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MOTOBRICK.COM => Welcome To Motobrick.Com => Topic started by: BJT on February 08, 2018, 08:18:49 AM
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Hello. So after 20+ years of Boxer miles, I bought a K75s. Road it 110 miles home in the rain, from Peterborough, thoughts of 'but what about the splines, THE SPLINES?!' going through my head. All good, and dropping the wheel and shaft showed everything was beautifully bathed in Molly. A good sign, as fairly representative of previous care and attention. The bike's an '88, with 3 owners and just shy of 90,000 on the clock. Full history in the book + paperwork and came with 2 pairs of tragkorbs (City and Regular), various spare bits and two owner's manuals. It had RT bars - brilliantly comfy but not doing much for the visuals. So on went the stubby originals, which was a PITA regarding cables but better all the same. And verdict after 500 miles? Pretty damn sweet. So different from the my R's of course and took a few miles to get my head around it but I reckon it's a keeper. And its staying like it is - no plans to turn it into a Scrambler (at this weight?!), Bobber, Brat etc. I know, I'm just so terribly old fashioned like that.
Here's a picture, that would be right at home (sort of) in a Period BM brochure. And look! The sun was shining. Brexit or not, Britain's not so bad...
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Welcome! Yes, IMO the K75S is one of the nicest machines to come out of BMW. A little low on power by modern standards, but the torque curve makes up for it nicely, the styling is classic, and the ergonomics are among the best anywhere. Congratulations on finding such a nice machine.
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Welcome! Yes, IMO the K75S is one of the nicest machines to come out of BMW. A little low on power by modern standards, but the torque curve makes up for it nicely, the styling is classic, and the ergonomics are among the best anywhere. Congratulations on finding such a nice machine.
Thanks awfully for the welcome, glad to be here.
At a crumbling 45, my desire for top end and scorching left-handers ('right-handers' perhaps for you?) has diminished somewhat.
I'm very happy with the 75, although if a K1 came along, well who knows?
And interesting stable you have there, I see a theme....
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At a crumbling 45 . .
I'm very happy with the 75, although if a K1 came along, well who knows?
Welcome, BJT!
At a crumbling 45, you'll be able to lift a dropped K75S off the road much more easily than if it were a K1. Good choice.
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Welcome, BJT!
At a crumbling 45, you'll be able to lift a dropped K75S off the road much more easily than if it were a K1. Good choice.
I don't relish either but I take your point. I could always go the sidecar route.
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although if a K1 came along, well who knows?
Trust me, K1's need healthy young highly flexible knees! Had a demo for a while, I thought it was going to ruin me for lesser bikes but it was a relief to get back on my K75. It is really hard for me to wrap my head around my K75s being a vintage machine, memories of riding it brand spanking new from the dealer are still way to fresh in my head. Then again, it does have historical plates on it.
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nice find! 75S is best of breed, not that i am biased or anything.
thank you for not hacking it up into something it will never be.
and only 45? youngster!
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and only 45? youngster!
Apparently a crumbling one though. :giggles The 75S might serve as a restorative. Let's hope a journal is kept.
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Welcome you have scored the pick of the litter in the best classic colour. Treat it well and it will be your friend for life.
Regards Martin.
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Despite what you may hear about how long these bikes last, be aware that the head will probably need new valve seats at 200,000 miles.
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Welcome you have scored the pick of the litter in the best classic colour. Treat it well and it will be your friend for life.
Regards Martin.
Thanks dude, for the first time in my life I may have just made a good choice...and all for just 900 notes.
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Despite what you may hear about how long these bikes last, be aware that the head will probably need new valve seats at 200,000 miles.
Thanks for the heads-up; I'll make a mental note to think about that in 100k miles. Happy riding.
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Welcome to the site. Nice to see another Brit on board. :2thumbup:
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Welcome to the site. Nice to see another Brit on board. :2thumbup:
Thanks, glad to be here. Went for a ride last night; cold but good....although thinking the leaky, worn Avon’s might have to go.
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Thanks, glad to be here. Went for a ride last night; cold but good....although thinking the leaky, worn Avon’s might have to go.
Braver than I am we had snow and Ice here last night. It definately was a night in evening.
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Thanks, glad to be here. Went for a ride last night; cold but good....although thinking the leaky, worn Avon’s might have to go.
put some new rubber on mine and it made a huge difference in the ride, even with the cheap Shinkos
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Welcome you have scored the pick of the litter in the best classic colour. Treat it well and it will be your friend for life.
Regards Martin.
The Dakar yellow with the black engine is also a nice combo. especially if you like bananas.
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If you get a red helmet you could do a passable imitation of a Banana Split. :hehehe
Regards Martin.