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Kawasaki GPZ500S Advice

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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 15:30 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Kawasaki GPZ500S Advice Reply with quote

Hi guys,

So I sold my Zontes. I have my license. I'm ready for the world of big(ger) bikes.
One which is within my meagre budget is a Kawasaki GPZ500S. It looks in fairly good nick for it's age. And it's about 50 miles away from me.
I called the owner and got the number plate for insurance and HPI. Haven't done the HPI yet, but the insurance is pretty good (£75ish TPf&f, £115 fully comp). I'd like to go down and view it.

Being a novice to engines and general parts of a bike, I'm not the most suited to go and view, but I don't have any mates/family members that know anything either, so I'm going solo.

Can anyone give me some advice on what to look for please? I've checked and read about fork seals, loose or tight chain which is very universal. Is there anything specific for this model I should keep an eye out for?

Also, is it worth getting fully comp insurance for a bike worth £650? The excess is £350 and if I crashed then I expect it would be next to worthless.

Cheers.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 15:44 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

Insurance wise possibly not directly worth it, but if you are involved in a claim (ie, one that you have no choice about) it can make life easier. For only £40 it is probably worth it.

As to the bike:-

Play in the rear suspension linkages. Very common on the GPZ500.
Brakes seize up easily, especially as both front and (on the later ones) the rear calipers are sliding items.
Finish can be poor on the GPZ. They were built as a cheap bike. More an issue to bargain them down on.
Water in the petrol tank.
Wear in the ignition switch (so the key comes out when the ignition is on).
On early ones the magnets fall off the flywheel (around 20k normally)
Early ones have 16" wheels which limit tyres a bit more

All the best

Katy
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 16:14 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi Katy,

Thanks for your reply. If it helps, the bike is a 2000 Y-plate, so I think some of the issues which you mentioned may have been ironed out by this point.

For a clod like me, could you briefly run me through how to check for the play in the rear suspension linkage please? Also, how do you check for water in the petrol tank?
Again, I'm very new to this. With my car, I drive it and let the garage do the rest.

Thanks!
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Azoth
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PostPosted: 18:30 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Choose a different bike?

I'm not a fan of the EX500-based bikes, at all. They can be very difficult to service. If you can keep it on the road, you've spent far more than the value of the bike on garage bills in the last year, or else you've become quite good at mechanical work.

I'm not going to go into all the problems with the design of the GPZ500S, but bear in mind that even though it's a lovely bike when running and working properly, it has a lot of serviceable parts that need replacement as they degrade. Getting to those parts, i.e. reaching them, is difficult because you need to remove a lot of stuff first. For example, rocker cover gasket. Remove tank, lines from fuel tap, lines to tank, manifold, air filter, etc. after dumping all the fuel and coolant. Then, when you have them off and , you have to replace not just that gasket but all the O-ring washers going to the cooling system, fill up and test cooling system, reattach everything and so on. Not too bad? Well, how about when at every step of the way, you're doing it on a 15 year old bike on which all the relevant nuts and screws have permanently seized up because of rust?

That bike will need constant attention in addition to normal wearable things like chains, sprockets, tyres and oil, because it simply wasn't designed to have lasted to 2016 in the first place. The only reason it exists is because we have good mechanics here and people look after their bikes carefully. Be very careful and think again before making it your weapon of choice. It's too long in the tooth, and should be considered a project bike, not a riding bike. Just my opinion.
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 18:59 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Woah. I appreciate your advice, but it is in stark contrast to everything else which I've read so far. That's not implying that you're wrong, by any means. But now you've planted doubt in my mind I'm curious as to what others have to say too.
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 19:59 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

MahatmaAndhi wrote:
Woah. I appreciate your advice, but it is in stark contrast to everything else which I've read so far. That's not implying that you're wrong, by any means. But now you've planted doubt in my mind I'm curious as to what others have to say too.


Most reliable, least hassle, easiest to live with bike No1-un-son has ever owned... when he was a student and on A2 restricted.

But given his track record with old hacks he couldn't afford to run, and usually rode even further into the ground.... into dry stone walls, back of busses or the sides of Taxis... (I knew he hated public transport, but I didn't think he'd go THAT far!)... if and when they ever actually ran.... it wouldn't have taken much to make that claim!

They were a great, and hugely under rated bike when new, and quickly aquired a following who apreciated them, offering the sort of power rarely got and never reliably from a two-stroke, without the weight of the four-pot fours.

