pipes, it had a 4 into 1 from the factory, It was a very distinctive looking 4 into 1, with all 4 header pipes angled to the right hand side...The 350/4 had 4 pipes...

    • @yorkiecol7973
      @yorkiecol7973 Год назад

      @@MickH60 nope it was a 400 and did have 4 pipes it's one of the reasons I bought it they looked cool, besides I'm not sure the 350 was ever sold as a UK model some may been grey imports like the 500 and 650 models though.

  • @RedRodders
    @RedRodders Год назад +28

    Velocette Venom, Velocette Thruxton, Velocette Viper. they handled well and had a decent turn of speed, they also attracted a crowd with their retro looks.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      Love that black paint job and a good match for the Goldstar
      Oddly enough I’ve only ever ridden a cami 350, it was fab

    • @TheBuccy
      @TheBuccy Год назад +2

      Had A Venom Clubman , Viper clubman and a Thruxton all great bikes .
      Velos looked mean.
      However, my favourite was a pre unit Triumph Speed Twin ,ultra reliable and fun to ride.

    • @vernontaylor568
      @vernontaylor568 Год назад +1

      The only Velo I owned (briefly) was a Valiant. I always fancied a Thruxton but the prices were like phone numbers.
      In the 60s there used to be a guy ride over from the next town on his Thruxton and go for a burn with the other guys - they would visit the White Post transport cafe near Mansfield and on the way back to Newark would let rip down the Averham Flash. One of the guys had a T120 Bonny that he had spent a fortune on around at Johnny Duncan's shop, partly with dreams of beating Cowboy's Velo down the Flash. Initially the Velo would be eating the Bonny's dust but on the return to base (Cross Keys pub), the Bonny owner would be heard to say he had lost again, "I can't understand it" he would moan, "it never seems to go faster, it only bangs louder"...

    • @thomaspridmore106
      @thomaspridmore106 Год назад +2

      Velocette venom was my bike sold it for £60 mad

    • @TX200AA
      @TX200AA Год назад +1

      My Venom was a delight. It was a machine made by engineers who knew their business, and handled superbly.

  • @sproutandkidneysoup2296
    @sproutandkidneysoup2296 Год назад +16

    I bought a new 400 Four aged 19 in 1977 and I loved everything about it. Looking back, it had a combination of power and gearing that made for a really fun ride when you ragged it. I had no experience at the time of more powerful bikes, having come from a Yamaha RD200, but I enjoyed every second I rode it, and given how I used to ride in those days, I'd have probably seriously hurt myself or worse if I'd bought something bigger. It's the only bike from my past I would consider buying again,
    As for the BSA Gold Star, I remember a lecturer while I was a student being totally unimpressed with the prices they were fetching in the late 70's. He owned one in the 60's, and it was so unreliable, he left it behind a hedge somewhere in North Wales because he couldn't be bothered with it anymore, and it was, in his words, the biggest pile of junk ever made.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      As I say all good bikes but do the justify today’s asking prices when other bikes are passed over ?

    • @drstrangelove4998
      @drstrangelove4998 Год назад +6

      Yes, I totally agree with your mate, the Goldie is useless junk!
      Er‘m, just out of interest, I don’t suppose you remember exactly where that hedge was… 🤔

    • @kingdevil6021
      @kingdevil6021 Год назад

      I had a CB 400 super four but much later model. Brilliant, solid, bike that was called pocket rocket at the time!
      One the best EVER!
      The guy with this channel just needed to put a jap bike in the list so he can feel good about his Brit self. A real wanker.
      Not watching his content anymore! C.nt

    • @ianpodmore9666
      @ianpodmore9666 Год назад +2

      I had a Kawasaki Z1B and due to a financial catastrophe had to downsize to a 400-4, got to say after hating it for the first month or so, I came to love that little thing.

    • @sandy7299
      @sandy7299 Год назад +1

      400-4 was the best bike I ever owned, living on the isle of Mull with single track roads everywhere it was super nimble, just as well because I had 13 hairpins to negotiate in 7 miles!
      I swapped the standard exhaust for one of Mr Yoshimuras as the standard one kept catching the road
      Going to work every morning was an absolute pleasure

  • @stuartosborne3013
    @stuartosborne3013 Год назад +64

    Buy a Honda Cub does everything perfect. Cheap affordable, economical and you’ll be utterly invisible at any bike meet

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +7

      Well that used to be true but the Cub has become rather trendy in the UK. Second hand prices are going up an£ up

    • @colinrashleigh6488
      @colinrashleigh6488 Год назад +5

      It’s a shame a lot of them are being trashed so called custom builds, I’ve had a c50 , c70 , c90, and loved them all 😊❤

    • @stuartosborne3013
      @stuartosborne3013 Год назад +2

      @@colinrashleigh6488 I agree ghastly hipster builds. It is the most genius bike ever built if you want to get somewhere and actually get there. But that’s not what most want out of a bike these days. More look at my wad posturing.

    • @johnasbury9915
      @johnasbury9915 Год назад

      @@stuartosborne3013 that goes w the “bike meat” comment.. 😃

    • @luddite2702
      @luddite2702 Год назад +1

      From the people who brought you pearl harbour. Note the correct spelling of harbour.

  • @ThreenaddiesRexMegistus
    @ThreenaddiesRexMegistus Год назад +24

    The Commando required an hours maintenance for a days ride in some versions but I’d gladly own another if they didn’t require a mortgage to own. You’re dead right about the T160, they were fantastic to ride, and so was the BSA Rocket III. That’s a beautiful Bonnie at the start of the video! I have a 1982 T-140 and remember when they came out - strong motor but everything else was scraping the bottom of the barrel in fit and finish. It still rides with minimum fuss and maximum fun though!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +9

      There’s the problem classics are getting beyond the reach of the people who would actually ride the things

    • @bobmarlowe3390
      @bobmarlowe3390 Год назад +5

      I loved my Commandos. Yeah, they required some maintenance, but it wasn't all that bad.

    • @kenkayiii
      @kenkayiii Год назад +5

      having my Norton Roadster turn 50 this year, seems like it has never let me down...My '69 P11 did, but the most fun I had was on my '76 CCM580... All these required that you know them intimately and be prepared to maintain them ...and the alloys didn't let you down., but never overrated.

    • @rickconstant6106
      @rickconstant6106 Год назад +6

      I loved my 850 Commando Mk2a, which I bought new in 1974, but it needed a lot of maintenance, and I was 19 and using it for everyday transport, so it got neglected and I paid the price with all kinds of vibration-related issues. I gave up 2 years on and bought a car. My next British bike was a Triumph T140V, which I still use now, 30 years later. It is much more reliable, but it does get a lot better treatment than the Norton.

    • @rgadave
      @rgadave Год назад +3

      I bought a new Commando 750 Interstate 'Combat' in 1972, it was unreliable rubbish, sold on 'patriotism'. They were called unreliable in those days, now it's changed into 'maintenance intensive'.

  • @jamesgraham6122
    @jamesgraham6122 Год назад +4

    Back in 1980, a fairly wealthy friend, a collector, was showing me over a dozen of his cherished bikes , as it was a beautiful late summer evening he suggested that I chose any of the bikes and he would select something else, we'd then ride from west London to the south coast and back. Without hesitating, (he might have changed his mind!), I opted for the BSA Clubman..Wow.. was that a mistake! The lowered bars, not the most comfortable position for a lengthy ride.. what felt like pulling away in 2nd gear at every stop.. By the time we arrived back I never wanted to go near it again.. except of course, to look at it. My personal all time favourite ? Sitting in a traffic jam in Park Lane, 1977, I looked left into the BMW showroom, usually displaying the latest offering from Bavaria.. instead of a super-car there was instead, for the first time ever, a motorcycle! It was stunning! I parked as soon as I could find a place, walked back to the showroom and tried to buy it! Metallic blue, R100RS, it just stunned me. They wouldn't let me have that one but two weeks later I had one, same colour, I loved it to death.. kept it inside my house, never in the garage.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      I must admit, while I’m not a big BMW fan I always loved 5he RS.

  • @quadsman11
    @quadsman11 Год назад +2

    An old throw-back from the 60's & 70's, I have a passion for saving, and restoring some of these old vintage bikes, before they end up in the scrap heap, and lost to history !
    I have to tell you that this video is without question, got a like, and subscription out of me !
    Nice job on the video Sir !

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Thanks 🙏

    • @quadsman11
      @quadsman11 Год назад +2

      @@bikerdood1100
      I wish as a kid that I knew some of these great brands were going to fade away !
      I would have put more $$$ into more of these older top quality bikes then !
      Now, I'm just picking up the pieces of what no one else wants to mess with !

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      @@quadsman11 you find that what is regarded as junk has a very annoying habit of shifting. I got Deb the excelsior 150 you can see in some of our videos not so long ago for the princely sum of £124
      Today they are worth 10 times that. The problem is that old bikes get pushed out the price range of most young riders which can only be a very bad thing. It’s difficult enough to attract young people on to bikes as it is.
      Once the people who have spent a fortune on older bikes die off, not so long away in reality well then what ?

  • @Titan500J
    @Titan500J Год назад +5

    Love this video!!
    I started riding in the late 60's which was on small Honda's. Later I rode several Triumphs and I agree with what you said.
    The CB 400 four had character, the 2 cylinder 350 did not. IMHO if you want a vintage 4 cylinder get a CB 750.
    I now own a 05 GS 1200 and I agree, it will do anything but nothing perfectly. I do my own maintenance so that's not an issue. I got it at a reasonable price four years ago with less than 2000 miles on it so that's not an issue. If I had to buy new, no way! Too much money and they have to be serviced at the dealership and that's even more money.
    Very well done video.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Thanks
      I do my own maintenance which puts me off a lot of machines. Service charges can be a bit crazy

    • @wideyxyz2271
      @wideyxyz2271 Год назад +1

      CB750K you could blag a good one in the late 80s for well under a grand.....Halcyon days!

  • @g8ymw
    @g8ymw Год назад +4

    About the Bonnie's handling, that is why the Triton and Tribsa were built by bikers back in the day (Norton or BSA frames with the Trummie engine)

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Exactly
      Should hear the level denial
      Fact is the frame was too flimsy particularly early on

  • @yorkiegilly4355
    @yorkiegilly4355 Год назад +6

    Another good video and I agree over the BMW I have had a few but found them "fussy" and hard to service and work on ,but my younger brother loves his .The Honda 4 was a pretty bike good for commuting or if your short in the leg ,but I have always been heavy & over 6 ft so hardly one for me , one serious annoying fault was the front mudguard sprayed water straight onto the camchain adjuster on the front of the cylinders being so small it was just made to snap or strip the threads ?. As for Brough ,I have ridden bikes since the early 6os and have only seen three on the road and one a old Guy had near me with a sidecar fitted . The pre unit Bonnie was fairly reliable and oil tight ,but the basic electrics were horrible ,it used to gobble bulbs with the vibration .Never got - on with the Goldie but loved the looks and handling ,I had a Rocket Gold Star and a 1960 Gold flash that I did 40 + thousand miles on solo & sidecar , only broke down twice ,mag . packed up and the old crappy caged ball clutch disintegrated in Derbyshire ?. Had 100s of bikes but the best I can count on one hand ,I now own 4 including a Kwak Z1000 and a Wildstar XVS 1600 ,in my 70s now but still ride thru the winters ,but kickstarts are now a no - no ! . Happy Riding Lads .

