The Yamaha Virago was a new kind of motorcycle

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2023
  • Today we're exploring the history of the iconic but divisive Yamaha Virago. From its inception in the early 80s to its ongoing influence in the cruiser world.
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Комментарии • 601

  • @miltcarlton2593
    @miltcarlton2593 Год назад +85

    Bought a 1982 virago still in the case at the dealer. Really enjoyed the motorcycle but the seat was a nightmare for my backside. Also living in the state of Oregon where those of us that ride you’re around, the fenders are not nearly adequate for the amount of water we had on our way roadways. And yet today at almost 80 years old, I would love to have my virago back.

    • @philtucker1224
      @philtucker1224 Год назад

      Hi Milt! What are you riding at the moment buddy?

    • @miltcarlton2593
      @miltcarlton2593 Год назад +6

      A 2009 triumph Bonneville with Sidecar. Have used Russell D long saddles on all my cycles for a long time Show my posterior is very happy.

    • @philtucker1224
      @philtucker1224 Год назад +1

      @@miltcarlton2593 very nice. I’ve seen a similar set up at the Wednesday meeting at the Pathfinder Cafe, (Blackbushe U.K)

    • @rongibson9702
      @rongibson9702 Год назад +1

      Try an SV650. I am on my second one - Just finished 15 years on a GSX R600 so I totally get being bored with speed and power. The 1000 CC bikes are even more ridiculous. I owned an SV before the Gixxer and said to self I wanna go back to simpler and more functional. Now the SV is no slouch. Few 4 wheelers can keep up with it from standing stop and top speed is 130MPH! I call it "well mannered". Its a joy to ride around town which is by far what I do the most. PS - I am 73 and have no problem handling the bike at all. They also handle and turn great. There are a few nits like poor protection from the elements. In the rain you will need a full rain suite. Braking is fine but I am looking forward to upgrading the pads to EBC HH. All items for routine maintenance are easily accessible. Changing oil on a damn Gixxer is a nightmare - You have to remove one side of the fairings. People are already talking it up as one of the best MCs Suzuki ever made and I expect that to hold true. Many people have logged over 100,000 miles on them without a major engine issue. Everyone describes the engine as bullet proof. However albeit the bike will easily do it do not attempt to wheelie the bike. Its also inexpensive. Now some interesting comparisons are made to the MT-07 - several videos right here on RUclips and usually the SV is preferred. Think about it. This is the perfect mount for us old guys 🚴

    • @philtucker1224
      @philtucker1224 Год назад +1

      @Greg Davis That’s very pleasing to know Greg, very best wishes from Henley on Thames U.K. 🇬🇧

  • @pigeon909
    @pigeon909 Год назад +21

    I'm almost 20 and I bloody love my 92 virago 1100. It just feels great

  • @jvl4832
    @jvl4832 Год назад +17

    The Virago was my driving school training motorcycle 1993. I remember the front wheel wobbled at 120 kmh, roughly 75mph ( here in Germany allowed) and the side pedals would touch the ground by not so acute turning angles. Although I ride a 1250 GS, the Virago will always have a fond place in my motorcycle heart and memory.

  • @jdecker9834
    @jdecker9834 Год назад +48

    I owned a 95' 750 Virago in the blue and black livery. I loved that bike. I know looks are subjective but to me, It had the most beautiful lines, especially the motor completely unobstructed hanging off the front as a stress member gave it such a bold look. I've had many bikes since then, my present daily rider is a Z900RS, but I'll never forget my Virago!

    • @alinoo1
      @alinoo1 10 месяцев назад +1

      Im buying a 95´ virago next week. I’m incredibly excited, planning on taking that beauty all over Australia.

    • @davebarrowcliffe1289
      @davebarrowcliffe1289 9 месяцев назад +1

      My uncle Arthur retired in 1983. He had always wanted a Harley. I got excited about the prospect of him showing up on his HD.
      When he turned up on a Virago, he sensed my disappointment. He explained that Harley had a crazy long lead time and the Virago was instantly available and was a fraction of the price.
      Wind the clock on 15 or so years, and Arthur died.
      I was offered the Virago for pennies. I didn't consider it worth my while taking the 150 mile round trip to go and collect it, so I declined.
      This was in Britain.

    • @pearson935
      @pearson935 Месяц назад

      Got a 95 750 with the teal and black. 95s are the best lookin 👌

  • @takeda780
    @takeda780 Год назад +7

    The Virgao is still is a better Harley than most Harleys in the same category and year.

  • @KU0136
    @KU0136 6 месяцев назад +3

    My 94 Virago 750 is a beautifully balanced bike at any speed. Looks great, almost bullet proof and can lay them into corners far more than you think with confidence. Hidden gems.

  • @davidgalt8107
    @davidgalt8107 Год назад +24

    I had a '90 Virago 535 for some years. Absolutely loved it! The only downside from my point of view was its limited range due to its small tanks thirst.

    • @69Harveyb1
      @69Harveyb1 8 месяцев назад +3

      I had an '87. Wonderful bike. I would love to own one again. Especially if it was EFI. I know they still make the 250, but that 535 was the perfect bike for a 5'6 guy. I had a National Cycle windscreen on mine. As you wrote, mine consistently hit 88 miles when I had to switch to reserve and find a gas station.

  • @MrHappygolfer
    @MrHappygolfer Год назад +9

    I bought the '82 Virago 750, new when in my mid twenties. I had fun with it, and it didn't try to kill me.

  • @kevinmccorkle7476
    @kevinmccorkle7476 Год назад +11

    Never owned a Virago, but always thought they were very unique. Road Star 1700 owner, with 85k done. Yamahammer makes very reliable bikes.

    • @robcampbell3235
      @robcampbell3235 Год назад +2

      My old tdm was epic reliable. Yamahas may be more reliable than hondas of course they dont shift quite as precisely but epic bikes.

