I've seen many build threads around here where people have taken piles of rust that I wouldn't even think about buying and have restored them to near showroom condition. It's much, much harder than you might think it is. Certainly it's several orders of magnitude more difficult than hopping down to Advance Auto and buying some spray-bomb flat paint and covering up what looks to have been a pretty nice paint job. It takes skill, and I can appreciate fine craftsmanship. If that's boring to you, so be it. I very much so appreciate well-done mods from stock as well. Some of these bikes are classics, though a 550L isn't going to fall into that category (believe me I know). If I had a 68 Corvette L88 with matching #'s (currently worth about $2M last I looked), you bet your ass I'd try to keep it bone stock! A base 'vette? I'm going to go to town with improvements on that car.
If you cannot tell the difference between 30-year-old, too-soft-from-the-factory-and-now-sacked-from-age, stock rear shocks and springs and a hardtail, then either you have zero sensitivity in your posterior or you've only ridden on glass-smooth roads. If you don't think that a rear suspension is handy, well, I guess you're well versed and experienced...
My advice? Fix it! Learn to ride, and learn to ride well. Love, and live for, the ride.
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