Bought "new" 1981 Yamaha xs400
- storysunfolding
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Bought "new" 1981 Yamaha xs400
What's better than riding your own ride?
Getting a ride for your girlfriend to ride with you.
I bought another old yamaha today. Guy needed to get rid of it. It had been sitting for awhile and wouldn't start. Bike had compression, and spark so that left fuel and I'm banking on it being a gunked up carb. Anyway, for $200 delivered, she was worth it. There's very little rust on the outside, none in the tank, tires are 2 years old but look new and the paint looks like it just came from the factory. Even came with an extra seat, cover, and haynes manual.
Anyway- the girl wants a bike to work on a bit to ger running so she understands her bike better. Add that it's a small engine, low center of gravity and her favorite color (red)- could it get any better for learning?
Getting a ride for your girlfriend to ride with you.
I bought another old yamaha today. Guy needed to get rid of it. It had been sitting for awhile and wouldn't start. Bike had compression, and spark so that left fuel and I'm banking on it being a gunked up carb. Anyway, for $200 delivered, she was worth it. There's very little rust on the outside, none in the tank, tires are 2 years old but look new and the paint looks like it just came from the factory. Even came with an extra seat, cover, and haynes manual.
Anyway- the girl wants a bike to work on a bit to ger running so she understands her bike better. Add that it's a small engine, low center of gravity and her favorite color (red)- could it get any better for learning?
- Sev
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My friend and his brother both had the exact same bike. A 1982 Yamaha Maxim 400. It's stood up through easily 18 000 km of riding between the two of them.
You made a good choice.
You made a good choice.
Of course I'm generalizing from a single example here, but everyone does that. At least I do.
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- storysunfolding
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- Location: Reston Virginia
- storysunfolding
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- Posts: 3882
- Joined: Wed Sep 21, 2005 10:20 am
- Sex: Male
- Years Riding: 22
- My Motorcycle: Vstrom 650, S1000RR, XS850, ZX6R
- Location: Reston Virginia
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Bike looks in good shape. Check the valves, these engines have a tendency to not start if the valves are set wrong. The carbs are pretty basic. Watch for a small rubber o-ring in the pilot screw(#25 on page 67 of Haynes Manual #378) it's not shown in the manual but it is there or it should be. If you run into any snags let me know I had to rebuilt the motor and the carbs on my xs400 when I bought it. It had been sitting for a long time and had no compression. Good luck and happy riding.
Heaven is a motorcycle, a million miles of road, and all eternity to ride.
Hell is the same scenario, but the bike won't start.
Hell is the same scenario, but the bike won't start.