  • @swizle9
    @swizle9 Год назад +9

    Ive owned 2 viragos and driven 3... my 95 1100 has been my favorite street bike so far. I drove it 18,000 miles in 10 months and I got out of some bad near death moments and the bike always stayed connected with the road. It was super forgiving and fast enough to be fun. I even did a pretty high speed jump with it and it stayed stable through the landing... Great bikes

    • @DerekPaxton-dd9ki
      @DerekPaxton-dd9ki 2 месяца назад +1

      Ha myvirago
      Twenty five years still the best

  • @andreasV535
    @andreasV535 3 месяца назад +2

    The Virago family had 250/535/750/1.100cc. models here in Brazil. I rided 100.000 km on a 535 and was a great bike! Really good with cardan transmission and beautiful lines!

  • @ricardoviana271
    @ricardoviana271 Год назад +26

    Royal Enfield got that feeling right and is now making simple bikes that are fun to ride. Not particularly notable on any spec, but fun and simple to ride in a world where bikes have gotten way too complex to give that relaxed vibe, which for me is the best feeling when riding a bike. After a couple of decades riding bigger bikes, I recently bought a Himalayan that always put a smile on my face, reminding me of my late Yamaha XT 600.

    • @rongibson9702
      @rongibson9702 Год назад

      💯

    • @trainliker100
      @trainliker100 7 месяцев назад

      And somebody is making a Royal Enfield V Twin by starting with a Royal Enfield Bullet and then using his own engine castings to have two Royal Enfield barrels with an exhaust system routed like a Vincent. It is called the "Musket V Twin" and is very retro looking. He was even on Jay Leno's garage and it can be seen on RUclips here: ruclips.net/video/hYzuqAX2A3A/видео.html

  • @artiecisneros4691
    @artiecisneros4691 7 месяцев назад +4

    The Virago 1990 1100 was my favorite bike I have ever owned and driven; wish I still had it. I very much enjoyed this video, thank you. 😎

  • @otisthecanadianbulldog2400
    @otisthecanadianbulldog2400 Год назад +2

    My father had a 1983 Heritage Special Yamaha. He took me all over when I was a kid. Great memories. Burgundy.

  • @danielwardley4185
    @danielwardley4185 Год назад +18

    I had an '82 XV 750 in New Zealand back in the late 80''s, I was doing MX and enduro, and went 'road bike' , man that thing was soo smooth. I have to disagree about the styling , Bart, the early models had such graceful lines, that's my take and was never interested in the new look with all the glitz. they were a great package, and yes they could hustle!, great to see some background on these bikes , thanks .

  • @rubbabubba6489
    @rubbabubba6489 Год назад +5

    Bought an '81 on the way home from work for $400. Spent the next 7 years and 30K riding that old girl all over including a few multi-day trips. Crash bars and highway pegs gave plenty of foot options, cool days I would ride with my feet on the engine cases to keep warm.. Was ratty as hell in a cool way. Dents, rust, zip ties but kept rolling. When you went for a ride you would smell like that bike the rest of the day. When she retired I had about $1000 into all that fun and most of it was tires and luggage. Ugly, slow, leaked oil, quirky, and so far my favorite bike.

  • @jlrutube1312
    @jlrutube1312 Год назад +26

    I just can't get over how great these bart videos are. They are so enjoyable and so well researched and so well thought out. Also, the delivery is perfect. Sometimes I even watch them more that once just because they seem so entertaining to me.

  • @chasie5928
    @chasie5928 6 месяцев назад +3

    Currently working on a 95 virago 535 as my first ever motorcycle and I’m already in love with it

  • @nelm612
    @nelm612 3 месяца назад +2

    My first ever bike, that I learned to ride and got my license on was a 1984 virago 1000 back in 2004 for 600 dollars. Rode her for 8 years(24k miles). Sold her before moving overseas for what I paid. I miss that girl. She was a great ride. All my friends had H-Ds which bothered me none. Mine cost a fraction of what they paid for theirs and the ride was the same.

  • @drewdavis4614
    @drewdavis4614 Год назад +3

    I worked in a yamaha shop in 1983 and put those viragos together from the crate and they kicked ass. Loved them. Left overs were sitting stagnant in Jersey warehouses.

  • @mcrand7887
    @mcrand7887 9 месяцев назад +3

    Hay Bart, I still have my 82' XV750 Special (Virago), I had bought it in 1991, been through ups and down, difficult, but still trying to maintain it. 'Bad tempered woman' yes it's perfect analogy for 1st gen Virago. Though it's imperfect and vintage now, but still special to me. Unfortunately we didn't have internet in those days to learn and maintain this bike, Now I am always on lookout for Virago videos on youtube and since I have learn a lot about it. Thank you.

  • @curtiscox7105
    @curtiscox7105 Год назад +7

    I have a 97 Virago 750. Ride it pretty much every day. There is north of 37K miles on it now. It's a good size for my needs. And I get compliments on it just about every time I stop, It is the best bike I ever owned/rode. It's smooth and responsive, Liked your video. Lot of good points - good and bad.

    • @giggiddy
      @giggiddy 3 месяца назад

      People average 80 mph on the highway near me. Will the 750 handle that or is that all the beans. Love the looks and seriously considering one but not sure what size. Thanks

  • @Zee_Kay_Jay
    @Zee_Kay_Jay Год назад +8

    Love the Virago

  • @kennypool
    @kennypool Год назад +29

    I had a 1100 it was beautiful gold and tan/brown medal flake , factory paint. I saw it on a job site, with a for sale sign on it. I jokingly said I'll give you, like 1/3 of the asking price. He turned around and said, ok today deal. I had the bike for a couple of years and eventually sold it for about 3x what I paid for it. Anyone buying new at the dealership is totally nuts.

    • @gteefxr3094
      @gteefxr3094 Год назад +2

      What did you actually sell it for?

