I'm an old-school superbike guy:
From left to right, 1982 Kawasaki GPz1100 (fuel injected, one of the first bikes with factory fuel injection), 1983 Kawasaki KZ1000R Eddie Lawson Replica (the previous owner dropped it, then just painted it a generic green, disguising its identity quite a bit), and my first bike, a 1986 Kawasaki ZX600R Ninja. This photo was taken at Altus AFB in 1991; I still own all three although they are all now rather derelict.
I rode the GPz1100 all over the place, racking up over 80K miles on it between 1988 and 1998. I took it on two transcontinental, 'round the USA trips, including one back in 1992 with Rob Mesa's best friend and old roommate, Doug DeRyke.
Interesting story there. Doug discovered partway along the ride that he had a congenital knee defect, and he simply couldn't tolerate riding a motorcycle for hours at a time. We'd gone from the S.F. Bay Area via back roads all the way up to Glacier-Waterton Nat'l Park in Canada, then down through Montana. His voltage regulator on his Honda VF1000F had conked out and the alternator sizzled his battery, so I would have to physically pick him up and lift him onto his bike (loaded down with tons of luggage etc.), then huff and puff and push-start him (his bike wasn't fond of starting and that often meant a LONG push), then hustle back to my GPz, fire it up and chase after him.
Doug finally flamed out in Kalamazoo, Michigan. We stopped at one of his relative's home, and he phoned home to Rob.
This goes to show what a terrific guy Rob is. He dropped everything, jumped in his pickup truck and drove NON-STOP all the way from Santa Clara, CA (right next to San Jose, a bit south of San Francisco) to Kalamazoo, a distance of some 2300 miles, arriving in something like 30 hours. He walked in looking like a ghost, fell down on the floor and went to sleep for 12 hours or something. Then he got up, they loaded the bike in the truck, and drove back to California, again, non-stop, so he could go to work the next day!
What a friend!
Anyway, Doug built Rob's race motors, and when my GPz motor was well past tired, he agreed to rebuild it for me in 30 days. One thing led to another and it took eight years (!) to get it back. I installed it in the frame about a year ago:
And unfortunately it's been sitting ever since. :sad:
When I was based in Korea (1995-96), Doug was the babysitter for my bikes and cars. He was supposed to ride them every week, but unfortunately on his first drive in my Cobra, the rear suspension snapped in two (completely NOT his fault) and the car was lightly wrecked. I think he became very self-conscious after that and he didn't want to take any more chances with my toys, so my bikes just sat. When I got home, the Ninja ran fine for a few days, then dropped a cylinder and was running on only three.
"I've got to fix that next weekend" I said to myself.
That was 1996. It's now 2010 and it's never turned a wheel again. I finally acknowledged the fact I was never going to get it going myself, and turned it over to my neighbor who's a professional motorcycle mechanic at a dealership, and does side work out of his garage.
I just bought a new battery for it, and with any luck, the engine will be running and this bike will be back on the road tomorrow afternoon! :thumbsup:
I'm then going to bring him the GPz (freshly built engine, just needs assembly, and the fuel injection may need some fiddling), and when that's done, I've got a complete spare set of NOS bodywork for the Eddie Lawson Replica, and he'll get after that too.
The ELR was running until I pulled it all apart to do a ground-up restoration in 1995. It was in a billion pieces when I got the word that I was being transferred to Korea in a few weeks--all the black bits (frame etc.) were at the powdercoating shop at the time. Doug's brother Mike came over after I got the pieces back, and in one day we totally assembled the bike, but every fastener is just finger-tight. So it needs to basically come apart and go back together again properly.
My garage has been a vehicular Jonestown for far too long. I'm hoping to have everything up and running by the end of the summer.
Of course, I just pulled the engine out of the Pantera on Tuesday, so that's not helping the cause...
