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Expensive furniture.![]()
A 100% original low mileage Yamaha XS850 recently sold for $33,000 at an auction. The folks on the Yamaha repair forum had mixed reactions to that with one person saying "It'll be nice to see an old classic like this preserved and ridden" My reply to that was "At $33k that bike isn't going to be ridden any further than up a ramp and onto a trailer"
Yeah, but that one has almost twice the miles, and it's missing parts.I know of one in Northeast Ohio with 5 miles on it! So, they're out there.
I think it’s more likely the same bike that I posted in this threadStorm, wondering if that could the same bike and new owner rolled mi. back from 5 to 3 trying to get a higher price?... Illegal, but rolling mi. back is nothing new.
Here's one that just came up for sale today in Vancouver....13,000 miles and $5,000cdn ($3,700us)....seems to be a much better deal
https://vancouver.craigslist.org/van/mcy/d/vancouver-1980-yamaha-xs850/7604105456.html
Excellent condition (and collector plated), low mileage 1980 Yamaha XS 850G, shaft drive, triple cylinder, no modifications except the exhaust which is an era correct 3 to 1. I have the original exhaust pipes which are included with the bike.
Repaired/restored a few years ago and well maintained since, always stored indoors, runs like a dream and turns heads wherever she goes. Needs nothing except a new owner to appreciate her. Selling because I found an XS1100 to work on next.
Lots of pictures attached so you can see every detail, email if you have any questions.
If ad is up it's still available.
The '80 XS850G is a pretty rare bird, they sold a WHOLE lot more of the 750/850 Specials than the standards. Wouldn't mind having one myself to be honest. I helped my brother buy a clean '79 XS750F two years ago, 4k mile original bike that had sat for the better part of 40 years. The Triple sounds really cool, and the bike with its pretty long travel suspension, low and long mufflers and shaft drive makes it feel like a Japanese take on an airhead Bimmer almost (with cooler sounding exhaust). In pure quarter mile comparisons the 78-79 750s actually ran quicker than the more-emissions strangled 850s, but I suspect in real world riding the 850's got a nice little torque advantage down low.