    • @Dave-sw2dm
      @Dave-sw2dm Год назад +5

      Be thankful for those "nuts", or you wouldn't have any used bikes to buy.

    • @ih8momjokes1
      @ih8momjokes1 Год назад

      @@Dave-sw2dm well said. people buy new so us people can buy used

    • @kassiedreaneai7459
      @kassiedreaneai7459 Год назад +1

      What you call nuts is actually perfectly smart for those who can afford it and are looking for years of trouble free riding. Everything one buys second hand has risks attached to it. Buying new with at least a 2 year warranty is the only way to minimise those risks. Buying 2nd hand one might get a great bike {or whatever they are buying.} but you have no idea how it has been treated or abused or what has been covered up that may bite you shortly after becoming the owner. I see too many people treat bikes {and cars} in a manner which compared to how I use them might take a year off the life of some of the parts inside due to abuse. I do not want to ever own something treated badly by someone else. But If I can get a sense that the previous owner is a bit like myself I might be happy to take that risk. I had to replace slipping clutch plates on a friends bike at 25,000 klm but with more than 60,000 extra klm {now} on my identical bike the clutch plates were almost like brand new when I checked them. His paint was faded and his rear shock absorbers were faulty. 20 years later the paint is not faded on mine and the original shock absorbers are still perfect. It is all about how well they are serviced and treated.

    • @kennypool
      @kennypool Год назад

      @@kassiedreaneai7459 Could you repeat that please. It was deleted by someone with a 🧠 brain.

  • @billgranger6939
    @billgranger6939 8 месяцев назад +1

    Im 65 and now on my ninth Virago. Have been riding them for close to 30 years now. Had all the bigger ones from the ‘82 750 up the ‘99 1100. Currently riding a ‘95 red and white XV1100 Virago complete with Mustang seat, forward controls, all LED lighting, and Mac exhaust.
    Always loved these bikes.

  • @Angryeddie14
    @Angryeddie14 Год назад +46

    Always a great day when Bart uploads some history!!

    • @TheAmerican1963
      @TheAmerican1963 Год назад +1

      You are so right !!!! It's, to me, like a college level education on what, why, when and where motorcycles exist !!!! 🙂

    • @mr.motormaster9881
      @mr.motormaster9881 Год назад

      EL BARTO LOKO 😅

  • @KU0136
    @KU0136 4 месяца назад +1

    My 94 Virago 750 is just great all round. They are balanced to perfection. Can see them becoming highly sought out in years to come. And they look pretty cool as well.

  • @IDYLBERRY
    @IDYLBERRY Год назад +2

    When I had seen the Virago at the dealership, I shook my head. Left with a XS1100, great bike.

  • @LarryECarlisle
    @LarryECarlisle Год назад +4

    Had the 920 and loved the shaft drive. Starter made a weird sound when cranking it over but the ride was so much nicer then my friends sportster. That had such a stiff ride. The 920 had much softer ride. Wish I still had it, often check Craig’s list to see if any one had one with very low miles, like new condition to bring back old memories.

  • @Ken-dr9th
    @Ken-dr9th Год назад +5

    I had a 1982 XV920RH, which was a sport tourer built for the european market using the Virago frame and running gear with the engine bored out to 920cc, and a huge headlight added. Didn't go over well in the N. American market, and was discontinued after two years. Awesome bike; sounded like a Harley when you fired it up. Tons of low end grunt, but ran out of juice at the high end of the powerband. Still, probably the most fun bike I've owned. I had a cop on a Harley talk himself out of giving me a ticket once, because he liked the bike so much, and had never seen one before.

    • @kasperkjrsgaard1447
      @kasperkjrsgaard1447 Год назад

      Funny enough, the European XV 1000 or TR1 as it was called was at 981 cc. Didn’t get the big numbers in sales, but the Virago 1000 with the same engine and with a shaftdrive was a huge hit. It continued as the Virago 1100.
      I acrually spotted a TR1 yesterday, so some is still around.

    • @Josher126
      @Josher126 Год назад

      I have an 82 and an 83 xv920,my 83 has only 8,270 miles

    • @lostcat9lives322
      @lostcat9lives322 Год назад

      I owned one. Narrow, slow and stable. A handsome, pleasant all around motorcycle.

  • @courtney5796
    @courtney5796 Год назад +8

    My first bike (in 1989) was an '83 Virago 750. Not one bad thing to say about that bike.

    • @GarysnewYT
      @GarysnewYT 7 месяцев назад

      What about the starter gear system , did it grid ? Did you somehow fix it ?

    • @fernandofonseca2020
      @fernandofonseca2020 5 месяцев назад

      @@GarysnewYT. Exactly! Although I loved my bike, that annoying clatter unnerved me a lot. Drove it and enjoyed it for a few years. Twice tried to repair that problem but couldn’t, so I sold it.

  • @markellott5620
    @markellott5620 Год назад +5

    I had the TR1 version. This was the 1000cc Euro styled bike. Never sold well, but I liked it and kept it for over twenty years.

    • @RiderOftheNorth1968
      @RiderOftheNorth1968 11 месяцев назад

      The xv1000 TR1 was my first bike. I bought it used in 1990. It was a -81. Wonderful engine but my driving style, back then, was more sporty than what the Yamaha could deliver.

  • @Bandiccoot
    @Bandiccoot Год назад +10

    I bought a Virago as my fist bike, didn't know anything about it so I had to go research after purchasing. Found out some of the very same details you mentioned here, and I got all excited having this old bike with many firsts.
    I never did get it to start and stay running, though. I even had the carb rebuilt and a new starter installed. Still, no dice. In the end, I sold it. Now I'm on a Bolt, and I still hope to own a Virago down the line.
    Thanks for this bit of history.

