Morning/Afternoon/Evening all!
I recently decided that my 1000cc V-twin (whilst stupidly fast) was not a practical commute to work, and actually used more fuel than my car.
So decided I'd get something smaller, and economical. I liked the idea of a more relaxed retro-style riding position, and decided to go genuine retro I can work on. Something that would just putt-putt along between A and B while I enjoy the ride, as opposed to trying to hold back a homicidal maniac that's determined to give me a near-death experience!
(Yeah, I guess I'm getting old!)
And that's how I'm now the owner of a 1981 GS250T. I have no idea if she's a TT or TX. After 37 years there's a lot of non-standard bits. GSX alloy wheels, single sided exhaust, mudguards/fenders (no idea where the rear came from, it's square edged and horrible!). The mirrors had Kawasaki written on them!
So over the past few months I've been fixing and tidying things up. She was last on the road in 2012.
After a carb strip down and new jets she started fine. Rear brake has been sorted, front brake refuses to work even after new seals, so I'm currently waiting for a new master cylinder to arrive. Headlight housing cleaned and repainted. Bulb mounting has been replaced with the genuine article, so now she has 45/45watt instead of a random holder and 35/35watt she came with. It's still candle power though. Any suggestions for a halogen unit that will fit in the housing?
I'm an IT guy, so upgrading the wiring/adding a relay is not a problem. I've already replaced all the dash bulbs with LEDs, and the stop/tail too to reduce the load on the electrical system. I'm in the process or cleaning up all the connectors and redoing the earths, and tidying up some electrical repairs she's had in the past. I'm almost at the point where I know all the wiring colours from memory!
With any luck I'll be able to get her tested and on the road before the UK summer disappears, and then this winter I can actually spend some time trying to find spoked wheels and chrome/stainless mudguards and get her back to original condition. Any suggestions?
Cheers,
Steve
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