These days? Dwindling pool of decent examples out there; so many run into the ground and beyond by A2 newbs and every-day commuters, few having much love for them; I would not have high hopes of finding a better example, or go out of my way to try and track one down.

Liveability over the last thirty years has been shown to be reasonable; quirks are well known, fixes well documented; and there's plenty of unloved ER5's knocking about to provide bits when needed.

But they are an old bike, of an even older design, that was avante-guard when new, but nothing that special now; and they carry a lot of the complexity of more modern machines by way of body-work making accessability for service more awkward, and having such features as that wonderful when new, but horrid when neglected multi-link rising rate uni-track back suspension begging more attention that many alternatives.

As a useful every day bike, you could do a lot worse for the money; and you would probably struggle to do an awful lot better; BUT, its an old bike; its a more convoluted design, and it will not come without risks and niggles.

All depends on your expectations and aspirations, and what you hope to do with the thing.

As said, its not one I would go out of my way to hunt out a good'n of, but I wouldn't turn my nose up if one came along at the right money...

Warnings of self destruicting alternators, sheared impellors, corroded radiators, siezed rear suspension bushes, inconsistencies in front end fork wheel brake arrangement to the catalogs and the such would not be 'so' material to my decision.... all bikes have thier quirks and niggles, GPz's are reasonably well known quantities, so a bit safer tham many.. but it Is an older bike to an even older design, and its not the simplest or most spanner friendly you could pick...

But as they say, you pays your money and takes your chances... so ultimately comes down to the overall condition of whats put infront of you, how much money they want from it, and how much you fear it going wrong.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 20:58 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

MahatmaAndhi wrote:
Hi Katy,

Thanks for your reply. If it helps, the bike is a 2000 Y-plate, so I think some of the issues which you mentioned may have been ironed out by this point.

For a clod like me, could you briefly run me through how to check for the play in the rear suspension linkage please? Also, how do you check for water in the petrol tank?


If it is a 2000 model then that is long after the ignition problems were involved and would have had 17" wheels.

For the linkage, stick the bike on the centre stand. Then lift the end of the swinging arm. In theory there should be no play but in practice there will be some. Check it isn't excessive, just a few mm. For the water in the tank you can look into the tank for it (will look like bubbles floating in the bottom of the tank), but not easy to spot.

MahatmaAndhi wrote:
Woah. I appreciate your advice, but it is in stark contrast to everything else which I've read so far. That's not implying that you're wrong, by any means. But now you've planted doubt in my mind I'm curious as to what others have to say too.


There are areas they are not the easiest bike to work on, but not to bad. Getting the rocker cover off is a minor pain due to the location of the throttle cables, the water pipes (just 2, sealed with O rings - they are dirt cheap and can be reused a few times but worth having some spares) and the coils. But put it this way, if you are dealing with bolts that haven't moved for 15 years and have seized then it isn't likely to be something you are dealing with regularly.

All the best

Katy
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Azoth
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PostPosted: 21:12 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Katy and Tef are crackerjack mechanics, and I'm not. So I'm not going to second-guess either of them, and I defer to their greater experience. However, just so you know, the time is right, now, for those bikes to be on at least their second set of throttle and clutch cables. Just replace them anyway, if you buy it. In addition, that old GPZ you're considering probably has some clutch slippage by now, and needs new springs/plates. Have they been replaced? If not, you will have to do them. You will want to do the forks at some point. There's a special technique for those as well, as they don't have the screw-on fork caps but a tricky wire clip holding them in place (bad design).

I don't want to be all negative, and if the truth be told, it's a really fun bike to ride. However, if you want to buy it you've got to keep it running. Changing chain and sprockets and fork seals is normal maintenance, but swapping that rocker cover gasket, or doing the valve clearances (necessary at the intervals specified by Haynes but probably not done), is a steeper learning curve simply because of the design decisions involved in coming up with this bike. The first one or two owners will have had it serviced. But it's been 15 years. I doubt it will have been serviced by Kawasaki post-30000 miles at all, so expect the worst. If the bolts and screws have rusted into various interesting semi-precious gemstone crystals, perhaps that's testimony to the reliability of the bike back then, but not now and for forever. At some point they have to come off.
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 21:36 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bhang wrote:
There's a special technique for those as well, as they don't have the screw-on fork caps but a tricky wire clip holding them in place (bad design).