    • @Cj-yw8cs
      @Cj-yw8cs Год назад +1

      Bought a Harley for my first bike...p.o.s. still don't run! But my xvs1100 runs like a champ

    • @Bandiccoot
      @Bandiccoot Год назад

      @Cj-yw8cs you know, before I got the Bolt, I purchased a XVS1100. I don't think carburetors want to work with me. 😌 That bike's carbs started acting up the day I bought it. The dealership ordered a part and installed it, too. The bike died o the way home.after I got it back from the shop. It won't even start up. In the end, they gave me the Bolt as a loaner for the weekend while they troubleshoot the XVS1100. When I went to return the Bolt, my mind was made up. I'm taking the Bolt over that carburetor XVS1100.
      I would like to own another VStar, though, an 1100 without the carbs if possible. That bike was fun to ride

    • @Cj-yw8cs
      @Cj-yw8cs Год назад +1

      @@Bandiccoot sounds like ya have bad luck. I do all my own work, my shit runs

  • @erikberg1623
    @erikberg1623 Год назад +10

    I really wanted one for going to college, this was the coolest Japanese bike at that time. I settled on a lightly used Honda CX500. HD motorcycles were not reliable enough to commute with. I wish that I still had my CX500, my dad called it a mini Moto Guzzi.

    • @gteefxr3094
      @gteefxr3094 Год назад

      Yeah, you couldn't commute on a "Harley" back then. STFU

    • @robcampbell3235
      @robcampbell3235 Год назад +3

      Some australian named steve i think cafe'd a cx500. Better looking than a goose in my humble. cool bikes.

  • @TheInterloafer
    @TheInterloafer Год назад +2

    I saw one of these parked on the street and it really caught my eye. Now I know way more than I ever thought I would. Thank you for the video!

  • @michaelvrooman5681
    @michaelvrooman5681 Год назад +8

    I bought a new " in the crate" 82 750 cc virago in 1987 for $1899 put a few accessories on it and rode it for several years..I even won a trophy with it at the local big Harley show. It was a fun bike and I never had any problems with it.

  • @KensWorldRestorations
    @KensWorldRestorations Год назад +4

    Hey Bart!! It was great to see some of my Virago restoration footage in this video - I wish you had used more! I owned many sport bikes in the '80s and remember the impact the later Viragos had on the market, especially the pain and grief it caused Harley-Davidson. Although the styling changes were not accepted by everyone, you are absolutely right when you said it created a cult following. The carbs pull air through the frame, it's shaft driven and has some fascinating characteristics when it comes to engine noise. Couple that to having 100% of engine torque delivered at 3000 rpm and you have something that puts a smile on anyone's face when you roll on the throttle. I would have to say that it's probably one of the few motorcycles that goes uphill just as fast as it goes downhill. Thanks for great content and feel free to use any of my videos in the future. I just picked up another restoration project: 1987 FZR1000 and have begun the inspection & disassembly process of that one.

  • @Mike-rm1vw
    @Mike-rm1vw Год назад +15

    Towards the end of the excellent video, you wondered about an “appetite for different kinds of motorcycles”.
    It’s for that reason that my next bike will be a Triumph Rocket 3R, the aesthetics, ride and engine are a little different.
    There’s no real reason for it’s existence other than fun, and I guess that’s enough reason for me…
    I really enjoy your work, good job 👍👍👍

    • @thejunkman
      @thejunkman Год назад

      Kinda like Buell in its day. Different pretty much only for the sake of being different

  • @jamesgeorge4874
    @jamesgeorge4874 Год назад +4

    Yamaha's promotional material from the 80's was great too, snowmoblie ad copy as well. Cutaway and exploded view illustrations of all their tech bits had me staring at it, studying it, memorizing every detail. At 50, it takes me right back to my teenage years.

    • @nelsonphilip4520
      @nelsonphilip4520 8 месяцев назад

      Ford Motor Co. also contracted with Yamaha to produce the performance engine for the super high output or SHO variant of the Ford flagship sedan , the Taurus.

  • @jameslaine2472
    @jameslaine2472 Год назад +2

    I still own and ride a '96 Virago 1100. Still a smooth ride.

  • @antonio7334
    @antonio7334 Год назад +2

    as a 20 something Yamaha Bolt owner, DAMN I didnt know the majority of viewers were 65+ but hey love this video as it paved the way for my beloved Bolt :)

  • @andyb.1643
    @andyb.1643 11 месяцев назад +2

    Man, I loved those 83 plus Viragos. Dump the mufflers and install a set of semi- baffle turnouts to get a nice sound and you had one of the best backroad bikes on earth. Great handling, more than enough power and room to strap a backpack on the back… you could ride all day on country highways and county roads and want to do it again tomorrow. Rarely needed any work, and when it did it was pretty easy. Once they were around for a few years you could buy a used one in great shape and low miles for pretty cheap, run it up to 60k, sell it for what you paid for it and get another one.

  • @howardwarren7683
    @howardwarren7683 Год назад +1

    My uncle bought an xv750 in 81 here in Australia. I still have it & never intend to sell it!

  • @HBButler01
    @HBButler01 Год назад +11

    Your comments on the 1st Gen Virago perfectly describe what I felt the first time I rode one.
    I told my buddy, “This bike is a cruiser but handles like a sport bike”
    That rear monoshock suspension and low swung engine lets my 82 Virago XV750 dip low in turns, be responsive in maneuvers, adjustable for riding environments/roads.
    It’s amazing to see what it developed into and if mine is 40+ years old and still running, I imagine many more are still out there ready to take on more miles!

  • @RVRCloset
    @RVRCloset Год назад +6

    Not sure I'll ever sell my Virago 1100. Actually considering getting a 535 as well, as a bobberish project. :)
    And that comfy looking seat, really is comfy! Like an armchair, especially with a pillion as a backrest behind you. XD

  • @astro61362
    @astro61362 Год назад +3

    Interesting video as always. I love those '83-'84 Viragos!

  • @anttitenhunen4725
    @anttitenhunen4725 Год назад +6

    I had Virago XV500 as my first bike. It was very comfortable to ride, light and easy to handle. But it was also pretty slow and very silent engine voice that only sounded cool with almost full throttle. I sold it to my dad few years ago and it still looks better than my Suzuki VX800 and is far more reliable :D

  • @Tommerd
    @Tommerd Год назад +3

    I owned an '82 920 Virago. It was fun.

    • @Tommerd
      @Tommerd Год назад +1

      Actually my Virago 920 was cool until my buddy took me for a ride on his Seca 900. I went out and bought a V-45 Interceptor after that, and then an '82 1100 Katana. Sport bikes RULE!

    • @robcampbell3235
      @robcampbell3235 Год назад +1

      ​@@Tommerd82 katana is one of my dream bikes. Lucky guy!

  • @guillermogreen3295
    @guillermogreen3295 Год назад +1

    I have two XV110's (1987 / 1994) - one in each country where I live / travel. Love them both.

  • @thomashussey5159
    @thomashussey5159 Год назад +4

    love your work. you can tell how much enthusiasm you have for the subject. always makes my day watching a new video you put out.

  • @greatkingrat
    @greatkingrat Год назад +1

    Hey Mr Bart. I’ve noticed that you have taken my suggestion and pause in your videos to let us hear the bike. This is great and very much appreciated! Strength to Strength!

  • @jeremiah1st
    @jeremiah1st Год назад +1

    I recently bought a Yamaha xs 750 Special and a xv 750 Special, both from '81......They are in 1000 pieces right now, getting glasblasted and rebuild stock. These bikes are getting rare.

  • @lahira4721
    @lahira4721 7 месяцев назад

    just got my first bike and its a virago 1993.
    i keep sliding lower and lower on my seat its so comfortable.
    i did my driving lessons on a mt07 and its a big leap to ride such a heavy low bike, but it sure is rewarding !

  • @syaqsakma81
    @syaqsakma81 Год назад +3

    The Virago was the bike that the driving school has when I went to get my big bike license..

  • @toddstidham8374
    @toddstidham8374 Год назад +2

    I had a coworker with a early 90's Virago 750 and he had 45k miles on the thing back in the late 90's. He rode everywhere. I'm currently bopping around town on a 1978 Yamaha XS400 and I love the thing. Sounds great with it's aftermarket Dunstall Decibel mufflers (actual, original Dunstalls). They eat fiberglass packing but sound great, especially when freshly repacked.

    • @2000xr400
      @2000xr400 Год назад +1

      I also have a 1978 xs400. The engine is seized. But it was fun while it was running. I keep saying I'm going to rebuild the engine, but never find the time.

  • @richardarthurlloyd5419
    @richardarthurlloyd5419 Год назад +1

    After years of buying and modifying used bikes (especially 2-strokes), got a ride on a new '82 Virago 750 at the time, and had to get one. Loved the engine. And it looked a whole heckuva lot better than the Honda CX-500 of that same year. I liked the look of the Virago and it being relatively quite narrow - at that time in the '80's the manufacturers were laboring hard to make their in-line four cylinder bikes as narrow as possible, but the Virago was naturally narrow without having to exert too much effort to be such, plus having the air box nicely tucked away under the seat so the you weren't banging your knees into it like on a Sportster. Though the later Virago's had a very comfortable LOOKING seat, the '81 and '82 Virago's actually had very comfortable and supportive seats, and was often complimented for being one of the nicest seats around at the time. But like I said, my main fave thing about it was the engine, so I concentrated on then modifying the suspension and brakes - braided stainless steel brake line, fork brace, progressive springs in the front forks (remember, these models had air-adjustable forks, too - quite the novelty at the time, and like you intimated, a sign of a lot of different cooks being in the kitchen at the same time), progressive spring for the rear mono-shock, lower Daytona-style handlebars, and Pirelli tyres that never seemed to care about the rain. Also added loud Fiamm horns and a brighter halogen headlight and a small bikini windshield to keep some of the wind off of my chest on long trips. Also, relatively novel at the time, the shaft-drive on a "cruiser", and the engine being a stressed member of the frame instead of resting in a cradle of tubing. Had mine for over 20 years. Handled very well... I likened it to an over-weight Ducati, for much cheaper and easier to self-service. Also, you might want to note the original XV920 Virago of those beginning years, as that bike looked even less like an effort at being an American-style cruiser, and was aesthetically probably more akin to a European sport-tourer. Thank you for the stroll down memory lane.

  • @corrosionoc69
    @corrosionoc69 5 месяцев назад

    About 25 years I had an '81 Virago...I loved that bike. I like it's styling much better than the later Viragos

  • @littleshopofelectrons4014
    @littleshopofelectrons4014 Год назад

    I've owned many bikes and I can assure you that my 2009 Yamaha VMAX has never bored me with its 200 HP.

  • @jfess1911
    @jfess1911 Год назад +2

    Those photos of the classic looking Yamaha SX650 and its mutation into the 650 Special really hurt. I really hated those years of chopperized standards.

  • @CappyLarou
    @CappyLarou Год назад +2

    I have always dubbed bikes like the Virago as a "Sport Cruiser", cruiser styling, sport handling and speed(sometimes).

  • @mikemiller659
    @mikemiller659 Год назад

    When I first moved to SF in 86 I didnt have much money & bought a 82 Virago. I didnt know how to drive a MC but got a ride from SF to Berkeley bought the bike and drove it home crossing the Bay Bridge during rush hour..I drove it over a year until I bought a Cutlass. The Virago never stranded me.

  • @jala6707
    @jala6707 Год назад +2

    What a great video. Great video-clips! Thanks for all the research and time you put in to this.

  • @stewartpickett5776
    @stewartpickett5776 2 месяца назад

    first bike was a 1982 Virago and it had has a life when I got it on it's 32nd year. I just picked up a 2017 Yamaha SCR950 and boy does the power and ride remind me of the virago.

  • @robbarker544
    @robbarker544 4 месяца назад

    I bought one new in 1981 - and still have it today, enough said really!
    I also liked the mention of manufacturers producing “Different” motorcycles, 28 years later I bought another different bike that Yamaha produced and that was the MT01. They both share space in my mancave with another Yamaha that didn’t sell well - the XT1200. Three very different bikes so I always have a choice depending on what mood I’m in

  • @jfess1911
    @jfess1911 Год назад +2

    As an Old Fart who was a teenager in the 1970's I really hated the "cruiserfication" of the Japanese motorcycles. By the late 1970's it was difficult to get a UJM or Standard naked bike because so many of the new models had raked-out forks and a lowered seat. Part of the reason that Harley had as big a market share as it did was that "Patriotic Americans" felt they should buy American made products, even if they were inferior in many ways. The Japanese manufactures either didn't understand this or just decided to ignore it. There was a general concern in the US at the time that Japanese products (especially "Rice Burner" cars and motorcycles) were replacing US-made ones and hurting our economy. That still exists today, although to a lesser extent. In 1983 the Congress even instituted the "Harley Tax" of 45% on import motorcycles over 700cc to help save Harley Davidson.
    I grew up in the mountains, within a few miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway, so handling and lean angle were much more important that looks. My thinking at the time was that the changes to Japanese motorcycles to make them more "American" mostly involved making them worse. Worse handling, less nimble. lower power and heavier. The I can understand why the Japanese engineers couldn't understand why some Americans wanted less capable motorcycles. In the late 1970's and 1980's it was increasingly difficult to find classic British-styled "standard" designs or even smaller UJM's (standards with 4-cyl engines). The front ends were raked out and seats lowered as shown with the Yamaha XS650 morphing into the 650 Special at 0.33 in this video. Essentially, the Naked class was largely gone and the Japanese-marque market was split into Cruisers (dedicated V-twins or raked-out Standards/UJM's), Tourers, and Sport Race Replica bikes.

  • @vincedibona4687
    @vincedibona4687 Год назад +2

    I remember being a mid-teenager and lusting over the mid- to late-80’s “boulevard cruisers” such as the Virago and the (same-but-not-same-same) Kawasaki Eliminators. I am 51 and want to find a nice example today! anyone know where a KW Eliminator 600/900 is??? 😃

  • @atrothe
    @atrothe 9 месяцев назад +2

    I owned two of these XV750 Midnight specials. and put thousands upon thousands of miles on it. I rode it all along the Australian eastern seaboard. They designed them for USER MAINTENANCE. They were good handlers. and comfortable. SUPER SUPER SUPER Reliable bikes. Their only weakness was the starter motor. The shaft drive would lock up and drag to the right under emergency stops..entirely predictablke and an great handler. Real fun long distance bike. I never did get to ride the 1000 or the 1100. A far better vtwin long distance cuiser than the boulavards or Vulcan and stuff that came later.
    .

  • @thenexthobby
    @thenexthobby Год назад +5

    My understanding of the "new type" back then wasn't this, but rather the 1 liter muscle bikes of the same era. They looked cruiser-ish but rocked large engines with both torque and great sound.

  • @allanw404
    @allanw404 Год назад +1

    "No Shake, No Rattle, Lots of Roll!" Oh yah baby. I loved my 84 xv1000 so much that after almost three decades of not riding, I found a 99 xv1100 (in 2018 ish). Yah Baby! What a wonderful bike. For cruising around town, it worked great. For revving up to scare myself, ... it could do that too. No its not an American big twin (my 08 Roadking makes it seem a little small out on the open highway) and its not a Sportster (my 05 Sportster 1200 seems a bit less cruiser and more sporty). Its a Virago,... Yah Baby!

  • @patrickgallagher9069
    @patrickgallagher9069 Год назад +4

    I loved my 86 Virago! Easy to ride, hard to work on. In time, the wire harness started to wear out, and I had to decide to remake it from scratch, or just get another bike. I sold it. But wow. A totally underrated bike!

    • @infesting
      @infesting Год назад

      Hard to work on? The virago is one of the easiest bikes of the era to work on. Super simple. Engine comes out in 20 mins. If your having trouble you might wanna stick to working on bicycles

    • @infesting
      @infesting Год назад

      Wiring harnesses don't wear out. Wiring harnesses get old and people yank on them causing broken wires and stuff like that but that problem is people yanking on wires not a worn out harness. Harnesses have zero moving parts. As long as YOU don't mess the harness up it will never wear out. A nonmoving part can't wear out unless outside forces act on it causing movement. Treat the old harness correct and it won't cause problems. The problem is the worker not the harness and that goes for any bike.

    • @patrickgallagher9069
      @patrickgallagher9069 Год назад

      @infesting , I had to grind and bent some of my tools to get them to fit. Getting the carbs back on the engine was a struggle. It might be easy for some. For me, the tight spaces was hard to manage. As for the wiring harness, where the harness flexes as you turn the handle bars the old plastic on the wires would crack as they bent and tugged against the headlight assembly (where everything seemed to come together) and it would short out or the wire would just break. I had a wire in the headlight rub on the chrome inside the headlight until it shorted out on the chrome, leaving me stranded in the mountains of West Virginia far from home. So, whatever that is, that's what I mean by wearing out. Many times shorted wires left me stranded. I figured new wires would fix the problem. Clearly that wasn't the expectation of the designers. The bike was almost 40 years old when this became a major problem. So that might be expected for something roadworthy for so long

    • @crf80fdarkdays
      @crf80fdarkdays 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@infestingI would beg to differ, wiring harness can and do rub through just from vibration, also the fact is insulation gets brittle over time and can fall away leaving exposed wires, causing a short

  • @jaygadd1805
    @jaygadd1805 Год назад +4

    I've owned and loved Yamaha Viragos in 250, 500(ish), 750, and 920 flavours. The "ish" is because the MTO licensed it as a 540. It and the 920 were of the original body/chassis scheme, and really not as comfortable as the later style. The 750 was my all time favourite; - I graduated to the 1100 VStar. Which turned 100K last summer.
    And the 250? Who doesn't like 90-100 miles/gallon (Imperial)

    • @gregoryclemen1870
      @gregoryclemen1870 9 месяцев назад

      it is amazing how long the engines last, if taken care of. I have a suzuki gs 450 that I bought in 1986 with 750 miles on it. today the engine is still running on the factory build, with 258,000 miles on the bike. I was told by all the now defunct dealerships that the engine will only last 50,000 miles!!!

  • @sampradrajauprety
    @sampradrajauprety Год назад +6

    Love your videos! Please do keep making more

    • @davidmacphee3549
      @davidmacphee3549 Год назад

      They are all really good! His voice is great too!

  • @MoparStephen
    @MoparStephen 9 месяцев назад

    Just picked up a 93 Virago XV1100 in amazing condition from a friend that had it since 2005. I'm slowly cleaning it up, replaced all the rubber lines, front tire. I've put 600 miles on it since I got it running again, and have been loving every minute of it.

  • @chirse4027
    @chirse4027 Год назад +3

    Love your videos, but nothing about the 82 920 with its futuristic electronic digital dashboard.

  • @stumpgrinder1000
    @stumpgrinder1000 Год назад +3

    I've got a 1999 Virago 1100, great bike and super reliable. I had a 1986 Virago 750 and was a good bike but the 1100 is way faster and fun to ride.

  • @danielrobey1759
    @danielrobey1759 Год назад

    I had an’85 virago 1000 back in the late 80’s loved that bike, I’d love to have it back!

  • @thompardoe8303
    @thompardoe8303 Год назад +7

    Now do all the Japanese cruisers. The Suzuki Intruders are my favorite of them all.

    • @gregoryclemen1870
      @gregoryclemen1870 9 месяцев назад

      that bike was a mechanics nightmare to work on, I was one of them!!!!.

  • @philtucker1224
    @philtucker1224 Год назад +1

    Very nicely composed and presented, thank you !

  • @papatorr3669
    @papatorr3669 9 месяцев назад

    I just realized that I have really enjoyed every one of your videos, so I'll subscribe. Which bike one finds enjoyable is so unique to each rider, and there are so many different designs that you pretty much have to ride one to find out. I had a thugly burgundy 920 Virago with the Mono shock, then upgraded to a beautiful teal dual shock 1100. The latter did not handle as well and had annoying vibrations above 65mph but played the cruiser part better. I went back to a 920 but they all benefited from a fork brace or steering damper, and their weak starters could left me stranded even after the fix. I've owned the early generations of Virago, Shadow, Vulcan, and Intruder, and the Evo Sportster. The Sportster sounds the best to my ears and gets you into the Harley club the way my Boxster gets me into the Porsche club, but that's the best I can say for the Sportster. The Virago was a step up in my experience. The Intruders 800 and 1400 had the cleanest lines and most custom shop looks to me. I've owned both and while the 1400 was only good for cruising IMO, the 800 is surprisingly fun to ride and cruise on and I still have one. I've owned four of the Shadows from 1984 - 2006 and consider them the standard bearers. The earlier models having shaft drive, fuel gauge, tachometer, and other features that were dropped along the way, but they had worsening handling and comfort with each newer generation. Really solid bikes that will go over 100k miles easily if maintained properly. I've ridden the newer iterations of Japanese cruisers and their shift to heavier ponderous dedicated cruisers: not my thing. I rode the Vulcan 1500 and it's limited to cruising, the VN750 Vulcan is an all arounder and the winner from this era of cruisers. It's the one cruiser that I can ride slowly and cruise around on, or I can take it on Skyline drive and push it into every corner and hope I don't get a ticket from a Park Ranger! It's the cruiser I have to check the speedometer only to find that I'm doing 90mph. It's a Goldilocks bike, which is what I look for in each category: not too big or small, too short or tall, too heavy or too slow, and so on. It's the one I would bring to the dance. I have several of them, including a factory touring version with frame mounted fairing and bags. I guess I had to get that out of my system! : )

  • @l1nepack
    @l1nepack Год назад +1

    Yet another good ‘un, Bart! And topical for me, since I’ve been mulling over chasing up an early-mid 80s Virago for my small but expanding bike collection.

  • @davidcisco4036
    @davidcisco4036 Год назад +4

    The Yamaha XZ550 Vision was memorable from that era.

    • @robcampbell3235
      @robcampbell3235 Год назад +1

      Yep. Porsche even got involved in the engine if i recall correctly. Kinda a proto vrod.

  • @TheHansoost
    @TheHansoost 10 месяцев назад +1

    Had a '96 Virago 1100. Really nice bike; smooth and powerful enough. I'm 6'2 and found it a bit cramped but loved it's power and maneuverability. Took my first big trip with 3 friends who were far more experienced riders than I. We completed a 9 day figure 8 ride from Vancouver B.C. to Watson Lake in the Yukon. No problems at all with the bike though my muffler feel off just as we pulled into a parking lot near Vanderhoof (bailing wire fix) and I did get a new rear tire installed in Prince George. Good times. Good friends.

  • @optymus9933
    @optymus9933 Год назад +3

    I have a Vulcan (EN 500A), built in '92. It is totally influenced by the virago, and is awesome! It's a great opportunity for new riders, as they can take part in the custom scene without spending 20k on a used 1990 Harley (at least here in Europe)
    :D

  • @rhaynhillyard9772
    @rhaynhillyard9772 Год назад

    Picked up a 1994 535 2 weeks ago, it's nice to have a quick touring style bike and then a laid back take in the sights and view bike

  • @rm25088
    @rm25088 Год назад +1

    Spent a lot of time with my buddys who had virago 1100s. They stomped the sportster 1200 I was on at the time. They are fun, torquey bikes.

