Your First Motorcycle Was a ............?

AFJ

Well-known member
My first motorcycle was a 1957 Ariel "Colt" in 1958-59. Bought second-hand with about 4,000 miles on the clock.
Rode to high school in Toronto all but 2 weeks of the winter and sold in Sept. '59 to pay for college tuition.
What was your first motorcycle?
AFJ
 
1972 Montesa Cota 123. Bought new from a dealer in Scarborough on Eglinton Ave.
 
Not sure my Allstate smoker qualifies as first motorcycle - 40 mph downhill with a tailwind.
Hand mix the oil and gas....what a horror.
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This does tho 305 Superhawk - great bike I rode all year in St Catharines duing uni in the 60s.
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I recall lighting a small fire under the bike to warm the oil on a cold morning at Glendale residences.
 
Very first... 'Some late sixties early seventies Yamaha 250(?) gifted to me circa 1975-76 by Frank Mrazek when I was but a boy... We lived on the same street.
'Never actually rode it though... Just sat on it pushing it up and down the driveway taking turns with my brother :)
'Found out years later he had just asked my dad to store it for him and we never actually had the key...

First "real" bike happened in 1991.
'Bought a second hand 1982(?)CX650E from Cycle World on Dundas.
'Rode it as far as Fort Lauderdale Florida:)

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1988 Honda Hawk GT, bought used in 1999. The bike I wanted was the freshly released SV650, but something that new wasn't in my budget. Read a blurb somewhere, probably in Motorcyclist Magazine or similar, that the Hawk GT was an even sweeter handling bike, and I preferred the look, so was immediately smitten. Found an ex-track bike in the old Boat Bike and RV Trader for a suspiciously low price, and snapped it up full of ambition and naivité.

Little did I know, the little word 'SALVAGE' on the title was going to pose a major problem. I tried and tried to register the bike for the road, getting stonewalled at every turn, even getting the number for someone fairly senior at the MTO from a desk clerk, and was quite surprised when he seemed genuinely furious that someone gave me his number, and sharply told me I would never be able to register the bike in Ontario. I kept trying, and my dumb stubbornness paid off eventually when someone at the MTO counter on Yonge near King must have taken pity on me, went in the back, did something on the computer and came back with a roadworthy registration. I don't think I quite clocked at the time quite how big a deal that was, to be honest.

I rode the absolute t*ts off that bike from then on, including a bunch of ill-advised WFO runs back and forth from Toronto to Ottawa where I was working, and got the mahoosive speeding ticket on Hwy 7 I've talked about elsewhere here. Let's just say I know that bike could do more than 186 km/h as confirmed by OPP radar.

I also discovered the pleasure of wrenching on that bike, and began a constant campaign of upgrades, inspired by the old Hawk GT message boards, with Hord as the guru. The problem was lots of those guys were racers, so I ended up essentially building a race bike for the road, and ruined the usefulness of the bike by jetting it like crazy and giving it about a 120 km range due to the peanut sized tank.

In the end, I put a Penske shock on the back, Race Tech cartridge emulators and springs in the front, M4 high exhaust, Corbin seat, six-pot AP (I think?) front caliper, braided lines, bar end mirrors, foam pod filters, and a DynaJet Stage 3 jet kit. Lots of good learning in between swearing working on the bike outside, and the limited tools I had then probably have led to a bit of a tool addiction now.

I ended up taking a job that meant working on the road for long stretches, and then eventually settled in BC, so sold the bike on. I slightly compensated for the Hawk GT's lack of power by buying a ZX-14 as my next bike, which was fun for about six months before the novelty wore off. I don't really regret the sale of the Hawk as such, though every time I see one for sale, part of me wants to pick up another.

Anyway, I don't have any pics of the one I had, as being in my early-20s meant I didn't give a crap about that stuff, and a hard drive with the few pics I have of that part of my life disappeared somewhere along the way. This is the closest one I could find via Google image search, and it gives an idea:

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Nostalgia is a drug.
 
It was either an '88 Yamaha DT200, or the '89 DT200R. I knew squat about bikes, and wasn't into taking pics (of anything) back then. It was the cheapest street-legal bike I could find. I vaguely recall having a friend drive me out to somewhere like Orangeville to pick it up, and I rode it home completely illegally with the seller's plate, no insurance, a fugly yellow beat up oversized motocross helmet without goggles bouncing around on my head, and smiling and giggling the whole way home. I'm pretty sure I didn't actually want a dual-sport, just ended up with one because of the price. What I really wanted was a fully-faired sport bike because of the magazines my friend brough in to school, and then I kept seeing a beautiful bike with a distinctive yellow patch in the school parking lot. So a year later I finally got the bike I really wanted:

1986 Honda NS400R

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I borrowed a CT70 for a summer and rode an ungodly number of kms on it. It used about one penny of gas for every minute of riding (which was all pretty much full throttle). The next summer I bought a CB450SC (Nighthawk). When I got it, it had close to 400km range with indicated 125kph top speed. When I sold it, <150km range with indicated top speed over 180 (it responded very well to adjusting valve lash to modify timing and overlap).
 
My first bike, if you would call it that, was a 1988 Honda CBR600. I was riding my BIL's bike for the summer and bought the CBR from Cycle World in Scarborough. Shortly after putting the deposit on the bike, I had a near death experience on my BIL's bike that made it clear that I was not ready to ride. Fortunately, the good folks at Cycle World gave me the deposit back.
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When I was ready, many years later, I bought a 1997 Suzuki Katana 600. I hated that bike while trying to convince myself otherwise.
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I hated that Katana so much, I bought a 2005 Suzuki Katana 600. Again, convincing myself that this was the bike I wanted. I learned not too long after that my dislike for the Katana was only marginally better. I was trying to stay insurance friendly and had no luck finding good used alternatives. The top of my list was a VFR.
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Once I really figured out what I wanted and having an opportunity to test ride my next bike, I fell in love with the BMW RT's and bought a 2003 R1150RT.
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I kept the 03 for 13 years and happened upon a really good opportunity to get into the next gen RT so I jumped on it. It is my current ride and I absolutely love it too. it is a 2006 BMW R1200RT
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Rupp Roadster.

First road bike was a Kawi S2.
 
Asked my parents for a Mini Trail ($299 @ Rocky's on Wharncliffe Rd.). Resounding nope. Bought a used 196_ Cub with my own money without telling them (I was 10).
 
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