Calling it a bad design is complementing it! Complete pain in the bum, trying to push down on the fork cap against the fork spring while trying to hoik out a circlip.

All the best

Katy
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 22:14 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well... shit!

If I was summarising all I've read so far, it would be something like: Good bike when it works, but tricky to fix when it doesn't.
Given my complete lack of understanding of engines and components, I'm a bit weary as to whether it's a novice's ideal bike.

This specific bike has done 27,000 and has no service history. The info is:

Quote:
Kwasaki GPZ500S for sale. Good, reliable bike. New chain , sprockets ,oil and filters changed. good tyres. Everything works as it should just want to upgrade to bigger bike., 5+ owners, Next MOT due 01/04/2017, No service history, BLUE, £650


And that's pretty much my budget. And I don't want to travel half the country on my first solo ride. This one is about 50 miles away.

I'm not in a massive hurry. Currently, I want a bike. Come January, I'll need a bike as we're moving premises.
I've got tomorrow to think it over. That seed of doubt is growing though!
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Azoth
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PostPosted: 22:29 - 27 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

OK, but you won't be a novice forever. Myself, Kickstart, Teflon-Mike, probably Rogerborg and many others would be willing to offer advice when you're doing jobs on the bike. Just 2 things to bear in mind when buying this bike (neither was really a problem for me, but it still gave me grey hairs): 1) expect to be working on the bike (i.e. develop a taste for work); 2) have at least £500 spare cash lying around to buy replacement parts without thinking twice (not including regular stuff like tyres, chains, bearings, etc.)
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 09:03 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

MahatmaAndhi wrote:

If I was summarising all I've read so far, it would be something like: Good bike when it works, but tricky to fix when it doesn't.
Given my complete lack of understanding of engines and components, I'm a bit weary as to whether it's a novice's ideal bike.


That applies to a hell of a lot of bikes in your budget. For example a 600 Bandit has similar (or worse) build quality and is in many ways harder to work on. Largely you need to find a bike that has been reasonably cared for as some people can destroy the best bike in no time at all, and at that price range there is a higher chance that one of its previous owners will be one who is like that!

There are ways round other things. While as mentioned stripping the forks is a pain, you can save money on getting it done professionally by taking the fork out of the bike and just taking that to a mechanic.

All the best

Katy
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 09:42 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

What about Yamaha Diversions 600cc? They seem to come up quite a bit and seem to be comparable to the GPZ500S, although the opinion is often divided on which is better handling, speed etc.
I don't really care about hitting 120MPH over 110MPH. I won't go be going at those kind of speeds.
Noone's mentioned which is easier to maintain though, which is something I need to be factoring in.
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 10:31 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Any bike you buy at that sort of age and price bracket is going to be a gamble. Finding one that doesn't obviously need anything done to it will be a bonus. I mean, you could buy a "bulletproof" oil cooled Bandit 600, but if it needs tyres, chain and sprockets done then you're down another £300 right off the bat. Then it could snap its CCT on the ride home.

Valve clearances? At that value? Wouldn't bother, unless racebike. The valves will burn out, or they won't. Can you remember the last time you heard from anyone who'd actually burned out a valve due to not adjusting clearances?

How good a bike are you expecting for £650?
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 10:43 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I know, I know. The budget is shit. But it's what I got.
When my job moves offices, I'm going to be needing to commute from the top end of Peterborough to Oundle which is about 15miles each way on 70 and 60mph roads.

I'm not looking at bikes which I want, rather than bikes which I can afford. So they're not even the style of bike which I would prefer.

I don't mind having a crack at fixing things myself with a Haynes manual and the internet, but it's going to be way out of my league then I'm a bit worried.

Another bike cropped up on my radar. It's relatively local, in my budget and another Kawasaki. Is this going to be the same story as the GPZ?

https://www.gumtree.com/p/kawasaki-motorbikes/kawasaki-zzr-600/1182443518
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Rogerborg
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PostPosted: 12:08 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

MahatmaAndhi wrote:
Is this going to be the same story as the GPZ?

That you'll invent reasons not to view it? Probably.

Go and see the bikes, get an idea of what £650 buys you, and choose the one that needs the least done to it right now.

