Since I decided to sell the Passat and the Porsche is more or less "done", I needed a new toy/project to keep me entertained over the winter.
I grew up riding dirt bikes and I've always wanted a street bike, but I'd just never got around to actually buying one. Finally, this summer I decided it was time, so I started looking for a bike. At first, I started looking for a mid-80s bike like a Yamaha Seca/Maxim or something along those lines that I could get for really cheap and make a project out of. However, a buddy of mine had a bike in his garage that he'd had for quite a while but hadn't ridden in over two years that he was thinking of getting rid of. He made me an offer I couldn't refuse, so I bought it.
The bike is a 1996 Suzuki Bandit 600S. It had 10k miles on it and overall was in really great condition. It's been down once before, but not while moving, so there is some random cosmetic damage here and there on the right side, but nothing major or worth worrying about.
The day I brought it home:
My biker bitch posing with it
First mod: taking the tank bra off.
Like I said before, the bike hadn't been ridden in at least two years, but it fired right up after replacing the battery. Besides the battery, all it needed was an oil change, spark plugs, fuel filter and new rear tire and it was ready to go.
A week or two after I bought the bike the starter switch starting acting weird and I had to push start the bike a couple times because it wouldn't turn over. So, I stripped the fairings off and found this rat nest:
I think I found the problem...
The bike looks WAY better with the fairings removed, so I left them off and ordered a standard 5 3/4" round headlight for a Harley and mounted that up.
I also cleaned up the rear of the bike because the factory undertray is ridiculously huge.
Before:
After:
Being an entry level bike, the suspension sucks and is super soft on these things, especially if you weigh close to 200 pounds like I do. So to solve that issue, I scored a rear shock from an '08 GSXR off Craigslist for only $35. As an added benefit, it raised the rear of the bike a bike which helped it turn better and made it more comfortable for me since I'm 6'4". While I was at it, I also flushed the fluid in the forks and replaced it with a higher viscosity oil to firm them up a bit (kind of a ghetto way to do it, but it worked for the time being).
I grew up riding dirt bikes and I've always wanted a street bike, but I'd just never got around to actually buying one. Finally, this summer I decided it was time, so I started looking for a bike. At first, I started looking for a mid-80s bike like a Yamaha Seca/Maxim or something along those lines that I could get for really cheap and make a project out of. However, a buddy of mine had a bike in his garage that he'd had for quite a while but hadn't ridden in over two years that he was thinking of getting rid of. He made me an offer I couldn't refuse, so I bought it.
The bike is a 1996 Suzuki Bandit 600S. It had 10k miles on it and overall was in really great condition. It's been down once before, but not while moving, so there is some random cosmetic damage here and there on the right side, but nothing major or worth worrying about.
The day I brought it home:
My biker bitch posing with it
First mod: taking the tank bra off.
Like I said before, the bike hadn't been ridden in at least two years, but it fired right up after replacing the battery. Besides the battery, all it needed was an oil change, spark plugs, fuel filter and new rear tire and it was ready to go.
A week or two after I bought the bike the starter switch starting acting weird and I had to push start the bike a couple times because it wouldn't turn over. So, I stripped the fairings off and found this rat nest:
I think I found the problem...
The bike looks WAY better with the fairings removed, so I left them off and ordered a standard 5 3/4" round headlight for a Harley and mounted that up.
I also cleaned up the rear of the bike because the factory undertray is ridiculously huge.
Before:
After:
Being an entry level bike, the suspension sucks and is super soft on these things, especially if you weigh close to 200 pounds like I do. So to solve that issue, I scored a rear shock from an '08 GSXR off Craigslist for only $35. As an added benefit, it raised the rear of the bike a bike which helped it turn better and made it more comfortable for me since I'm 6'4". While I was at it, I also flushed the fluid in the forks and replaced it with a higher viscosity oil to firm them up a bit (kind of a ghetto way to do it, but it worked for the time being).
Comment