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      It’s really about getting people to think about considering alternatives. Rather than everyone wanting the same things.

    • @gsmdo8836
      @gsmdo8836 Год назад

      I can't agree with your statement that the BMW boxer is hard to work on. It's the easiest bike to service I've ever owned...

    • @yorkiegilly4355
      @yorkiegilly4355 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@gsmdo8836 Old air cooled Beemers are ,I am talking about the later fully faired offerings ,what take a afternoon to get at the battery ?.

  • @iain777uk
    @iain777uk Год назад +2

    Fantastic content. Really enjoyed watching.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Thank you for good feedback much appreciated

  • @orwellboy1958
    @orwellboy1958 Год назад +2

    I'm wondering what is your take on the Kawasaki GPZ? I had a little 305, I think it was the best handling bike I've ever owned, very forgiving in corners and very light weight, maybe not the fastest but fun to ride.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      I had the scorpion 250 which I’m afraid a thrashed to death. The 305 is of course a development of the scorpion but obviously with a bit more mid range and top end shove. And there was the very handy belt drive too. By modern standards I suspect it would appear tiny, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing at all these days

  • @henrylidholm
    @henrylidholm Год назад +4

    Hey I like to hear about the Ariel models. I had a twin in the late sexties . I am not shure if it was the Red Hunter or a Huntmaster. Back then I loved working with and driving this machine.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      Ariel are probably the best value for money Classics. Far too often overlooked

  • @mrgladstone4044
    @mrgladstone4044 Год назад +5

    I ran a pair of Sunbeam S7's for 30yrs, very tidy, got them in magazines, alas the garage rent went up to £120 PCM. So sold them in my late 50's. I think one found its way to Cyprus. The 'post war dream machine', 'The Gentleman's mount'. Points distributor like on a car. With its wide wheels and solo seat a very stylish mount. In Black and then Mist Green For me it was love at first sight. My school teacher girlfriend became expert in handling all the questions whenever we parked up. I spent much of my earnings on those bikes. Stewart Engineering in Putney had available every last nut and bolt needed, much easier to source the parts for than newer Japanese bikes. Now underrated? Yes!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Shame really, could , should have been more successful but BSA didn’t develop the bike at all

    • @paulsmith2960
      @paulsmith2960 11 месяцев назад

      That's a shame. Totally agree in the looks department and love the unusual engineering. One day I may get rid of my top heavy overweight parts bin raided sports/tourer and get an S7.
      If you don't mind me asking, I read an article once that claimed they were a little on the wobbly side when cornering, since the frame isn't the most rigid. Would you say that is a fair assessment or, were they being a bit critical?

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm 10 месяцев назад

      That was an unusual bike for Britain, but of course it was a BMW design that was seized after WW2. Have seen two in my hometown and they look like battle tanks. One in sand brown and the other in red. Shaft driven of course, and that longitudinal twin layout was perfect for it.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@paulsmith2960 Hi Paul, I've never ridden an S7 but I think part of the reason for seemingly-eccentric handling might be the layout. The cylinders being in-line, the crankshaft is too, and so too the shaft final drive. At high revs this might produce sufficient gyroscopics to require discriminatory handling by the rider.

    • @miriamdumbleton4280
      @miriamdumbleton4280 8 месяцев назад

      had an s8. looled nice, interesting, but. . . gutless, poor handling, an that appalling worm drive . @@paulsmith2960

  • @gladegoodrich2297
    @gladegoodrich2297 Год назад +4

    When I was a kid in 1964 I had a Triumph cub. Ride it a mile and push it home. Loved that bike😂

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well wasn’t it so often the way with the Cub.
      Still they did keep u fit

    • @iamrocketray
      @iamrocketray Год назад

      I knew a guy who made a living stealing Triumph Tiger Cubs, He eventually got caught and his garage was stacked with bits of Cubs, He got sent to Borstal 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @Ian-bq7gp
    @Ian-bq7gp Год назад +7

    The forks frames, chrome and paint finish is far far superior to today's machines
    I had a BSA A10 and the chrome on the exhaust , footrests etc never peeled or failed even if it had been abused and the frame was so well made, beautiful brazing too. Magneto ignition was great. I had many 1970s bikes from Japan after. Some were great like z650 Kawasaki and Suzuki gs850, 1000 and 750. Really solid engines . Yamaha XS750 triple was a disaster but xs650 was good and xt500 was a lot of fun but had flaws with top end oil feed.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well I run both old and new bikes alongside each other, old bike Finnish is indeed very good, cost less of an object I suppose. Suspension and frame definitely not, well apart from the Harley sportster we had a few years ago, it’s suspension was very crashy
      Our SV Suzuki has cheap suspension but it’s very good compared to anything I felt on a classic. I have to say that the chassis design on some 60s Triumphs was ridiculously flimsy, especially the smaller bikes 350 and 500

    • @worty
      @worty Год назад

      Almost exacty the same as what I have now. Flash and W650. Had loads of Jap bikes in the 80s.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm 10 месяцев назад

      Ya, I've read that the XS650 was nicknamed the 'Hamamatsu Bonneville' 😁

  • @johnhill2813
    @johnhill2813 Год назад +3

    I would add the Honda VFR late models when they moved away from the gear driven cams. The early ones were a dream to ride and the noise from the gears was wonderful. I do miss my early one...I bought two later models with the chain driven cams and even a vtec model but they just could not cut it.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      They did get heavy and thirsty later
      VTEC was just unnecessary

    • @wookie45nz
      @wookie45nz Год назад

      Loved my Vtec!

    • @richardpeychers4076
      @richardpeychers4076 3 месяца назад

      Bought a 2002 Honda vtec/ VFR In
      2014 only 12000 kms on the clock and whistle Dixie everytime
      I'm out riding , beautiful bike build on a solid well balanced platform.Yes the enthusiasts love the gear driven motor and the particular sound it makes but their are those of us whom like the sound of that vtec cutting in and the surge of power it provides.
      As regards the vtec being unnecessary I can only say, not to many motorcycles can on basically the same platform boast top touring bike for so many years.
      One can think of Mitchell's Spitfire and the number of variations on that frame before it became obsolete.

  • @haroldrogers311
    @haroldrogers311 Год назад +1

    I bought a 1975 CB400F red, brand new in the spring of 1977, our local Honda dealer bought a bunch of these when Honda was dumping the left over units. $1,100.00 out the door, it was a lot of fun and sounded great with a Kerker header. I rode mine on the twisties a lot and in May 1978, road trip from Kansas to Daytona. It served me well until 1980 when I thought I had to have a bigger bike. The only bike to this day I regret selling.

  • @54macdog
    @54macdog Год назад +2

    Excellent video. Some hard hitting myth-busting.

  • @geraldscott4302
    @geraldscott4302 Год назад +16

    I look at motorcycles in a very different way than you do. To me a motorcycle is far more of an emotional thing than a functional thing. If you want a transportation appliance, get a modern car, or scooter. I owned a 1966 Triumph T120 Bonneville from 1983-1988. It was an absolutely wonderful motorcycle. Out of more than 50 motorcycles I have owned, it was my favorite. Yes it had it's issues as far as reliability and function goes, but its emotional appeal was off the scale. It was a beautiful bike, it made a beautiful sound, and it had a wonderful feel. Riding it gave you an almost euphoric feel. If there is one thing I hate, it is a smooth, quiet motorcycle. It was a simple machine, easy to work on, and it had absolutely NO electronic parts. Today's motorcycles are nothing but computers on wheels, and every single one of them are as ugly as it gets. Most of them are 99% flat black. I made a serious mistake in selling it, and cannot afford to replace it, or I would. In 2013, I bought a new Royal Enfield Classic 500. It was dirt cheap, and in stock form it was a horrible bike. It looked great, but it wheezed and hesitated like crazy. and it had a three foot long 50 pound exhaust that produced no sound. I trash canned the EFI, and replaced it with an Amal Concentric MK1 carburetor, and replaced that horrible exhaust with a shorter, lighter, much louder one. It now felt and sounded like a long stroke British single should. It's certainly not a replacement for the Triumph, but I have put 21,000 miles on it, and thoroughly enjoyed every one of them.
    As for the Gold Star, it is also a beautiful bike, and while I would love to own one, I admit it would not get ridden much. It's just too high strung for my more relaxed type of riding.
    I have only seen one Brough Superior, at a motorcycle show, I did not hear it run, but I love the way it sounds in your video. I had always heard about the super high quality, but the one I saw, while beautifully finished (obviously a very expensive restoration) I was not impressed with the manufacturing quality of its parts. It was rough. It looked like it had been hammered out by the village blacksmith. While it was an intriguing bike, it did not meet my expectations. That might have been different had I been able to ride it. As someone who has worked on Model T Fords, I do accept the fact that the finish was pretty much representative of the period in which it was built. It is much older than the Triumph or the Gold Star.
    I don't even know what that BMW is doing here. It is 100% JUNK. Not only is it super ugly, but smooth, quiet, more computer than motorcycle, and as unreliable as it gets. Modern BMWs are less reliable than 1960s British bikes. I don't hate all BMWs, those made from around 1970 and back were actually quite desirable, and far more reliable than new ones.
    The Honda CB400F is a bike I have conflicting feelings about. First, it's Japanese, which kind of puts me off to begin with. But there is a beauty to it, starting with those four chrome pipes that wrap around to a single exhaust. It would likely be a lot of fun on curvy mountain roads, but would take a lot more effort to ride. I think it would be fun for a short ride, on the right kind of roads. But I'm the type who prefers to just sit back and ride at a fairly steady speed, enjoying the sound and feel of the engine. An inline four would be a bit too smooth, and too well balanced to have much of a feel. Everything is relative, and if modern bikes were not so disgusting, I probably wouldn't give it a second look. But when comparing it to modern bikes, it looks a LOT better than it probably did back in it's day. If I were going to buy a Japanese bike, it would probably be a Yamaha XS650.
    Besides the Royal Enfield, I also have a 1997 H-D Sportster 883, a 2002 H-D Sportster 1200, and a 2004 Suzuki DR400 dual sport bike for off road riding. Oh, and a 1979 Vespa P200E 2 stroke manual shift scooter.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +7

      If you think I don’t see motorcycles in an emotionally you would be very wrong. I’ve been passionate about all of. I love riding them, the history and everything about them. Nothing brings more joy than to ride my old BSA.
      What makes me a green is the way that classic bikes are treated as a commodity and not something to be enjoyed. When bikes like a Brough are put on a pedestal it means that real riders never get to experience them and that can only be a very bad thing.
      The Gold star is beautiful but look at the prices they sell for absolutely obscene. But ultimately we have to be realistic, I say right at the beginning of that video that they are all great bikes. I just want people to consider that are very worthwhile alternatives, would I like to be able to ride a Goldstar, yes but owning one I’m not so sure they are very very needy, like a bad women,. I love the styling in fact if features in our top 10 most beautiful bikes videos but when riding you also have to practical.
      Can I ride this thing 100 miles without needing surgery. For me in buy A rocket Goldstar every time given the cash, if you not on track is far and away a better bike and just as pretty
      If I wasn’t emotional about bikes
      Why would I make videos about them.it’s not like I make any real money from it
      Just a thought

    • @philherrick7319
      @philherrick7319 Год назад +2

      Get yourself the XS650. You won't regret it.

    • @AmbroseB1900
      @AmbroseB1900 10 месяцев назад

      About 50 years ago I had a 1952 Royal Enfield 500 Twin. My late father had rebuilt and tuned it (he was a competition mechanic) and the top speed had gone from about 70 mph to over 100! It had twin reverse cone megaphone exhausts and sounded gorgeous. Plenty of pulling power even at low revs, comfortable to ride even with two up and handled well - my footrest rubbers were chamfered away from fast cornering. Great memory.

    • @EssexCountyPhoto
      @EssexCountyPhoto 10 месяцев назад

      You've clearly never ridden a modern BMW.
      Ignorance is dangerous.

  • @notwocdivad
    @notwocdivad Год назад +4

    Just one comment on the Gold Star, (and I have never owned one!) How can a motorcycle with so many wins in so many different discipline's be Overrated? And I think if it was so overrated wouldn't people have sussed it out by now and the prices would be a lot lower. Just an alternative view! Very good video Off to watch the UNDERrated bikes video now thanks!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Race wins mean bugger all when you’ve got to use it on the road, and on the road it is plain hard work. We don’t live on race tracks do we.
      If you put lights on a Moto GP bike it would be a bag of crap of an actual road.
      The video isn’t about how good a track bike, I do describe as a great bike right at the beginning. But the fact is there are a lot of really great alternatives which are far better road bikes and don’t cost over twenty grand.
      As I point out in the video a twin such as the contemporary A10 shown would be a far better choice if you actually want to ride anywhere and be far less than half the price.overrating a machine and putting it on a pedestal musts makes it so expensive that the price is not justified.
      Big reputation leads to big price. And that might be good for collectors but very bad for we riders

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Race wins mean bugger all when you’ve got to use it on the road, and on the road it is plain hard work. We don’t live on race tracks do we.
      If you put lights on a Moto GP bike it would be a bag of crap of an actual road.
      The video isn’t about how good a track bike, I do describe as a great bike right at the beginning. But the fact is there are a lot of really great alternatives which are far better road bikes and don’t cost over twenty grand.
      As I point out in the video a twin such as the contemporary A10 shown would be a far better choice if you actually want to ride anywhere and be far less than half the price.overrating a machine and putting it on a pedestal musts makes it so expensive that the price is not justified.
      Big reputation leads to big price. And that might be good for collectors but very bad for we riders

    • @notwocdivad
      @notwocdivad Год назад +3

      @@bikerdood1100 If you are classing it as a race bike maybe it should not then have been on the list? Just a thought.

  • @whiteonggoy7009
    @whiteonggoy7009 Год назад

    Just subscribed..great channel just my cup of tea.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the feedback and subscribing of course

  • @bobroberts6155
    @bobroberts6155 Год назад +4

    You’re a brave man making these videos knowing that you are going to be treading on the toes of both those who lust after these bikes and those who forked out “too much” money for one already. Bottom line is that all these bikes are highly desirable and so their greatness is simply an established fact that pointing out their faults does nothing to diminish. I enjoyed both your videos on this subject just to see and hear these great machines. Market forces have already decided that they are not overrated, these bikes are valued as automotive art as much as anything so comparing them with alternatives that are “just as good” doesn’t necessarily make a compelling argument against their value.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      I think people need to be honest and realistic
      Also it’s not about say their rubbish as some seem to think it’s about stopping people fixating on such a narrow field
      There’s are world of choice out there some bikes that are just as good if not better choices that simply get ignored.
      People can very sheep like sometimes. I find that when everyone wants the same thing is a massive turn off (GS)
      I’m not convinced people make informed choice but rather follow blindly.
      Biking is supposed to be about individuality
      Market forces mean bugger all ultimately and the modern obsession with how much bikes achieve at auction says nothing about the bike itself

    • @bobroberts6155
      @bobroberts6155 Год назад +2

      @@bikerdood1100 I liked a lot of these bikes (I’m old, but not a Brough Superior old) before I knew they were or before they became iconic, this says to me that they are inherently desirable. A Spitfire is iconic but there are better planes, an E Type Jag is iconic but there are better cars. Where I agree is that many other bikes with similar qualities do exist that make great alternatives for us mere mortals at more reasonable prices. If a few people have the narrow focus you mention then all the better for the rest of us?

    • @alihenderson5910
      @alihenderson5910 4 месяца назад +1

      It's just objectivity verses nostalgia. Too many people are too easily offended.

    • @mackpryor6887
      @mackpryor6887 4 месяца назад

      @bobroberts6155 An item is worth exactly what It will bring in the marketplace. (Roughly) John D Rockefeller

  • @FunAllDayLong4353
    @FunAllDayLong4353 Год назад +15

    Most Overrated Motorcycle in History? The original Honda 750. Every owner I knew back in the 70s died trying to keep up with their mates on British bikes on the corners. Whether it was the stodgy, wallowy handling, or just that the riders became reckless in their need to impress on over-crowded, twisty English roads, whereas a Bonnie could be ridden with abandon.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      I must admit I was sorely tempted to include it. Definitely a part 2 coming

    • @stefanmaslaczyk1259
      @stefanmaslaczyk1259 4 месяца назад +2

      During testing on race tracks in America, Honda put the 750 up against the competition. Harleys were totally uncompetitive. The only British bike that could live with the Honda was the Norton Commando but unfortunately they shook themselves to death after a couple of days. Granted on backroad scratching the lighter and more agile British Iron probably had the advantage.

    • @DavidM2002
      @DavidM2002 4 месяца назад +4

      I had a 1974 CB750 and yes, cornering was not up to the British bikes but, while we may have lost seconds in the corners we gained minutes while they were topping up their oil and hours or days while they were replacing lost nuts, bolts, and other bits. I rode mine across Canada and back and only had to oil my chain.

    • @user-ic2rq8cb1l
      @user-ic2rq8cb1l 4 месяца назад +3

      I bought a brand new CB750K6 1975 year my first multi, what joy that bike gave me in my later teens and still fondly remembered.

    • @Cheers_Warren
      @Cheers_Warren 4 месяца назад +4

      The CB750 was a marvel. As a British bike rider in the 70-80’s we hated them , they were fast , incredibly reliable , stayed clean and could go just a fast and round the corners every time they went out on the road , for us it was hit or miss if we could manage to show up.
      And they had electric start.
      They did everything a bike should do , we hated them because they did everything we wanted to do!
      Cheers Warren

  • @rickconstant6106
    @rickconstant6106 Год назад +11

    It may be a controversial view, but I think the later, oil-in-frame Bonnevilles are a more practical bike to own than the early pre-unit or even unit sixties models. OK, they're not as pretty, but they handle well, don't leak if they are put together properly, and have more modern features like disc brakes, indicators and halogen lighting. Virtually all the parts are readily available off the shelf, and the bikes are a much more sensible price than the early ones.
    I may be biased here, I've had a 1978 T140V for the last 30 years, and it has been very reliable and a pleasure to ride. It may not be suitable for regular, long distance commuting or continental touring, but I use it as daily transport, with the odd long run thrown in.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      On Balance I’m inclined to agree
      We had a Tr7rv and it was very good

    • @jamesfairmind2247
      @jamesfairmind2247 Год назад +3

      No question the T140 was a much maligned bike that was and is actually a solid well built bike, at least the Meriden ones.

    • @richardmoore7381
      @richardmoore7381 Год назад +1

      @@bikerdood1100 Tr7rv in green/white - my first 'proper' bike when I was 17

  • @peter7624
    @peter7624 Год назад

    A great video. A well informed and unbiased opinion on the "superbikes" of the day.

  • @stephenmorse342
    @stephenmorse342 Год назад

    My Dad loves his Goldstar but TBH it is endless hard work looking after it and riding it!! :)

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Precisely many people would be better served by a tourer twin of the same era, not quite as exciting, true but the Goldie like a bad women demands constant attention

  • @robertmarsh3588
    @robertmarsh3588 Год назад +4

    The ergonomics are the key to the GS. I've owned all the 1200 boxer versions and this is far more comfortable than any, especially for those of us with back or knee issues. Have barely ridden my RT since I bought mine, a few years ago as the RT gas a very cramped leg position. It is way too heavy and expensive now which is why I don't have the latest version. Wouldn't dream of taking it off road either.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Oh there is a lot of good comfortable bikes out their
      But do people look

    • @coreygolpheneee
      @coreygolpheneee Год назад

      The phyiscs of the boxer itself has a lot to do with it as well imo

    • @rolfwassens4047
      @rolfwassens4047 4 месяца назад

      the old air cooled boxers are better in that way. I have riden a lot of BMW ( still now but I hate GS very ugly and an everyone’s bike) but the riding position on a R 80 or 100 for me is better rhan on modern types. They are lighter too. Or you can take a Guzzi. More different and better looking, often underestimated in comparision with BMW. Great video’s you are making, thanks.

  • @MarkPalmer1000
    @MarkPalmer1000 Год назад +7

    The Honda CB350F four has something of a cult following in the USA among classics, more so than the 400 which never sold well here. I got the chance to ride one at an event, and yes it's real darn smooth. It's also real darn slow, enough to make me wonder why they built something that complex to have such little power. But I imagine that's the main reason collectors enjoy it, as it's sort of a misfit.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      The 350 class was not nearly as important in Britain so it was never sold here
      400s became a thing for tax reasons

    • @johncmitchell4941
      @johncmitchell4941 Год назад +1

      I actually rode one. It seemed out of breath at any rpm. Never got it past 50 mph and didn't feel like it wanted to go there. lol Nice try.

    • @kingdevil6021
      @kingdevil6021 Год назад

      It's a commuter bike!!! CB is commuter, reliable, fun, daily transportation!!!
      That's why this guy's is a wanker to put it here!

    • @64fairlane305
      @64fairlane305 Год назад +2

      Wonder why all 350F`s were slow but n ot mine? Mine was an angry little machine that could do 106-7mph sitting upright if I gave it some straight road

    • @kingdevil6021
      @kingdevil6021 Год назад

      @@64fairlane305 the dude with the channel is crazy, like a hard core redneck Brit or something

  • @robertjan6886
    @robertjan6886 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for a great video. Being an old Velocette owner, I was wondering if you could do a review on the mark.
    In the past I owned, from new a 1970 Thruxton, restored a 1953 MSS, and I also used to race a 60’s MSS motor and gearbox in a slider type short circuit frame, not very successfully mind you, but a lot of fun.
    Marriage and the need for cash, put an end to my Velocette ownership, but not my passion.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  10 месяцев назад

      Oddly enough the only Velo I’ve ever ridden was a pre war Cammy
      It was a fabulous machine

  • @johnbrooks9151
    @johnbrooks9151 Год назад +2

    Having owned a 400/4 in the mid 1970's I did 100's of miles, going on holidays and attending race meetings at Snetterton race circuit. Still miss it even after 40+ years, great little bike to progress on, as many riders did back then.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Nothing wrong with them just 5hat the 500 have the nicer motor.

    • @johnbrooks9151
      @johnbrooks9151 Год назад

      @bikerdood1100 , 500/4 nice bike but was out of price range of up and coming bikers In the 70's,,,, I know,, I was there,,

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      @@johnbrooks9151 well I do in fact remember the 70s. And in reality I don’t remember many people having the cash for too many bikes brand new. Most people brought second hand. I was riding for years before I owned a new bike. Don’t remember the price difference between the 5 and 400, be interesting to find out, but it didn’t mean a thing because no one I knew could afford either new anyway

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      @@johnbrooks9151 the price difference was not particularly large when new as a point of fact and on the classic market the 500 is often cheaper🙄
      I was there 🙄
      Don’t know how old people think I am, under 40 perhaps, I wish 😂😂😂😂

    • @matthewcoldicutt5951
      @matthewcoldicutt5951 10 месяцев назад

      Very fair comment, John, on the 400/4. We must have been living similar biking lives back then. A great progression bike, as you say, coming off a 250. Years later i have revisited my Yamaha 650 XS, but the the 4 pot 400 Honda seems so small now and so revvy and busy, I wouldn't be able to live with it!

  • @JW-ym5yb
    @JW-ym5yb Год назад +3

    i think the mythology around some of these bikes is amazing in itself. Jay leno, the American comedian, has a huge motorcycle collections and possible one of the largest privately held collections of Brough Superiors in the world. To purchase these he had to donate enough money to pay for the building of a new hospital wing at a children's hospital in the UK. From what he says, I don't know him personally, he's not underwhelmed. But that's the type of money your up against if you want to own one.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      I suppose there’s a couple of factors to consider really. If I’d spent that kind of cash on a machine then there isn’t a chance in hell I’d tell anyone if it wasn’t really as good as I’d hoped ( emperors new clothes and all that )
      The other is even if it’s brilliant, which it likely is, does it justify the price ?
      There were a few really brilliant bikes in that period and I suspect a lot less money would leave you equally impressed and a bit less bankrupt.
      I personally love riding pretty much any bike to be honest so the kind of expenditure that some of the bikes in the video is for just incomprehensible.
      When my old Goldern flash cost a mere fraction and is absolutely joyous to ride

    • @chrislaunders8283
      @chrislaunders8283 Год назад +1

      @@bikerdood1100 Not having that kind of cash I built an replica 1927 SS100 from scratch, making almost all of it myself apart from the engine and gearbox castings and internals, it took ten years but only cost around £10k and is a proper replica, not a vague lookalike. It handles beautifully and although I've only had it up to 95mph it was still pulling like a train, what a monstrous thing they must have seemed when they were new.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      @@chrislaunders8283 I truth few people do have that kind of cash, nice work though. Don’t blame you for keeping the speed below a tone. My little Terrot runs out of steam just above 45 but given the suspension it feels more than quick enough

  • @Mr39knuck
    @Mr39knuck Год назад +8

    You are right it’s hard to beat a late 60s British vertical twin for the sheer joy of riding. Although they lack the ability to eat up miles on the interstate. I love riding my Velocette MSS but back to back with my Bsa thunderbolt I have to say the thunderbolt is better. The Harley Davidson shovel head super glide is a very nice bike for American roads. I would like to see One of them in your shootouts.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      Well time yet, need more research first to do a bike justice of course, the shovel head is a very uncommon site here

    • @rickconstant6106
      @rickconstant6106 Год назад +2

      @@bikerdood1100 I had a friend, sadly no longer with us, who had a 72 shovelhead FLH. It looked and sounded lovely (straight through pipes, used to set off all the car alarms), but was very unreliable. It leaked like a sieve, ate up regulator/rectifiers and the vibration regularly loosened or fractured parts (several broken brackets, exhaust systems and a split fuel tank). I spent a lot of time patching things up as he had no real mechanical skills and I worked as a car mechanic. What it really needed was stripping right down and doing properly, but he never had the money to do that.
      Maybe that one was an exception, but I would be extremely wary of getting involved with a shovelhead again.

    • @JW-ym5yb
      @JW-ym5yb Год назад +5

      I owned a new shovel head "back in the day" yes I'm that old. Mine was completely reliable, never leaked oil, and only repair ever needed was a wire broke to the headlight but was easily fixed. Had it for six years, there's pictures of it on my wall still. I travelled all across the US on it putting thousands of miles on it. Like many designs routed in the past preventive maintenance was the key. Mine had both electric and an aftermarket kickstart. There was something about kick starting a bike like that that was so satisfying.

    • @ralphtieleman4950
      @ralphtieleman4950 Год назад +5

      My 1982 fxrs shovel is still great !

    • @JW-ym5yb
      @JW-ym5yb Год назад +2

      @@ralphtieleman4950 Keep on riding!

  • @Swaggerlot
    @Swaggerlot Год назад +1

    The big difference between the late British bikes and the Japanese models that eventually wrote them off, was that you had to be a motorcycle enthusiast. Enthusiastic in getting your hands dirty, enthusiastic in pushing a bike home on a rainy day and all of those other annoying things we had to put up with. CB750 and Z1s had their issues, but you could ride them whenever you wanted and wherever you wanted to, without being an enthusiast.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Well let’s not forget the market had shifted to recreational rather than general use and the British engines were never designed for high power figures or motorway work

    • @Swaggerlot
      @Swaggerlot Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 That's a rather assumptive statement and I'm not sure that it is based on fact. The period I refer to was one that motorcycles were still used as daily transport, in fact I used them for that for many years. However I was more comfortable on a little Yamaha getting me to where I was going than any BSA or Matchless I owned previously. The latter were more well suited to strapping on a sidecar than a Jap bike however.

  • @WilliamLithgowGuitars
    @WilliamLithgowGuitars Год назад +2

    Reading the Classic Bike magazines when younger i always thought those Coventry Eagles where way tasty!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Ditto to be honest
      Nearly brought myself a small capacity one a few years back, got an excelsior in the end instead. It’s that black and red paint job that does it for me I just think it looks far nicer than the more pricy Brough

  • @needparalegal
    @needparalegal Год назад +5

    I had the 1972 Kawasaki H2. Not only was it faster than any of these bikes but it was also reliable.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      And in a corner ?

    • @needparalegal
      @needparalegal Год назад +1

      @@bikerdood1100 It never went down in a corner, though I do not push cornering generally. There are not many variables in bike handling except tires, and to a greatly lesser extent weight distribution. The brakes definitely sucked.

    • @hanshogqvist7927
      @hanshogqvist7927 Год назад +2

      @@bikerdood1100 I had the 350 Avenger, the 500 H1 and the 750 H2. Before driving them I changed the tyres from Bridgestone to Dunlop and the bikes behaved much better after that. The 750 needed some strengtening of the frame also and both triples behaved much better with better swingarm. The 350 was faster than any of the Brittish bikes.

    • @barrycooper9451
      @barrycooper9451 Год назад +3

      Are you in your seventies?
      I never knew anyone who had a H2 who didn't smash it fragments.
      Lethal handling, next to no brakes and an intractable engine.
      No good for anything at all except the long straight roads of America I suppose.

    • @needparalegal
      @needparalegal Год назад +1

      @@barrycooper9451 Got it when I was 19. I have cheated death so many times that I just assume I am immortal. Most of my friends who wore their helmets and leathers are dead.

  • @lawrieflowers8314
    @lawrieflowers8314 Год назад +4

    Interesting video, thanks for posting.
    I was expecting to see a particular Vincent model on this list, but it’s interesting you’ve not included it.
    I remember a sentence from a 1949 Motor Cycle road test (‘So far as the standards of engine performance, handling and braking are concerned - the chief features which can make or mar an otherwise perfect mount - the mighty Black Shadow must be awarded 99 out of 100 marks; 99 because nothing, it is said, is perfect.’)
    Clearly, it had made quite an impression!
    Unfortunately, I never aspired to anything quite as good as that, but back in the day I bought a nearly-new 1990 Yamaha RD350 YPVS F2, and had a lot of fun on it.
    It had great performance for such small capacity, producing a lot of power in a lightweight package (exactly what a bike should do) and it would be very interesting to see an appraisal of it.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +4

      The Vincent is like an expensive, beautiful women, high maintenance. Amazing bit of kit though and I would certainly place it above the Brough so much of it was there own work. In the long run perhaps too much

    • @tobythehairlessdog8876
      @tobythehairlessdog8876 Год назад

      You could never start the bloody things if you weighed less than 12 stone, and even the hefters took 20 kicks - so what's the point?

    • @453421abcdefg12345
      @453421abcdefg12345 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@tobythehairlessdog8876 The secret is in "how" you start one, they are very easy if set up correctly, or if you are a real whimp, fit an electric starter.

    • @keithwickham8558
      @keithwickham8558 9 месяцев назад +1

      In 1960 when i was 20 i had a 650 cc BSA Gold Flash twin .I weighed only 10 stone at that time (work out what 10 stone was yourself) and i could kick start it no problem!!

    • @453421abcdefg12345
      @453421abcdefg12345 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@keithwickham8558 I think the problem with many people is that they jus kick away mindlessly, hoping it will start, stating with a kickstart requires a little bit of technique and thought, something a lot of people just do not have. Chris B.

  • @ben9l351
    @ben9l351 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have lamented my decision on my bike choice since 1978 when I purchased a CB400 hawk twin In the states called the dream. You have now made be go to bed with a smile on my face knowing that I made the right choice. I love you

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  9 месяцев назад

      My pleasure
      Remember there is no right choice just the right bike for you 😎

    • @othgmark1
      @othgmark1 4 месяца назад

      The twins after the 400f were called Hawks in the United States not Dreams.The 500 and 550 fours were sold at the same time as the 400 four.