  • @SlovoTverdo
    @SlovoTverdo 3 месяца назад

    Still riding on my Virago 1100 mostly everyday. Ideal bike for me - on city streets, or on highways, it always give me a lot of satisfaction. Also like original exhaust sound - like a big cat make "purr-r-r" 😊.

  • @briandauphinais7894
    @briandauphinais7894 8 месяцев назад

    Great history lesson...again! In 81 I sold my 79 XS650 Special and bought the new Virago. I loved the air mono shock, the engine supporting the pressed frame, and the off-set cylinders to help keep the rear cylinder cooler. I rode coast to coast solo, and a few years later coast to coast with my 'to be' future wife. I slightly customized it with a tombstone tail light, bullet signals, and drags bars. Put 63k on it, it was indeed reliable. It was a unique bike for the time, which I thoroughly enjoyed.

  • @justadog8248
    @justadog8248 5 месяцев назад

    I got 2006 virago 250. My dog Crosby and I put 2000km last year, our first year riding. Love it.

  • @bushmanPMRR
    @bushmanPMRR Год назад

    I had a 1984 XV750 in mat black with apes and the thing was great. I rode it all around Britain and when I met my now wife, I talked her into spending a week riding around the country and staying at campsites. The highlight of this trip was showing her how amazing Glencoe in Scotland is but the lows were the throttle cable snapping in the middle of Glencoe (the middle of nowhere in the Scottish Highlands!) and also not strapping her new sleeping bag securely enough and discovering it had slowly slipped down until it came to a rest on the exhaust pipe!
    We still have very fond memories of that trip!

  • @randallstewart1224
    @randallstewart1224 Год назад

    As a 37 year old lawyer, a fellow attorney induced me to launch into biking as a group social activity. Although I had more trouble learning on my first bike a Honda 350, I soon replaced it with a Virago 750 around 1985. The first owner hadn't maintained it very well, and I always thought its oil consumption was excessive, if not really a problem. On the freeway, it got about 42 mpg, less than I expected, but then you don't buy these things with mileage in mind. Frankly, it was horribly uncomfortable if ridden on a longer trip, but okay around town. We rode for about fifteen years, but my friend died, and I lost touch with the rest. I finally dusted it off and gave it to the college aged son of a friend about 2014. As far as riding the Virago, I always likened it to driving half a Buick.

  • @foggy4180
    @foggy4180 7 месяцев назад

    I rode a Yamaha Virago in the eighties. I liked Harleys but I did'nt like their pricetag and their maintenance so I bought a Virago XV750 and it gave me a cruiser style ride, comfortable for a decent price and almost no maintenance at all, I loved this bike.

  • @robertbagley9199
    @robertbagley9199 Год назад +1

    Owned an 1100 Virago for a while, great engine, and thankfully the previous owner had changed it quite a bit -different bars, bobbed rear mudguard, single seat etc' as for me in standard trim they were a right tarts handbag😛

  • @jeffhogan9125
    @jeffhogan9125 11 часов назад

    Yes, I owned a Virago 1100 Black and maroon with fenders painted to match the tank and side panels instead of those gawd-awful chrome ones I've seen. Loved the gold accents and the backfiring "problem" I could cause it to backfire any time I wanted by rolling off the throttle, like under bridges or in tunnels to make people see if they could find who was shooting off a gun. Loved loved loved my Virago! However, the seat looked great, but riding it across Texas multiple times should have made me eligible for the iron-butt club after only 600 miles. OMG, that thing was nowhere near the comfort of my later Goldwing but it sure had style and knew how to turn heads. Thanks for making this video! I went to the motorcycle shop in town to buy an oil filter for my Honda Ascot 500 and spotted the Virago on the showroom floor and left with the Ascot filter AND the Virago.

  • @vincentrider7638
    @vincentrider7638 9 месяцев назад

    My first bike was an '87 Virago 535: it taught me how to live, laugh, lean! Looked like a cruiser, sat like a standard and had amazing clearance - I loved leaning into corners and I thought all motorcycles had clearance like that. Traded it in for bike #2 and was quickly proven wrong. I miss that bike!

  • @helloish12321
    @helloish12321 Год назад +2

    Love my virago 250. Not nearly as much tech or style as the bigger bikes but it has enough soul. Plus you can still buy one new as the vstar 250.

  • @41BeachComber
    @41BeachComber Год назад

    I had the 700cc Virago with spoke rims. Such a great bike. I wish i still owned it today.

  • @Coolhand99au
    @Coolhand99au 11 месяцев назад

    I own a 1983 XV1000 Midnight Special fully rstored. I do like taking it for a spin. My other bikes are more high performance and tend to bring out the hooligan.
    The Yammy doesnt do that It's like riding along in a cumphy chair, no pressure and I just sit back and enjoy the scenery
    Love my XV1000 !

  • @tonybranton
    @tonybranton Год назад

    I had a first model 920. Rode from Louisiana to California and back with my wife in 1986. Dependable bike!

  • @old-n-still-runnin1597
    @old-n-still-runnin1597 Год назад

    I had a 1982 Virago 750. I put an upgraded seat on it with a cushioned sissy bar and my wife and I rode it everywhere. We loved it. It was my work commute ride except when it was below 30F. The main draw back was the tank was way too small. You had to stop for gas often on any extended trip. In 84 my wife got pregnant with our first child so there went my riding partner. A year later I decided daddy needed to sell the bike. We now tell our grandkids about when Granny and Grandpa used to traverse the roads on two wheels.

  • @rucerius4968
    @rucerius4968 Год назад

    I've never owned or ridden a Virago, however I did a chance to ride it's sport bike powered sibling. A buddy owned a 1986 Yamaha XJ700S Maxim and I got to take it for a test ride.