You might look into insurance quotes first though.
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 12:14 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

To be fair, I was set on going to see it. The reasons not to were invented for me.
The insurance on it is good. Sub £100 for Third Party F&T.
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Azoth
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PostPosted: 14:17 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

30 miles a day counts as heavy use, for any bike. So, the bike you use for 30 miles a day must be well-maintained and in good order. The way most people achieve reliable commuting by bike is by buying a newer bike than that, which obviously costs more money.

I think you have two options. First is to buy a cheap bike, as you're considering right now, ride it a lot and fix it up scrupulously as soon as you discover any issue, before you actually need it for commuting in January. The advantage would be gaining some road experience, and learning what actually needs doing, how and when, on that particular bike.
Second is to refrain from buying a bike right now, and just save up until January, when your budget is sufficient to buy a newer bike. I would say, at least £1500 for the initial purchase price, not including your maintenance and spares fund. The advantage would be buying a better bike, and one that will need less attention to keep it on the road under heavy use.

EDIT: Looks like you bought the ZZR, since the advert has gone. It could be a good or bad example, but if it was you that bought it, my personal opinion is you made a wise decision to avoid catching the falling knife (GPZ).
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Kickstart
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PostPosted: 16:31 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hi

I had a Divvy for a while. I found it very boring to ride and with a few quirks. They also have a quick seize front caliper. On older ones a vacuum fuel pump that is a pain (can flatten the battery before pumping enough fuel through to start the engine). Mine seized the rear shock (as in it suddenly went absolutely solid). Clutch thrust bearings can fail if the wrong lube is used (Yamaha list moly grease - the Haynes says to use oil.....). Finish is better than the GPZ and the 600 Bandit.

ZZR600 is better made than the GPZ, but harder to work on for many things. Good on fuel. But brakes that really like to seize (there is a common fix retrofitting Honda calipers - but you need some spacers to do the job properly).

All the best

Katy
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MahatmaAndhi
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PostPosted: 17:16 - 28 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks for the replies. I really do appreciate it, even if it wasn't what I wanted to hear.

I've decided to not go and see this bike. I'm definitely the kind of person to chuck money at the first thing which I can afford, but my wife is very wisely telling me to hold off for a while.

I'm going to keep browsing the usual haunts and ask people locally to keep an eye out for on-the-side-of-the-road sales. No doubt I'll be back soon with more questions.

Thanks again.

Edit:

Bhang wrote:

EDIT: Looks like you bought the ZZR, since the advert has gone. It could be a good or bad example, but if it was you that bought it, my personal opinion is you made a wise decision to avoid catching the falling knife (GPZ).


Nope. Wasn't me. Maybe it was a good deal if it went so quickly. The guy never picked up the phone, nor replied to a text when I tried earlier today.
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Teflon-Mike
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PostPosted: 06:26 - 29 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

£650? - Lets be a bit realistic here; at that sort of money, you aint gonna be expecting a minter; it's a dog-end pre-rat, you expect the worst whilst hoping for the best of....

Follow on from previous comments; I wouldn't go out my way to find one; but if that was my budget, if it ran, had an MOT & looked half way like it deserved it... I'd go look.....

I'f I could ride it round the block, and it didn't make too many nasty noises, I'd waggle & haggle and try and get it for closer to £500.. and probably take the chance...

You just don't get much with an MOT for that sort of money..... and WHEN it goes wrong.... it's not an IF, it's definitely a 'when' merely a question of how long from now 'till when..... I wouldn't be planning on burrowing too deep to fix shit..... anything more than a new set of spark plugs or a simple C&S kit, and the thing would be wending it's way skip-wise.....

It would probably not 'quite' make it that far in my tender care... it would sort of stall a few feet from the back-door, & join the other 'projects-in-waiting' for Snowie to moan at me "WHY haven't you weighed that thing in!?" And make me stammer things like "Well, IF I can pick up an MOT Failed ER5" or "Well, I have an idea bout the back-suspension" or something... but that's me!

Realistically, a bike in that budget is likely to be deemed 'Beyond Ecconomical Repair' for the price of a new pair of tyres and a set of brake pads!

As such, you can fuck-off a lot of nebulous ideas of 'reliability' and model maladies... they just don't matter... it either works or it don't... if it works, you ride it, when it don't, you scrap it and go look for something else....

It's called banger-nomics, and pretty much anything in the sub £1500 bracket is going to be in or approaching that arena, and what you need to do is avoid the bike that has got to the end of it's road, with bangernomicists not putting work or money into the thing, saving it instead for the inevitable replacement....

