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I need advice on a KZ-550
- Phred
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- steell
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Not to many people can exceed what a modern sportbike is capable of doing (or even push the bike to it's limits), so unless you are roadracing I don't think you will have a problem
But of course you are not going to be able to keep up with a good rider on a modern sportbike, but could you keep up if you were on a modern sportbike also? I couldn't, just don't have the guts any more
KD9JUR
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- Phred
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I used to think I was really THAT good, now I realize I was just THAT stupid.But of course you are not going to be able to keep up with a good rider on a modern sportbike, but could you keep up if you were on a modern sportbike also? I couldn't, just don't have the guts any more
I started riding in '86 so I don't know much about the 70's race bikes. Would you consider the Kz550a to be a late 70's road-race replica? I realize that the GPz was just one away from a track bike, but I kind of considered the KZ/LTD's more of a standard UJM. This is the first 'a' model that I ever really looked at, and I think it's really unique.
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- Phred
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- Pterosaur
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BTW, I have never actually seen a good rider on a modern sportbike. I thought they were an urban legend. All I ever see riding newer sportbikes are posers with $400 helmets and a 1,000 miles on the clock.
Well, it's not like modern sport bikes have a lock on dip$hit operators; they're just likely to make a more spectacular splat when they run out of skills, road and luck at the same time.
It's not just the 18 year old Migel DuHamel wannabes on take your pick of out of the box carbon bodied rockets that are making themselves a hazzard to navigation - I wanna know what kind of misogynistic idiot tells a 130 pound squeeze in Lard-ash jeans that she's got what it takes to wrassle a Hardley Twin Cam through the twisties - even at 40mph.
Wish I had a buck for every pair of terror-stricken Bambi-peepers I've seen coming the other way around a turn...
Post edited by: Pterosaur, at: 2006/05/22 01:40
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- neilage66
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They are light, quick, nimble and a blast to throw around in the corners. As far as power goes I am really impressed with my little bike although it is supposed to be a bit "hotter" that a standard KZ550.
The picture you posted looks like a really nice, clean bike for the money. How many miles are on it? Can't be many by the look of it. If you know the maintenance history and it's ready for the road I wouldn't hesitate, but of course it ain't my money...it's yourn. Did you take it for a ride yet ?...that'll tell the story for you.
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- apeman
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Great bike. I hope you enjoy every mile.
Petaluma and Truckee, CA -- member since Jan. 23, 2003;
PREVIOUS KZs: 1980 KZ750H with 108,000 miles; 1980 KZ750E with 28,000 miles; and KZ750H street/cafe project, all sold a few years back.
This is what I do for fun, not for work. It is art, with a little engineering thrown in.
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- Phred
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11k, most of that in the last couple of years. (It has a lot of rubber bits replaced). I took a short jaunt on it, but the owner was pretty nervous so I wasn't comfortable pushing it at all.The picture you posted looks like a really nice, clean bike for the money. How many miles are on it? Can't be many by the look of it.
My favorite bike was my EX500, that thing was a complete hoot to ride. Quick, rev happy, rock solid twin with comfy seat and laid back riding position. I put 30k on that bike in three years, and it never needed anything. The dumnest thing I ever did was trade 'up' to a 5 valve FZR750, The FZR was too complex, too costly to repair and too top-heavy. The low handlebars, oversize tank and high footpegs made made me feel like I was humping a watermelon during low speed manuevers. I am hoping that my next bike will be a little like an air-cooled, naked EX.
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- neilage66
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Wow, that's amazing. My 81 had 14K when I got her last summer. Our bikes were definitely for recreation as opposed to transportation eh?11k, most of that in the last couple of years.
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