Two hard-ons now.......G-Man wrote:Yes I saw the CB750 - a sort of pre-sandcast sandcast and the only one in captivity. Not sure I would fork out that sort of cash fro a pre-production museum piece. I don't mind looking at it but I'd like someone else to take care of it. You could have a lot of fun for 120 grand...
My friend had a Kawasaki H2 and I made the mistake of going for a ride on the back with him. I pretty much thought that I was going to die that day.
When my buddie saw my 400/4 post restoration he had to have one. I bought a frame with registration and we set about building him one entirely out of parts from swap meets and a few NOS parts from David Silver. The most annoying thing was that it turned out nicer than mine.....
G
I remember a guy living local to me in Southampton in late 1970 had a road-going Kwakker H1R -- the one with all the black bits instead of chrome; what a sound it had! This was just before I got street legal. I could never understand why my first bike -- a James Captain 200 (197cc Villiers engine and 50mph tops) -- never sounded quite that good; it was still a 2-stroke, after all.... The original Crazy Frog, with its "drrringggg-ding-ding-ding".
When I had my first GT380 I spotted a 1972 S2 for sale in the classifieds, so I rode along for a looksee. Pretty ratty build quality, compared to the Suzuki, but I took it for a ride anyway. Fatima, Mother of Mohammed! What a scary machine! I gave it a fistful, in first gear, and it seemed to do little apart from exude a shedload of induction noise; then came the power band. Holy sh1t! I sailed off up the road with the front wheel four feet off the tarmac! No power-on then dump the clutch; it just had a will of its own!! If the Mach IV was The Widowmaker then the S2 was The Willbreaker.
I turned it down, rode home and promptly changed my messy shreddies....
I never mounted another Kwakker triple again. Too bloody hyperactive for my liking.