BUT... beggers and choosers; you want cheap get to work wheels for 15 miles each way, anything with two wheels, an engine that runs and an MOT aught do the job, and you aren't going to find anything that's likely much safer a bet in your budget, even looking at tddlers or scooters.

27k? If it's genuine & the clocks match the rest of the bike; the front end is right for the year & the frame, and not obviously been rebuilt with whatever available spares could be sourced a few times, you MIGHT and it is a might, be lucking in on a reasonably original and well looked after example that hasn't been thrashed to death by restrcted licence newb or miser-miling commuter.... if so, get in quick, 'cos it wont hang around log; if not? well, it's typical commuter fare, and you pays your money and takes your chances.... and with a bit of common weighing it up, likely as far a bet as anything in that budget.

Debating the if's and buts with us, is not helping you really; get a grip on your wallet; take a deep breath, promise NOT to get exited when you hear the engine running, re-calibrate your expectations to your budget, and go look at the damn thing.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 07:27 - 29 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Fwiw, I paid £750 for a '90s rear drum braked CB500 w/ iirc 22k miles on it. I'm in york, it was in peterborough. It looked well enough on ebay, and the seller didn't seem like a total crook. So...I...took a chance. "Shook" on it via eBay PMs, got me clobber together and caught a train down. It was more or less as good as the photos - but my spidey senses were tingling as I tried to find bearings w/ play, a binding caliper, or tell-tail knocking sounds etc. etc. Like I actually had a clue.

I pogoed the front forks, I looked over the meagre paperwork, I checked chain and sprockets, etc. But I couldn't find a damn thing wrong with it - even though I "knew" there was something. This was in many ways a grand's worth of bike (according to my prior few months of monitoring completed listings etc.) - so why £750. Maybe the guy just suddenly needed the cash. He did look a bit broke.

In the event it got me home fine - but the nearside fork seal had pissed oil down its leg. Good job it wasn't the offside one where the brake disc was.

I contemplated having a go at replacing the seal but chickened out, and got a proper job. Cost me £300. Some tosser had bodged in a incorrectly sized seal which wouldn't come out without blow lamp and mauling.

Since then the bike's been fine - used most days, has 50 odd thou on it. Just done a valve check - no adjustment needed. But it does and always has made slightly strange clicking and knocking noises if not used for a week or so - I think clutch related but can't be sure. Slightly unsettling. But now it's getting short interval oil, and regular use, the bastard'll probably see a 100k *if* I can be arsed.

So, just as I suspected, the £750 bike turned out to be a grand after all. Also, when you get to the "not much over £500 quid bracket" buying gets very tricky. Especially if you're a novice with no fettling know-how, nor extended circle of biking mates who might be able to point you in the direction of more "honest" low-priced machines. Iow your budget might well not be enough.
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angryjonny
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PostPosted: 10:48 - 29 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

FWIW - mechanics aside, I bought a 500 as my first bike and was told I'd regret it. I did. I was riding a 600 within months. 100cc doesn't sound like a lot engine wise but there's a huge gulf between 500s and 600s when it comes to power.
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trevor saxe-coburg-gotha
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PostPosted: 13:00 - 29 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

90% of the time I find 55bhp is enough - but then 90% of the time I'm on my favourite roads where 70-80mph is quite a good pace, and carrying a more or less continuous 60mph feels like something of an achievement. I honestly don't mind if 600s are coming by me on the less twisty stretches so long as they're look smaller in the mirrors through the more technical parts.
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MahatmaAndhi
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Joined: 10 Jun 2015
Karma :

PostPosted: 18:28 - 29 Aug 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well, I went ahead and did it. Not that Kawasaki, but a different one.
An ER5. 2002 plate. MOT until June. 20,000 miles with FSH and MOT docs.
It was from a semi-retired guy who had back surgery and couldn't ride it anymore (or anything). Really nice guy who made me feel assured.
I really do feel happy with this purchase. I hope I continue to.

I know the ER5s aren't particuarly quick or exciting, but I want a commuter and going back up the A1 felt really comfortable at 60 and 70MPH.

https://i.imgur.com/GC7ljZE.jpg

Thank you all for your help and advice. I'm sure I'll be needing it again in the future. [/img]
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The last post was made 9 years, 141 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful?
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