  • @BanjoLuke1
    @BanjoLuke1 Год назад

    A brave video and well argued.
    I agree with all, apart from the BMW G/S section. I did quite a few miles in the mid-80s on a Monolever R80 G/S and it was a delight. Less grunt than you might want from an 800, but no gaps on the delivery and a ride that soaked up everything without being wishy-washy. I confess, I never took it off-road, but as a sit-up-high mile cruncher, it was wonderful.
    I find the more recent GS models slightly cartoonish and sad, but people do love them.
    I think your list is pretty good.
    I might put a Ducati on it, but I'm not sure which.
    As to underrated bikes, the V50 III and Monza. Solo, they were almost the perfect motorcycle on tarmac in any weather. And... Very entertaining where there was room to play.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      An R80 is a million miles away from todays Chelsea tractor
      Too much bike too many toys for me and they fact the people don’t consider alternatives very proves the point for me

    • @BanjoLuke1
      @BanjoLuke1 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 Absolutely, the current ones are almost a pastiche. But looking back, the old 800 seemed absurdly big and heavy at the time. The one I rode was standard, but you'd see them with those Gaston Rahier "elephant arse" P/D tanks and increased ride height. In Soho. The current ones (and the Harley version and more) are slightly silly; a sort of male Botox. But sillier.

  • @williamnethercott4364
    @williamnethercott4364 Год назад +3

    An alternative title might be "Five Justifiably Famous Motorcycles ".

  • @paulscofield8506
    @paulscofield8506 Год назад +4

    I guess everything is down to a point of view. One thing I would like to put right is the 500/4 came out before the 400/4 . The other is that folk lore plays an important part in how a motorcycle is viewed ,and perceived. The bonnie and Triumph in general being the absolute pinnacle of this . Movies ,land speed records ,and of course Steve McQueen . The Brough had Lawrence of Arabia and that mythical race with an aeroplane , The Goldy less so but had the cafe racer image straight out of the crate like no other .The BMW I can’t quite understand it being in your list ,it’s not exactly mythical but again it does have the folk lore with Ewan and Charlie,long way round,and I agree a obscured bike to go mud plugging in Mongolia with as demonstrated in the film. ! I would have replaced it with the Honda 750/4 WHAT!!!! Yes I know but bear with me . Why was/ is the original CB 750 Honda looked upon with such reverence? It was more for what it was as opposed to what it did. It was exotica for the masses . That engine was the real sensation on was otherwise an unremarkable machine as to what it DID. As a riders bike the Triumph trident ,and BSA rocket three were superior WHAT!!!. Well yes actually. The Trident / BSA had similar performance but would on a real riders road with two riders of equal ability a road with bends ,dips, imperfections in other words the real world the triples would run away ,I know I had a 750/4 ,handle it didn’t , and front brake wasn’t great either with the sheer weight it had to stop. . Ok the Honda didn’t leak, was totally reliable, and could be cruised at unheard f velocities,but a true enthusiast will never forgive bad handling and while I’m having a bit of a tantrum I’ll throw in a bike that was made in the 1950s that I believe would also give Honda a run for it’s money ,the Vincent Black Shadow, almost as fast ,good brakes ,good handling ,and in my opinion holds the title for the bike with the most iconic picture of all time ,that of one Rollie Free layer flat over the top of the machine in his swimming trunks breaking a land speed record at Bonneville salt flats ,now that’s what I call folk lore !!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +3

      I know about the 500 being earlier it was the twin that replaced it.
      The Bonnie was not in fact the mount of choice for Steve McQueen, both in the Great escape and in ISDT he of course rode a Trophy the twin carb Bonnie which was in no way an off roader, single carb is best as I always say.
      As for Brough nothing can justify the asking price today, TE Lawrence and all. If I was going for an expensive British Vtwin, is Vincent every time not the Bitsa Brough.
      I do love the Goldstar but not enough to drop 20 grand and for me the RGS 650 is a much better road bike.
      The only thing that really stuck in my mind about long way round was how often they were picking those tanks up off the deck, they broke 3 frames Crossing Russia not the one shown just too big and too common
      It’s the same as Japanese cars they offered more bells and whistles and that always sells, see how everyone wants a bike with an LCD screen today which has to be the most pointless thing ever fitted to a motorcycle. Would I personally buy a Honda or a T150 For me trident every time but I am strange that way . Always loved the look of a T160, but I’m more of a Tiger 750 man really because I’m tight

    • @columbmurray
      @columbmurray 10 месяцев назад

      Not a question of opinion. Yes , we can all have different opinions but things are either true or false regardless of anyone s opinion wishing it so. I can have an opinion as to whether or not it will rain but whether it does or not is a question of fact. And so we my love this or that bike thats your opinion but whether it leaks oil or handles badly is a question of fact.
      Lawrence did frequently race aeroplanes from his airfield.

  • @brucenichols9153
    @brucenichols9153 Год назад +3

    I have restored many Gold Stars yes a pig to ride in traffic, just a small point they never fitted TT carbs but a huge 1 1/2 inch GP carb. Good vid well done. I would add the Velocette Thruxton which I also owned
    /

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Yes similar in many respects, including that high price tag. The great shame about these bikes really is that their inflated prices make them too expensive for ordinary riders to afford and enjoy

  • @TheRealWindlePoons
    @TheRealWindlePoons Год назад +1

    I had a CB400F and remember it fondly. The power band ran from 7000 to 9000 revs but it didn't matter as it had a 6 speed box. I owned the previous midweight Honda, the CB360 (G5) and that was under-powered and handled poorly. The 400F was a great package, it looked good, it handled well and (while not a competitor to the 2 strokes of the time) it went well.
    The 400 Dream which followed was short-lived in the UK and was quickly replaced by the Super Dream, a re-styled (more slab-sided) version. The Super Dream was faster, better braked and handled as well. I didn't own a Super Dream but my wife did and we went off on honeymoon with her on a 400 Super Dream and me on a CB400F. Happy days.
    Later we had (Meriden built) Triumph 750s, hers was the Tiger and mine the Bonneville. Neither were a lot faster than the Honda 400s but the Triumphs were "ride all day" effortless.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Some like the rev happy nature of a 400f some less so

  • @jacquiecrandall6058
    @jacquiecrandall6058 Год назад +3

    Pretty much every Harley ever made

  • @rosewood1
    @rosewood1 Год назад +3

    The Honda CB 400 Super Four with VTEC and ABS and a Staintune exhaust absolutely howled great bike.
    My most over rated pick
    All American cruisers and I ride an Indian which I love. But the suspension and brakes are poor compared to my BMW R1200R.
    Aerial Square Four... gets hot... deadly rear end... look fantastic

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      We owned a Harley for a few years, it was surprisingly crude in some areas

  • @oscartravis5740
    @oscartravis5740 Год назад

    Terrific video, I tend to feel the same, how the aura and reputation of these bikes far outweighs the practicalities of buying, riding and living with the things.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      And that is precisely the point sir
      Had so many owners getting precious about their machines. Probably because the paid a tonne of cash for the things I expect

    • @oscartravis5740
      @oscartravis5740 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 I'd like to drop a hand grenade in and vote for the entire output of Harley Davidson to be placed under the same consideration. I've never seen the appeal of them!

  • @simonsadler9360
    @simonsadler9360 9 месяцев назад

    My last bike in England before moving to Spain was a Norton 600 since sold it cheap what's she worth now ?

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  9 месяцев назад

      More than you sold it for that’s for sure 😂

  • @aceofspades5786
    @aceofspades5786 Год назад +4

    Had a 400four in those colours, everything you say is true, but it is light, smooth and easy to ride, a proper bike after the L plates

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Nice usable bikes but a Little short on torque. The 500 is just better and the parallel twins are better too

    • @yorkiecol7973
      @yorkiecol7973 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 you would have to define better. in terms of difference, I tried a 400 super twin didn't like it at all the 250 was a more practical bike don't know about the 500 but the 550 was quite a bit heavier and far harsher to ride.

  • @guitarzanbikes1862
    @guitarzanbikes1862 Год назад +4

    I couldn't agree more about the 400/4, i had 3 in total. Slow, and I mean really slow even revving the nuts off em to keep up with 2 stroke 250's, fragile to when used like that! Reckon the people paying silly money for em today never rode one "in anger" back in the day! Agree that 60's/early 70's British parallel twins are the way to go, easy to live with, great handling and enough go and stop for mixing it with todays traffic on A & B roads!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +2

      Well I’m not a big bikes for everyone person but, effective 400 fours were a generation away and it wasn’t until the mid eighties that they became really competent. I had a humble Guzzi V 50 for many years and it was way faster than the cb.
      70s Triumphs are much underrated by the biking snobs but they are actually very capable bikes

    • @RIDGEBACK1943
      @RIDGEBACK1943 Год назад +1

      Had one too small had to drop down gear box to get anywhere. Terrible when carring a passenger. Glad to see it go.

    • @tobythehairlessdog8876
      @tobythehairlessdog8876 Год назад +1

      Totally agree - so gutless and expensive, but looked good. My Suzuki Cobra was twice as fast, and my H1 out of sight.

  • @shingerz
    @shingerz Год назад

    What a cracking review your spot on in everything you've said there good stuff ps il keep pottering around on my 59 flash I love it oh and 79 r80 7 👍

  • @southerncross4956
    @southerncross4956 4 месяца назад

    Your correct about the CB400F’s top speed. In 1976, during a WERA sanctioned 24-hour enduro road race at Charlotte Motor Speedway, I was a team rider among 25 other teams. During one of my rides at night, additional headlights had been added, positioned to illuminate corners while bike was leaned over. However, when not cornering, they projected upward, resembling glowing horns. Skilled in wet conditions, I quickly passed other teams when it started raining. While not exceptionally fast, the bike was stable and predictable. On the back straight, the speedometer registered 104MPH. I admit to sliding off the track in a tight turn, resulting in no significant damage, but understandably angering my team.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      Ouch !,
      Hopefully no serious injuries

  • @nlsn1964
    @nlsn1964 Год назад +4

    I had a Honda 400 four as my first serious motorcycle when I was about 15 years old. I agree with everything you said except you left out that when you are in that disagreeable part of the power band the particular vibration frequency makes your wrists ache after a few hours of liberal doses of it. Overall great bike to grow up on. Can definitely go fast enough to get you in trouble with local law enforcement. One other thing...those tiny little valves are about a nightmare to adjust.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Well most fours have a period in the reverse range when they buz I suppose. Recently tried out a Honda Cbr650 and did find it quite buzzy at times

  • @stephenanderson4603
    @stephenanderson4603 Год назад +3

    BMW r90s massively over rated, had a couple over the years and much prefer the later r80 /r100 models for a fraction of the price. Interesting video cheers 👍

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Think it’s because it help change perceptions about BMWs to some degree rather than any real ability the bike has

    • @stewy62
      @stewy62 Год назад +1

      @@bikerdood1100 I agree to a large extent with your comment, I owned both (second hand) a R90S and an early 1977 R100S. I’m not sure I could have told them apart when riding although some claimed that the smaller engine was smoother at low revs. At tickover the different carbs (the R90S having Dell’Ortos) gave a different intake sound. To me though, I don’t think that the TT silver smoke or Daytona smoke orange has ever been matched let alone bettered by BMW. The price difference now, around double I’d say for a R90S compared to a R100S, hard to justify, but that doesn’t mean that the bike is over rated. Now, if I could pick an air head to join my R nineT I’d go for a /5 with a toaster tank ! 🇬🇧

    • @collyernicholasjohn
      @collyernicholasjohn Год назад +2

      Maybe now overpriced and overrated, but I paid AUD $2100 in 1982 for a 1975 90s. God I loved it: 150kph all day on flat Oz roads and mechanically dead simple. Ifu want overrated (but gorgeous) the Duke ‘70s SS models 😂

  • @russthebiker
    @russthebiker Год назад +1

    One of the major reasons for the 400 fours success was the price,its compact size,not all motorcyclists wanted a massive ego booster,and it's inherent reliability, and it's user friendliness
    I knew lots of people that purchased them back then,often older riders in their 40s and 50s who wanted to travel without the oil leaks,the vibration,and the Sid Snott image of motorcycling in general,also very popular with women,and couriers who needed low running costs,and the ability to ride vast distances without being shaken to bits

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      It was a good bike as the video does say at the beginning, they can suffer problems long term of course simply because they were so revy. Having ridden some of the twin cylinder 350s from Europe I have to say they had much more torquey engines, at the time of course they would have been more expensive, but not so today.

  • @theymusthatetesla3186
    @theymusthatetesla3186 Год назад

    ...loved your comments about the Beemer! ;)

  • @collord7249
    @collord7249 Год назад +4

    My 400/4 had huge camchain rattle and the adjuster bolt broke off...the exhaust had massive corrosion and cost more than the bike did...the frame was off the little cj250t and was tiny even for a a five foot 6 shorty like me......4 bloody carbs to clean and balance.....loved it...

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Sometimes the pain brings you closer. You can tell I’ve been married a long time 😂

    • @barrycooper9451
      @barrycooper9451 Год назад

      And the 350LC arrived! 😳🙂😁

    • @adriandaw3451
      @adriandaw3451 4 месяца назад

      you forgot the pivoting front brake. I had to copper slip my girlfriends very 3 months. They used a horrendous aluminium.

  • @johnscotcher9753
    @johnscotcher9753 Год назад +5

    Yes, a lot of bull about those bikes nowadays, especially the Gold Star. However, a friend of mine has one that he, being over 80 years old, has changed to make it much more user friendly. The bike has indicators, electric start, normal handlebars, concentric Amal carb, realistic gearing. He knows a lot about Goldies as he had one new in the 1950s where he ended up doing about 150,000 miles on it, touring Europe every year etc.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +6

      I think the main problem is everyone likes the bike in full on clubman spec which of course is most definitely not user friendly on modern roads

    • @captainchaos3053
      @captainchaos3053 Год назад +3

      @@bikerdood1100 Agreed. My goldie was a stock standard bike and as such was a joy to own and ride.

    • @chrisfournier6144
      @chrisfournier6144 Год назад

      Rode a Gold Star and it scared the day lights out of me. No power, less brakes. Good looks though.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      @@chrisfournier6144 well of course power is relative, this was the 1950s, it was a very successful clubman racer but was expensive but of course with the arrival of the 650 twins which are much easier to ride on busy roads and death of the clubman race series it was aLl over for the Goldie in 62

    • @geoffmcrorie90
      @geoffmcrorie90 Год назад +1

      Indicators,electric start,normal bars,concentric carb,realistic gearing - what else perhaps belt drive,double discs etc; etc; It's no longer a Gold Star then in my opinion.

  • @collord7249
    @collord7249 Год назад +2

    triumph t100ss 1967...so hard to start and the oil came out quicker than you could put it in....loved the effing thing...

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Can take a bit of a kick to get going, big singles can be tougher though. Bloody Starfire 250 of all things could be a total bastard. Your right about the leaks. Those push rod tubes are a pain although many Triumph nuts argue with you if you say they do. We’ve owned them and they do.
      Loads of character though.

  • @redr1150r
    @redr1150r Год назад

    I'm 71 and have had more than a few bikes. I rode them day and night, in all kinds of weather, all year around. I'm dangerous in a car when she lets me drive it. 🙂 I earned the BMW 500,000 mile award on 5 different BMW's. One of them was a GS1200 which I enjoyed for 130,000 miles , or so. I've also had Norton, Triumph and BSA, several of each. If a bike has a weakness, I'll find it and I'll fix it. What do I ride now ? I got off the BMW's and got a Harley Davidson Sportster. They think I'm doing animal sacrifice under a full moon. 🙂 I still do a 100 mile a day commute at my age. I like the Sportster (Bike #31) . It talks to me and I can feel everything. Very good video.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      I think it’s important to have a ridden a good range of different machines, some only ever ride the one type of bike which I feel is not good for your riding. The idea of the video is for people to consider other machines because all too often riders seem to follow the herd l

  • @ralphmctell5210
    @ralphmctell5210 Год назад +3

    I've always thought the same re Bonneville and Goldie, but I'd add Vincent to the list even though I'd like a Brough (or Brow as Drew Prichard calls them). BSAs build quality at the time was better than Triumph - I'd happily pull a chair with A10, but Triumph twin is a little bit too delicate. My A10 has performed well in the 33 years since I rebuilt it, as has my air cooled BMW.👍

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      That’s the point really there are a great number of really good machines out there and it’s folly to put some on a pedestal. It just leads to inflated prices

    • @shingerz
      @shingerz Год назад

      Wow I have same bikes love em 👍

  • @markebush
    @markebush Год назад +3

    The Gold Star won many many races. It was a remarkable handler on the road or in the dirt, but you needed to understand the Girling Suspension. Other bikes could not keep up with the Gold Star in Scrambles races.
    You mentioned the Bonneville, I once came across a guy who worked locally who rode his 1956 Bonneville daily to work for 26years at the time I met him. The Gold Star was not over rated. The Brough Superior nor the Triumph were not over rated for their era, especially the Brough Superior. You are a very confused man.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      You should pay more attention to the video. It’s about how those bikes command such high prices really. Their were other great bikes in this period too which were at least comparable. A Bonnie can be twice the price of its contemporaries today. Is it twice as good absolutely not. Ditto other bikes. All the bikes in the video are great, I say that from the start . But there are other bikes which are great too and don’t need to be seen through the same rose tinted specs. I own and love classics but I’m also realistic about them and not a fantasist

    • @rickconstant6106
      @rickconstant6106 Год назад

      Bonneville came out in 1959. I think you are confused.

    • @markebush
      @markebush Год назад

      @@rickconstant6106 You may be correct. The bike I remember was a single carb In less than a minute of looking at it I remember it looked like a Bonneville T120 so this bike was a TR6 because I remember the single carb. I didn't meet the rider personally as I was there with a friend on a BSA 650 Thunderbolt, who had talked with the guy. This was back in the 1970s. So the TR6 was about 20 years old. I was really impressed. Eventually my bike out lasted all my cars to over 40 years. Still runs but I haven't been riding for a while.

  • @thomaslubben8559
    @thomaslubben8559 Год назад +2

    Honda did NOT replace it with a 500 and later a 550. Those came BEFORE the 400 and were a different machine. They replaced it with the 400 Hawk.
    And actually, the 350/400 was more of a scaled down 500/550 than a scaled down 750. The frame was similar to the CB350.
    I worked on all of them in a shop in that period, and had a GF with a 350 four, so am pretty familiar with them. She rode the 350 four across the US twice. It and the 400f were pretty capable machines.
    As for the GS, it's not a dirt bike. It's the best touring bike BMW makes. But it's clothed in people's dreams. When they buy it they discover it's the bike they really want, rather than the bike they thought they wanted. Very clever marketing. They did the same with the R90S. People bought it thinking they wanted a cafe racer, but when they rode it, they realized they really wanted a gentleman touring bike. And had it in the R90S.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Well really depends on the market but essentially yes the 400 twin replaced it, Hawk name is not one commonly used the Uk. The point here is that it was replaced by the apparently simpler twin..
      In the video I do say that the engine is quite different than the 750. It was even wet sump which of course the 750 wasn’t. The 350 was never seen in the UK or indeed most of Europe where there was less of a 350 market. In fairness the ability to make a 400 truly capable was a decade away and would need 16valves and water cooling. I’ve ridden some of 5he European 350s of the period and believe me they make much better talk than the rather busy 400f.
      I think it’s pretty obvious the GS isn’t a dirt bike 🙄hence the Chelsie tractor comment. The point of the video is not to say that they aren’t great bikes is it, I say as much right at the beginning
      The point is that there are many capable bikes out there. And too rate any one way abov3 the others is just plain dumb.
      I think people hear what the want too in videos to be honest.
      We own 10 bikes including classics but we do not see bikes through rose tinted glasses like so many Ex bikers seem too. I’ve toured for thousands of miles despite not ever feeling the need to blow a tonne of cash on an overweight GS

  • @davidbaker9730
    @davidbaker9730 Год назад

    Love your videos. I have a porridge bike - AJS 18 1957. It does everything in a competent and unexciting way but, do everything it will with reliability. You can have the illusion on a quiet road that you are back in the '50s without the distraction of a mobile phone and the cares of the world.
    I also have a Norton Commando. With sleeved front master cylinder, electronic ignition, better starter motor with heavier cables and (cringe from the purists) a Mikuni carb I could not ask for a better daily rider. But they, along with all the desireable British bikes from pre 1980, are very expensive. There is a crop of very desirable bikes from the 90's coming through which I predict will be the future kings of classic. Examples Suzuki Bandit (600 or 1200), Honda Blackbird, Triumph Speed Triple, Ducati Monster etc. which remain wicked cheap and are super capable bikes. Perhaps a focus on some of those bikes would be useful in a future video?

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      All good machines
      As far as the purists go I’d say it’s your Norton and most of the people who criticise don’t have to ride it

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      AMC 350 singles are very good but often forget motorcycles

    • @davidbaker9730
      @davidbaker9730 Год назад

      @@bikerdood1100 Yes it is true. For 4 years I perservered with a stock "pure" motorcycle except for the brake upgrade. Sadly I could never count on getting home under the bike's steam. A friend said "You can put the Amals in a nice box and give them to the future owner" I think I have managed to extract much of what was good about the character filled joy of British engineering with the efficient expedience of Japanese re-engineering

  • @paulbarnard933
    @paulbarnard933 Год назад +3

    MZ are brilliant bikes. Great engine. 100.00 mi

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Were indeed

    • @iamrocketray
      @iamrocketray Год назад

      I passed my Test on an MZ250 that I bought new, sold it for more than I paid for it and got a Honda CB 750 K7, Now that was a bike if you liked chrome and big pipes.

