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Most riders can't go ANYWHERE near what these skinny tire bikes can do.
Are you an expert road racer?
If you were you wouldn't be asking these questions.
Hard parts are definitely the limiting factor after "bottle" on my bikes :lol:
For a translation of bottle check Google UK![]()
Ive just read all the way through this thread again & am pretty confusedafter setting up stock gs suspension to my liking & raising the rear a tad i can pretty easily run to the edge of the skinny rear tyre & often push the front to the point of it getting scary, i'm no racer either, in fact although i'm pretty quick & smooth i'm nowhere near the fastest in group of the people i ride with
The point of all the above is with modern suspension keeping the wheels in contact with the road & modern rubber i cant quite run to the edge of the tyre in normal riding conditions, therefore i'm leaving myself a safty margin which can only be a good thing
I'm also getting myself decent brakes & rubber that will grip rather than the wooden stock rubbish which wouldnt stop a wheelbarrow in a hurry
I expect some people to take issue with the above comments & thats fair enough but i suspect those people have never done a few thousand miles on a gs equiped with modern running gear, so in my opinion are not qualified to comment
cheers tone
i have a 80 gs750 want a fatter tire in the bike what would need to be dont/modified in order to achieve that. looking for a 170 even better 180
i have a 80 gs750 want a fatter tire in the bike what would need to be dont/modified in order to achieve that. looking for a 170 even better 180
I took your original post and will answer it from a philisophical and practical view.
I recommend that you stay with the 120 or 130 rear tire that this bike was designed for and here are some reasons:
1. most riders don't even push the existing "skinny" tires to the limit now.
2. they are cheaper than the "fat" tires.
3. most buyers (75% by my guess) would prefer stock tires because they don't trust what the seller tries to tell them about their "improvements"
4. why spend $$ for expensive mods (rims, swing arm, etc...) to accomodate the "fat" tire, which again most of us don't trust what you might tell me about how much better it handles because some experts said so on the web.
5. after all those so called improvements in handling, tell me how often I can use it on the byways of New England. Between wet leaves in the fall, frost heaves in the spring, washouts and gravel on the roads after summer downpours, frequent rains, chopped up roads with 2" breaks in the pavement, blind curves with driveway entrances lurking around just about every one of them, slow moving farm vehicles that suddenly block your angle on back roads... do you still want try to prove to me that your expensively modded bike with a new "fat" tire handles better at 80mph on these roads and take a chance on "losing it" anyway due to above mentioned road conditions?
Do whatever you want...it's your bike. I'll stick with my 120(and maybe the 130 if I can't find the 120's) rear tire on all my GSes and will stay within 20-30mph "over" back road speed limits for thrills and never even push the bike to it's handling limits.
I don't own a racetrack, or have manicured roads up here, or have "spotters" clearing the road ahead for me, and am trying to hang on to my license, even though I've been stopped more than a few times for excessive speeds on back roads in the last year on my skinny, old, tired GSes with stock forks and no mods.....![]()
Agreed. IF i change over my ES to the 86 Gixxer stuff, my main goal is only to get the better brakes and more and modern rubber on the ground. However, I think the large misconception for people looking to do these mods is that it will somehow make the old GS handle like a modern sportbike. What doesnt seem to be understood to the full by the guys just poking around about it (like myself at first) is that the single most limiting factor at that point becomes the frame, followed closely by the weight of the bike to begin with. It will NEVER handle like a GSXR or R1 or the like, even if you go thru with bracing the frame, but it will help to do so. However, the cost factor in this endeavor becomes the NEXT limiting factor for alot of us. When you consider that to do all the necessary modification to make the bike actually HANDLE better other than just having better stopping power and stickier rubber, it simply doesnt make sense. The price tag, all said and done, can end up well over 3 grand, and for that, you can land a NICE Bandit, or a few years old FZ1 or ZRX...
i find this thread to be quite incredible...you look through various threads and theres folks chopping up perfectly good GS's all the time . some turn out good , others worse than they started, loads of which get applauded and volumes spoken about how great they are.
then joe soap here wants to do the same sort of thing , ie chop up a perfectly good GS, and all he gets is negativity and reasons not to .
and as for just buying a modern bike for the same money .......wheres the fun in that ...
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i have a 80 gs750 want a fatter tire in the bike what would need to be dont/modified in order to achieve that. looking for a 170 even better 180
well rj im not an oc chopper wanna be but i am a newb to this im accually trying to build a cafe reson why i want the fat tire is one the look and two the handling i want to be able to take it up to the canyons and be able to handle i just have a hard time trusting the skinny tires the real is currently a 110 and the front a 100 but like i said im a newb. my apologies
I can still scare the chit out of myself with a my "130" rear tire.
Dont get me wrong, there will be some handling gains, but its not going to EVER be a modern bike. I have good suspension on my ES, and that bike rails in the corners, pegs draggin, etc. But i feel the frame move before I feel any sloppiness in the suspension. Also, You get off much easier in the wallet dept because you're already running a monoshock, which makes things open up a little better in the choice of routes to take. Guys with twin shock bikes have to do a bit more converting things over to take advantage of larger wheels with modern rubber...If you rode a stock '83 750 es and then were to ride mine, trust me. You would think differently. My frame is stock also, it's just fine as is. And counting in the $450 that the Hagon shock cost I only have @ $1200 into the swap. Some of the best money I've ever spent.
Why not get a new bike that isn't completely ridiculous with a wider tire?
BWAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
This will be Brians personal hell. He will be stuck in a room full of guys asking how to put on fat tires and how much shorter they can cut the shocks...