chasbmw wrote:Dear Rev
I originally did the conversion on my RT because I liked the R90s, but preferred the later light flywheel, brakes and swinging arm and general drivability of the 81-84 twin shocks. I have always had a prejudice against the mono levers and later airheads.
Now I find that I ride my relatively standard R90/6 more......I haven't quite worked out why!
I don't know if my story is at all like yours, but I have an idea why. For years I had a '76 R75/6 stashed at my parents farm in the Boise area of Idaho to use during the times when I would fly in from Oklahoma for vacation. Sometimes I drove instead of flying. Those times I usually carried my '77 R100S with me in the back of my van. Most of those times my brother, brother-in-law, a friend, and myself would take a long ride, usually over the Lowman Loop in the Rocky Mountains north of Boise. Those times I would let my brother in law ride my R100S while I rode my R75 (with Luftmeister fairing). When I first jumped on the R75 I would wonder if it had a problem. The power just wasn't there. Then I would remind myself that it is a mildly engined bike compared to a significantly more powerful R100S.
My story sounds to me like there might be a bit of a parallel to yours.
For the long ride I would loan my brother-in-law my R100S while I rode the R75. The Lowman Loop is a lot of fun to ride with a more powerful, better braking airhead. But strangely I wasn't having any less fun on the R75. I've told this story before here on Boxerworks, but I eventually figured out that I was having a bit of a different kind of fun. In so many words, I was wringing the R75's neck. I was keeping the revs up higher in the power band, watching the gear I was in, and just generally sharpening up on my riding skills. And sometimes going up a long hill my throttle was fully open for extended periods of time. (I reasoned that my open throttle operation on the R75 wasn't pumping any more heat into the engine than a slighter throttle opening on the R100.)
The upshot is that I was having as much fun on my R75 as I ever did on my R100S. Maybe more. And it wasn't just power. The handling and braking suits me better on the R100S. But "sharpening up" was apparently the difference.
Editing: The '77 R100S is the bike I'm riding in my avatar.
Ken