  • @jamesfairmind2247
    @jamesfairmind2247 Год назад +32

    Most overrated British bike for me is the 750/850 Norton Commando. Great bike for sure but far too many basic engine and chassis faults to be deserving of its reputation compared even to other Norton models. Most overrated Italian bike, the Laverda Jota, not that powerful in reality and not brilliant handling. Most overrated Jap bike, Kawasaki Z1/900/ fantastic engine and looks but handled like a drunk camel on roller-skates. Owned all of the aforementioned. All great bikes but overrated. Conversely, most maligned bike, Triumph T160, smooth, comfortable, reliable and cornered like a dream, but I was lucky to have had a good one. BTW Honda produced the 500/4 and 550/4 before the 400/4, not after it. The 500/4 launched here in 1971 and the 550/4 in 1974.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Good point true about the Commando. The gearbox used was from AMC twins and the shafts did not line up brilliantly. Wasn’t a big problem on earlier machines but the power of the commando , especially the racers was pushing it really.
      The handling of a lot of early Kawasaki was poor weather they be two or four strokes.
      Was gunna include the z in a later video for that very reason. In standard trim the bars were too high and the suspension poor

    • @stephenanderson4603
      @stephenanderson4603 Год назад +2

      A mate of mine had a really good t160v and it was superb.! Unfortunately the one I had wasn’t.

    • @jamesfairmind2247
      @jamesfairmind2247 Год назад +1

      @@stephenanderson4603 Sadly that was the majority experience. It could have been the bike that saved Triumph. They took the wrong bike away from Meriden. Look how well made the T140 was, the Meriden factory was a good workforce badly betrayed.

    • @jamesfairmind2247
      @jamesfairmind2247 Год назад +4

      @@bikerdood1100 Yes, pity, the 900 was one of the greatest 4 cylinder engines ever, could be tuned to double power and still be 100 per cent reliable. It had the highest quality alloy metallurgy of any Jap engine ever made, virgin material, not recycled alloy. Kawasaki had a metals division so they allocated the best to heir flagship bike out of pride. That is why so many people fitted it into Harris, Sealey and Rickman chassis. .

    • @Grahamvfr
      @Grahamvfr Год назад +3

      Interesting comment, bit surprised about you thinking the z1, z900 was overated, nobody overrated its handling,(very few big jap bikes handled well at the time, particularly my triples.) However at launch it was simply awesome, due to its size and performance and looks as you say. Just my thoughts.

  • @mohammadghani3933
    @mohammadghani3933 10 месяцев назад

    Thankyou very much for the fantastic Videos
    Love the Honda and BSA Motorcycles
    It's still I think will be talk of the Town
    Thanks Buddy
    post More Informative Videos like this

  • @uralbob1
    @uralbob1 Год назад

    Great episode!

  • @jeremykeller211
    @jeremykeller211 Год назад +3

    Dood! You damage your credibility by impugning the Goldie. Your only criterion seems to be everyday use. By using this criterion alone, you deny the DBD 34 its place in its true environment, clubman racing in the UK in the 50s and 60s, where, in the right hands, it could do more than hold its own against pricier Norton Manxes and Italian multis. If you are yowling into Paddock bend at Brands Hatch, you are not going to be concerned with hard starting or clutch slipping in first gear.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Is not everyday use important?
      Unfortunately for the Goldie it’s true environment isn’t modern roads, you could level the same charge could levelled at modern litre sort bikes to some extent. As the video says it’s not saying it’s not a great bike but in all honesty a twin is a better road bike and we don’t live our lives on a race track do we

  • @gnm109
    @gnm109 Год назад +2

    Calling the BSA Gold Star over-rated is just plain silly. It excelled at road racing, scrambles, enduros, flat track and just plain riding. Yes, I owned one and raced it for some 10 years. Over-rated? Hardly.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      It’s a great bike but the cost is obscene and it’s practically on the road then and now poor. Silly I think not

    • @gnm109
      @gnm109 Год назад +2

      @@bikerdood1100 I paid $1,000 for my Gold Star in the Crate from England in 1957. I have no idea what the current models sell for. We are apparently talking about two different motorcycles. I'd have to say that the early Gold Star is the best single cylinder bike ever built in that era. I've owned street AJS, Matchless, Norton and Velocette as well. No accounting for taste.

  • @Longansrun
    @Longansrun 11 месяцев назад

    Perhaps a video on the unrestricted 50cc sports mopeds? Fizzie, AP50, SS50? Thanks so much!

  • @barryrudge1576
    @barryrudge1576 Год назад +2

    I rode Triumph 650cc 6T motorcycles on Lancashire Traffic Department in the mid 1960's. As much as I enjoyed riding them they had one major fault, vibration. Hence the marriage by some of using the Norton featherbed frame with the Triumph twin preferably pre unit.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Triumph vibration was always an issue, made worse by the flimsy frame which if anything amplified the vibes
      We run. BSA A10/and I have to say it’s much smoother than any Triumph twin I’ve yet ridden

  • @kennethmaney914
    @kennethmaney914 3 месяца назад

    An Ariel arrow, and a BSA C15 WERE TWO OF THE BEST BIKES I HAD. I Could convert my arrow from a full race looking machine, with full fairing ,racing seat and tank etc. To a novelty bike with a long front to back seat, ace bars turned up, and a cafe racer looks in about half an hour, They only did about 65 tops but I loved em. And back then you could ride a 250cc on L plates. My C15 had ape hangers and a banana seat, with Esso tiger tails hanging from the bars. It was never about performance, It was about ease of use, and being able to convert them in minutes instead of weeks.DID MY FIRST TON ON A HONDA CB 250 ,THROUGH TOWN ON A SUNDAY MORNIG, AND SAW ONLY ONE CAR. Those where the days.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  3 месяца назад

      You make such a variety of comments
      Some good, some dumb and some frankly concerning
      I do agree about the arrow.
      You later describe bikes as death traps after boasting about speeding
      Trust me the bikes may well not be the problem

  • @columbmurray
    @columbmurray 10 месяцев назад

    In my eighties i now ride a Starship PCX scooter. Excellent vid , most interesting.. Thanks.

  • @aliwhitwell
    @aliwhitwell 10 месяцев назад +1

    My neighbour had a Goldstar. It was an amazing bike and very fast. It was every biker's dream to own one regardless of what ever this video would lead you to believe. What seems to be missingin the video is that back in the nineteen sixties the traffic and roads were entirely different than those of today. A Goldstar would indeed be a poor choice in the 2020s but by the same token an R1 Yamaha would have been totally unsuitable for the roads 60 odd years ago. I know as I was a biker back in the sixties and still ride today!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  10 месяцев назад

      If you pay attention I’m not saying it isn’t a great bike
      But it’s not perfect nor more importantly is it ideal for everyone
      Incidentally I wouldn’t consider an R1 or any litre sports bikes they are all poor road bikes
      The prices of bikes such as Goldstars in unjustified and unsustainable and has turned the bike into an investment so you never see them on the road
      The fact is that most classic bike owners are older and as a rule use the bikes for a sunder potter
      A role for which the Goldstar is I’ll suited and younger riders who could get the use out of them can’t afford them, has this sadly made the bike something of an irrelevance, possibly

  • @walkerhjk
    @walkerhjk 4 месяца назад

    I had a 1955 650cc Ariel Huntmaster. That was a lovely bike, I had no problems at all, it was very comfortable to ride all day.
    George Brough was a personal friend of my father. His bikes were all built 'one off' for a particular customer who would have dinner and a discussion with George who would build the bike specifically for him. You could not buy a Brough Superior 'off the shelf'.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      Literally everyone knows that
      Not really unique however in that period
      Interestingly they weren’t that expensive in their time
      Unlike today where their price is absolutely unjustifiable

  • @user-nl7il5zb8m
    @user-nl7il5zb8m Год назад

    A great series and a pleasure to watch. How about (and I know this has been done before), but complete 'turkeys', which manufacturers thought would be winners. but were just the opposite.

  • @Farweasel
    @Farweasel Год назад +2

    Possibly interesting supplement to the Honda 350 & 400 Fours
    in '74 I ambled around north central France for a few days on a CB350 K4 (twin)
    I think that was the first time I'd seen the 400 Fours and the French absolutely loved 'em -
    They (& Honda CD 175s) were everywhere, 'tho the 4000 Fours were incredibly rare back in the UK .

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Remember those cd 175s, absolutely massive for a small capacity bike looked like a 500 to us back then. If I saw one now it would probably seem small

    • @wideyxyz2271
      @wideyxyz2271 Год назад +1

      Benlies!!

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel Год назад

      @@wideyxyz2271 I'd forgotten that name 'til you said it
      In fact I though for a bit 'Why's he bringing Benellis into this part of the discussion'?
      THEN I remembered
      *FUN FACT* Benly is the Anglisised version of the Japanese word Benry.

    • @kingdevil6021
      @kingdevil6021 Год назад +1

      Cb400 was a real bike. Everything on the tin, affordable, reliable, easy to handle (my GF road it too) and all round beautiful ❤️
      This guy's an idiot or biased against Asians to put it here. He's sounding racist to me 🤣

  • @eronavbj
    @eronavbj Год назад

    Thirty Years ago, I took my Honda CB 350 to a neighbor for some cylinder work. He worked at a Harley dealership but did work on all bikes on the side in his garage. I was thinking of upgrading my Honda to a 900 Sportster. He asked me what I was interested In-status or performance. I said I want a bigger bike that was safe, comfortable, and reliable.
    He told me flatly to ignore Harley and get a Japanese bike, any of which he claimed would out-shine a Harley and at a much more reasonable price. I have had Yamahas and Suzukis over the years, my last being a Yamaha 1100 Virago and have never been disappointed. As I now approach 80 (years, not MPH!) I no longer ride. If I was to try a bike again, it still would not be a Harley.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Sounds like you took a pragmatic approach to your bike choices. If you like the bike you ride, what other people think means not a thing

  • @belperflyer7419
    @belperflyer7419 4 месяца назад

    I had a 1953 BB34 Gold Star with a standard gearbox and normal handlebars. I used it for everything from day to day, touring, and even semi-sporting trials both solo and sidecar. It was the first Gold Star with a pivoted rear fork. One of the great things was the quickly detachable wheels, which made punctures easy to repair. I had to replace the worn out TT Carb with a Monobloc, which was easier on my kick-start knee :) I still have a piston with a hole burnt in from the dodgy TT carb (weak mixture).

