Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 23

Thread: Worth complying my old TS75?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105

    Worth complying my old TS75?

    First up I've read up on re-complying something somewhat. I have an old TS75 from 1974 or so. Kinda gutless but it's fun enough on the farm. My mum bought it brand new way way way back in the day. It has done 2500km, in generally good nick apart from surface rust from sitting but the forks were kept greased.

    I could sell it as is, put the cash at something newer, nicer.

    Could comply it, tidy it up and sell it

    Or comply it and just use it to get learners/restricted, use it occasionally then park it/sell it.



    But I'm looking at it on a cost vs reward basis, I'm not spending $400 getting it on road then selling it for a dollar. Likewise I'm not going to really undersell it as a farmbike if it's worth something as a more usable bike. I've looked on tardme a little bit but there aren't many to directly compare. A couple beaters though, just as a tidy hack it might get $300 or so. As a usable bike after repairs I have no idea really. I'll try get some pics of it if it matters, still has the original manual under the seat in the plastic bag though.

    I'm biketarded, don't watch the market or how much goes wrong bringing a 70's bike up to spec so I'm asking. It does have some history though, I learned to ride on it.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    10th May 2010 - 21:56
    Bike
    DR650 again
    Location
    Otaki
    Posts
    643
    Comply it, keep it and enjoy the ride. You know the history of the bike and there will be little difference in cost in the end.

    I, for one, wish I had kept some of my older rides so your mum may thank you.

    Cheers

    http://www.trademe.co.nz/motors/moto...-490115257.htm

  3. #3
    Join Date
    12th September 2009 - 16:14
    Bike
    .
    Location
    .
    Posts
    1,750
    Don't bother putting time and money into getting it back on the road if your only goal is to make a profit. There's not going to be a big market for a road legal 40 year old 75cc two stroke for use as anything other than a novelty item.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    6th May 2012 - 10:41
    Bike
    invisibike
    Location
    pulling a sick mono
    Posts
    6,054
    Blog Entries
    4
    Quote Originally Posted by 328FTW View Post
    First up I've read up on re-complying something somewhat. I have an old TS75 from 1974 or so. Kinda gutless but it's fun enough on the farm. My mum bought it brand new way way way back in the day. It has done 2500km, in generally good nick apart from surface rust from sitting but the forks were kept greased.

    I could sell it as is, put the cash at something newer, nicer.

    Could comply it, tidy it up and sell it

    Or comply it and just use it to get learners/restricted, use it occasionally then park it/sell it.



    But I'm looking at it on a cost vs reward basis, I'm not spending $400 getting it on road then selling it for a dollar. Likewise I'm not going to really undersell it as a farmbike if it's worth something as a more usable bike. I've looked on tardme a little bit but there aren't many to directly compare. A couple beaters though, just as a tidy hack it might get $300 or so. As a usable bike after repairs I have no idea really. I'll try get some pics of it if it matters, still has the original manual under the seat in the plastic bag though.

    I'm biketarded, don't watch the market or how much goes wrong bringing a 70's bike up to spec so I'm asking. It does have some history though, I learned to ride on it.

    don't now how much a small engine is worth. i had a ts185 for a while, schweeet little thrasher.
    "road worthy" always improves sale-ability - it shows that the bike is good enough to be "legal"
    people who want a farm thrash will buy a farm thrash. i can't imagine any going for the small engine though... (is it a full size frame? suitable for kids?)

    trade in would probably be the most beneficial $$wise to you - shop around dealers. but personally, given the money, i'd do a resto - rego on it and sell it as a minty.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105
    It's not that big, used to ride it when I was about 12ish. Like I said I'm just biketarded, it's not something I know enough about yet. I do enjoy fixing things up however I have a lot to fix right now. But at the same time with the low kms a quick clean up and as long as I get a good complier it's a cheap bike and I do know the bike, just it can also be a nightmare if it needs anything extensive even though I doubt that. It's not perfectly suitable but can always upgrade.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105
    Drag this back from the dead.

    Spent a few days fixing it up. Stripped all down to the frame then sanded the surface rust off the frame, sanded the fairings down and painted them fiat orange, frame/motor is in acrylic Jet Black paint. Did lots of little things like got rid of the huge chain slack. Carb was way way out of whack so reset the float level and rode around with a screwdriver stopping every little bit to wind the mixture in and out using my butt dyno and plug colour to tune it. Had to redo a bit of the exhaust then stripped the rust off and used stove paint to paint it again. Runs really nice now, starts even with the most lack luster kick in the guts.

    Shitty cellphone picture after getting it back together tonight, haven't done the tank yet is the only thing.






