Hi all,
I was browsing the forum during my lunch hour at work today and noticed Maz's posts on the non-availability of the SS(?) frame and the usual "XB = Bic razor" comment.
Obviously, as an XB owner, this is a bit depressing - not that it might not be 100% true. But it did set me thinking about the whole XB thing.
I cut my teath on Jap stuff, with the occasional Italian deviation thrown in. I'd always gone for slightly non-mainstream stuff (H2 B, kwak 750 Turbos, Morini 3 1/2 sports etc) but never even given Buells a thought. It wasn't that I'd been aware of them and disregarded them as obscure Harley derivitives - I really wasn't aware of them at all.
When things came to the point where I could get a new bike, and a few £thousand either way in the purchase price wasn't an issue, I looked at my options. I was all set up to buy a Ducati monster. I even walked into the dealership at the pre-arranged time to seal the deal with the salesman. He kept me waiting 45 minutes, then I walked out. At this point, I decided that I'd go for the MV 750 (which I 'd always really wanted anyway, but I'd just thought that the Ducati might be a more sensible option!)
Then I saw the marketing pics of the first XB - the XB9R Firebolt. Wow! This was so radical: that frame shape - that disc - that swinging arm - the whole look just blew me away. Stripped down, air cooled, pushrod, 1,000cc V twin with looks to die for. Pure nivarna for a Morini freak like me.
I put down my deposit based on the spec /pics alone (oh, I did test-ride a M2 to get a feel of the whole Buell thing, but that just re-confirmed my conviction).
When it arrived, I loved it. I had a 28 mile standard "test route" around the hills in the borders of Scotland and on the first try I utterly caned my best "lap time" on the 750 Turbo. (Some of this route is very high speed, very long straights where the Turbo "wins" so its not an obvious "Buell would win" circuit.)
I immediately had probs with the bike and with the dealer, but only minor stuff (eg the exhaust was melting the belly-pan; the dealer lost some of the warranty parts that came in etc), but only minor niggles.
With 8 years experience, I still love my XB - but sometimes I wish it hadn't been built by Buell! OK, maybe none of the 'inovations' on the original XB were truely 'new' (I used to have a fuell-in-the-frame Francis Barnett grass-tracker) but it was the first time they'd all come together on a road bike and, by 2002 standards, it looked light-years ahead of anything else on the market.
I'm old enough to remember the original Honda VF750 - that high bar, fairly forward pegs, chocolate cams, custom look-ish thing. What an abomination that was! Utterly hidious in every way. Clearly a product from the same factory that brought us the disaster that was the CX650 turbo.
Honda had a complete lemon on their hands, but did they can it? Did they hell as like. After various recalls, urgent developments and upgrades over the years, it evolved into the VFR - a standard by which all 'sports tourers' are still judged.
I do sometimes wish that those early promotional pics of the XB had shown a bike with (say) three tuning forks on the timing cover. Just imagine what we've had now if a major Jap manufacturer had come up with the original design, then backed it with the finance required to develop it properly.
The whole "it doesn't have a cassette gearbox" argument would be utterly irrelevant. You only need a cassette access if the gearbox goes wrong or needs major sevicing at unreasonably regular intervals. After 80k+ miles on a FZR 600, I never needed a cassette box 'cos the box was faultless throughout (unfortunately, it wasn't Pugeot at 60+mph impact speed proof!). If an XB would reliably provide 80K+ miles with no gearbox problems, I guess that Maz wouldn't really have an axe to grind here. At 80K, the whole motor probably needs a full overhaul anyway, so there is no issue (unless you've got a tuber on 80K that's never had the gearbox out?).
Yes, its only a Tuesday, and equally obviously, my brother has recently arrived back from Scotland with some very special whisky -but I still stand by the above.
Any comments?
Dave
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