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      The big problem is the GP carb which is made worse by poor maintenance and the fact the almost everyone wants a close ratio box and clip ons just makes for an impractical combination on modern roads. People will argue is better for the track but the reality is that’s not where people rode them these days, well most

    • @belperflyer7419
      @belperflyer7419 4 месяца назад

      @@bikerdood1100 Quite. A few years back I met an old friend I hadn't seen for years and he'd got my old Goldie. He claimed it was literally the first Gold Star with that frame. He had been an artist with sheet metal and made many alloy tanks/farings etc. He used to trial Ariel sidecar outfits.
      I'm 84 now and a lot of things I enjoyed are no longer possible - mostly due to injury - but I've had a lot of bikes in my time. Of BMWs I much prefer the lighter, more manageable Earles fork models, R50, R60 and R69s, all of which I had at one time - I even rode my R69s in the Land's End trial! They have the benefit of a much lower saddle height.
      I knew an old chap in Nottingham (about my age now!) who knew George Brough quite well and agreed with your assessment of his salesmanship and flair. He used to passenger in a sidecar with Sturmey Archer gearbox designer Issy Cohen in the 1920s.

  • @trevorhoward7682
    @trevorhoward7682 10 месяцев назад +1

    I know nothing about motorbikes but I saw one helluva bike many years ago. In the 70s I was driving up the M1 going on leave. My passenger; who knew something about bikes; told me to watch as we pulled back into the middle lane. Alongside for a few seconds was this large, long motorbike. My mate told me it was a Vincent 1000. It looked impressive but, I don't even know if my mate was having me on. I later worked for IMI Marston which had a small museum of Sunbeam pushbikes and motorbikes.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  10 месяцев назад +2

      That would be a Vincent alright
      If you know nothing about then it’s easily remedied
      They have a fascinating history that started before the motor car
      And off course they are so much more enjoyable
      A classic bike is so much easier to live with than a classic car. No body work to rot
      I would also say I post a lot of stiff on various machines you can watch
      ( shameless plug ) 😂

    • @harley1200davidson
      @harley1200davidson 3 месяца назад

      Still got mine, bought it in 71 , won't part with it.

  • @andrewblatherwick8758
    @andrewblatherwick8758 Год назад

    Any love for the old MZ. My mate learned on one. Not sure which model though. Learners could learn on up to 250cc back in those days.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      Ran a 250 for a while myself
      Did a great job getting me to work

  • @fireblademan494
    @fireblademan494 4 месяца назад

    You are right about the Early Bonneville The head on mine cracked across the valves. I had only just bought the bike, second hand from a dealer. So they ordered me a new head. Excitedly I got home and got strait to work stripping the rubbery protective cover off the new head. only to discover The old head was 5 stud The new one was 6. But it got sorted in the end.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      It was a well documented problem

  • @blu203
    @blu203 11 месяцев назад

    1982 Yamaha Maxim 650 was my first bike. I wish I never would've sold it. Great great machine.ncan you find one to comment on? Thanks!!

  • @djrichylaurence8991
    @djrichylaurence8991 10 месяцев назад

    My dad had a T500 back in the day. He told me he carried a bag of spanners everywhere he went and it leaked oil like the Ammaco Cadiz lol.

  • @Edam-Channel
    @Edam-Channel 9 месяцев назад

    My ex-boss used to sidecar race in the 50's and he said they picked up whatever wrecks were about to drop into a sidecar and at various times raced with engines out of Goldstars, Manx Nortons, Square Fours and even a Vincent Black Shadow.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  9 месяцев назад

      Well I suppose you just wanted the most powerful unit you could find

  • @rosewood1
    @rosewood1 10 месяцев назад

    You obviously are not familiar with the Honda CB400 Super Four with VTEC. This revs to the moon 12000RPM all day! The BMW GS is a great bike. With the Telelever front end and Paralever rear plus ESA it can do things other bikes cannot. And it's still very fast on tarmac. But I agree for off road it's very big and you had better have advanced dirt bike riding skills to really extract the potential this machine has. Personally I prefer my R1200R Classic. It is very fast and capable as a tourer and will go to 90% of the places the GS can go and it's lighter and lower. And it is really beautifully made. It handles mud corrugations and pillion with ease. Is the Brough worth the money? Probably, because there is only a very limited number made. It will always be a good investment.
    Great video as always.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  10 месяцев назад

      I am and that’s 2 decades later 🙄
      Has absolutely nothing to do with this bike at all
      I’d pick a more conventional model over a Gs for sure
      Incidentally we have an early 2000s oil head boxer and we all agree that the Guzzi Breva 1100 motor is much nicer and looks better to, by way of a bonus. After riding big Guzzi’s for years we were keen to see how it compared. Not exactly overwhelming. OK but surprisingly lacking character, which surprised us
      As for Brough the same can be said of a few very similar machines of the period, more a matter of great marketing than anything else, is it head and shoulders above say a Coventry eagle flying 8 ?
      Absolutely not. A bike is for riding I personally despise them being seen or used as an investment
      Makes my blood boil 🤬

  • @richardfox2865
    @richardfox2865 Год назад +2

    Interesting video... the suzuki GS 550 is easily the best bike I've owned. The GsX1100ez was also a superb bike, great handling and bucket loads of power.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      🤫am intending the feature the 550 soon

    • @orwellboy1958
      @orwellboy1958 Год назад

      I absolutely agree with you on the GS 550, easy maintenance too. I never owned a GsX though so I can't comment on that but I've read good things.

  • @charliepatterson9321
    @charliepatterson9321 Год назад +2

    Harley
    Owners
    Need
    Dependable
    Alternatives
    My brother had a 400 4 and I would choose it any day over a Harley.
    There are many people in the US that believe that if it isn't a Harley then it's not a motorcycle.
    The mindset is as follows, if you own a Honda ( or any other brand ) than you can never attain " biker " status .
    You're just a rider .

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Well we do own a Honda, among other things. It’s great. But a true bike lover can never have one mistress and owning other types makes for a much richer experience.
      We don’t currently own a Harley incidentally

    • @charliepatterson9321
      @charliepatterson9321 Год назад +1

      @@bikerdood1100 agreed. I'm an old guy who still rides his bicycle while my Honda watches . I've had many many bikes , all Japanese. Not one Harley . Way overpriced and too unreliable .
      I paid $1100.00 dollars for my current 750 shadow aero with 1000 miles on the clock . My friend paid 18000.00 for his Harley with 45k on the clock .
      His wife was looking at our bikes side by side and asked him why he paid so much ? He said , baby it's a Harley.
      That was 3 years ago and while I have only changed tires , oil , and plugs he has had 3 major breakdowns .
      I love all bikes , I simply have an aversion to breakdowns .

  • @c.a.marsupial.1282
    @c.a.marsupial.1282 Год назад +1

    That superior bike is the most beautiful motorcycle I've ever seen. Not seen it before. Thanks for another great production.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      I love the red and black paint of the Coventry Eagle myself

    • @bobmarlowe3390
      @bobmarlowe3390 Год назад +1

      Lawrrence of Arabia rode one. Jay Leno has one in his collection.

    • @mackenzie77777
      @mackenzie77777 Год назад

      @@bobmarlowe3390 Didnt Laurence die on one too...

    • @bobmarlowe3390
      @bobmarlowe3390 Год назад

      @@mackenzie77777, he died 6 days after a crash on one, but yeah, close enough.

  • @timhancock6626
    @timhancock6626 Год назад +2

    I had a very modest Suzuki 250 GT, and I must confess when I blagged a ride or two on a Honda 400 four I thought " is that it ?" Even though it was a jewel of a motorcycle to I found it too small and no mid range unless you thrashed it.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад

      That’s the area with an otherwise brilliant little bike falls down. Of course some love bikes they can ride hard like that. Personally I look to cover distance on my bikes and would have found it tiresome after a while

    • @DennisMerwood-xk8wp
      @DennisMerwood-xk8wp Год назад

      The Suzuki T500 was easily the best Jap 2-stroke. And lasted for ever.

  • @janstolk486
    @janstolk486 Год назад +1

    I had a BSA goldstar when I was young , biggest piece of shit i ever owned .

  • @robertjames6640
    @robertjames6640 4 месяца назад +1

    I rode BSA BB 34 and DBD34 Gold Star scramblers alongside Matchless G80 and 85 Matchless engined Métisse machines. I also had a Triumph 500 square barrel slotted into another Rickman Metisse frame
    All great bikes for off road work and good for improving a rider’s skills.For the road, I preferred a BMW twin or A Moto Guzzi: I ran several over many years and always rated them highly.
    Now most of those British scramblers are out of my price range as the collector greed has taken a huge dent on the sport. Even my Guzzi Lemans is selling for three to four times its original price.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      That is the real problem isn’t it 🤔

  • @EssexCountyPhoto
    @EssexCountyPhoto 10 месяцев назад

    Great video, interesting details.
    I've ridden many bikes over the past 30 years, currently riding a 2015 GSA, and I agree with your assessment.
    However...
    I'm tall, and a tall bike with decent weather protection is a necessity for long distance riding. If Honda made a Goldwing with a seat 10cm taller, I'd have one. The issue is not with the passionate riders, it's with greedy PR people, fanboys and fashionistas...
    I can't think of many bikes that can be ridden for over 1000 miles in 24 hours without causing pain in back, knees, neck or wrists...
    And if you like Tonka toys, it's actually rather pretty!

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  10 месяцев назад

      Plenty of tall bikes around
      Which is kind of the point of the video

  • @buellb0y
    @buellb0y Год назад

    I’ve had both a Honda CB350 twin and a 400F. Both great rides, but I found the 400 to be much more challenging and fun to ride in a technical sense.
    I’d also like to make note that one bike conspicuously missing from this list is the Kawasaki KH750, also known as the “H2” or the “widow maker”. Amazing motorcycle, explosively powerful, great exhaust note… and handled like a brick. Terrifying, yet more fun than than I’ve had on any pre-1980 machine.
    *currently my favorite is a 1999 Buell M2. More on road capabilities than most will ever utilize, none of the computer generated babysitters so easily found on “modern” motorcycles.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  Год назад +1

      Well you like. Good variety. Good to know a Buel is still getting good use

    • @monza1002000
      @monza1002000 11 месяцев назад

      I found the H2 a fabulous bike to ride. Raced mine in Production Bike (Stock Road) races and unlimited, riding it to work the next day 😊

  • @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq
    @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq 2 месяца назад

    I saw the Honda 4 being raced in the Island in the 70's, seemed to go quite well.

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  2 месяца назад

      Does the video say that it’s a bad bike ?
      Fact is they weren’t particularly quick, even by the standards of the time, the twin was more powerful by about 6hp a lot when you have only 37 to stay with
      And more importantly it wasn’t popular in the all important US market so Honda pulled the plug after just two years
      Successful bikes run for a lot longer than that

  • @cabaneencac5168
    @cabaneencac5168 4 месяца назад

    The Dream was the Hawk for NA market . 10:36 ? About Impulse series from Suzuki : it was a nice very efficient little 400cc 4 cylinder machine .

    • @bikerdood1100
      @bikerdood1100  4 месяца назад

      We ran a GSXr400 a number of years ago
      Nice bike but it did eat spark plugs for some reason
      Wasn’t the Hawk styled a little differently?