    I have some new tyres for it to. My question for today is the right rear shock has some corrosion on the shaft. I'd assume it would fail compliance on that? Not a major but still.

    The last owner was my mum, she died 3 years ago. I'm not sure where the papers are for the bike, the plate seems to be gone although it might still be around. The factory stampings are intact though, but it's been out of the system about 35 years. I'm unsure if that's going to be a problem when re-registering, anyone clued up on that side? Would the chassis number still be in the system after such a long period of time or is it worked more along the lines of it's only logged as interesting to the police/finance/whatever if it has an entry, no entry = cleared to go? I'm not sure how that side of it works

  7. #7
    Join Date
    26th January 2008 - 07:37
    Bike
    91 R80GS
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    5,225
    I can't answer any of the questions however just wanted to say it looks very cool - heaps better than what you described. Good work
    In life as in dance Grace glides on blistered feet

  8. #8
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105
    Thanks. It looked a lot different a few days ago. Hardly ran either, wouldn't rev out, often died without warning. It still needs a bunch of new bolts, I snapped a bunch off taking it apart. It stops the rust though, I wouldn't of wanted it to get worse.

    Will make it easier to wash and keep clean to. The frame was full of wheelbearing grease which was being used to oil the chain. Horrible stuff.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    1st January 2007 - 19:48
    Bike
    Suzuki RG400 Yamaha ST125 Yamaha TDR250
    Location
    Singapura/Banks Peninsula
    Posts
    1,474
    Blog Entries
    1
    oh dear

    my weakness is small old two stroke dirt bikes

    I have already restored a few and some are now in collectors museums

    I want it if its a runner or at least all there

    how much?
    "more than two strokes is masturbation"
    www.motoparts-online.com

  10. #10
    Join Date
    4th November 2007 - 16:56
    Bike
    A few
    Location
    OSR Clubrooms
    Posts
    4,852
    I'm with this fella ^^^^ How much
    A girlfriend once asked " Why is it you seem to prefer to race, than spend time with me ?"
    The answer was simple ! "I'll prolly get bored with racing too, once i've nailed it !"

    Bowls can wait !

  11. #11
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105
    Uhhh pass, I have no idea what they are worth? I was just going to ride it around town first, see if I liked it. Although it is neat to think someone would do a nicer job fixing it, I just wanted it good enough to be usable cause it's kinda neat

    It's all there, like I said it's done 2500 km's. It has done a lot of sitting around. I wouldn't mind something bigger though.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    9th August 2005 - 19:57
    Bike
    Yamaha MT09 Tracer
    Location
    napier
    Posts
    1,111
    great little bike!
    i say either keep it as is, or sell to an appreciative buyer cos road legality would probably be a waste of money
    unless you know of a light weight high school kid tht might use it

    p.s i have one exactly the same, but in blue trim (original)
    much the worse for wear tho..5000km's on the clock
    'the stickiest situation since sticky the stick insect got stuck on a sticky bun'

    Cpt Edmund Blackadder

  13. #13
    Join Date
    15th August 2006 - 17:33
    Bike
    2001 R1150GS
    Location
    South Taranaki
    Posts
    5,530
    Tidy it up, keep it. maybe your kids could learn to ride on it too.
    Then in 10-15 years tidy(restore) it up again and sell it to gammaguy or sinfull for lots of $$$ it should be a real collecters item by then

    its a wee gem very old skool cool

    MHO I wouldnt comply it
    'Good things come to those who wait'
    Bollocks, get of your arse and go get it

  14. #14
    Join Date
    18th May 2012 - 22:03
    Bike
    2001 RF400RV
    Location
    Pukekohe
    Posts
    105
    I found the old plate!

    It's an old black plate, the warrant ran out later than I thought. 1984 it lapsed out of the system. Have the original papers from buying it to, the address it was registered. Even has the km's when it was first registered in February 1977, 4kms on the clock.

    I'm still kind of keen to register it, I have all the paperwork now. Apart from that shock I see no reason it wouldn't fly through inspection. It's not a ball of fire but cool for around town, I haven't actually even got my learners (when I get time I'll do something about that) and lams hasn't kicked in yet so I'm in no rush to get something bigger yet anyway. Keeps it from turning into a ball of rust in the corner.

  15. #15
    Join Date
    9th August 2005 - 19:57
    Bike
    Yamaha MT09 Tracer
    Location
    napier
    Posts
    1,111
    if youre thinking of getting it legal for yourself to use
    then i say go for it! around town itd have enough pep
    and a bit of a novelty factor eh
    a kid at my boys school is riding around on an ac50
    approx 76 model which was my first bike
    real cool!
    'the stickiest situation since sticky the stick insect got stuck on a sticky bun'

    Cpt Edmund Blackadder

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •