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(11-30-2017, 10:33 PM)jodytek_imp Wrote: Recently got my 2014 STD, and it is great. I have been reading many post for ideas of modifications, both for ascetic performance enhancement. There are a lot of really cool options. But I have to wonder. Since the total amount of these bikes out there are relatively low in numbers. I am thinking that keeping the bike 100% stock will be in the best interest long term.
I have looked at all the restored cb's from the 70's that are out there for sale. Many of them have been painstakingly pieced back together, and command a pretty penny to play.
While I am loving my new ride, and plan to put some serious miles on it, I just can't help to think how many of these will be survivors in another 40 to 50 years. How many of them will be all original.
Personally, I hope to have great, great grandchild find this bike sitting in my barn, clean, covered and ready to go.
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Hi Jodytek,
I’m new here, as well. Same thought process as yours... if it’s all original, and maintained and garaged for the long haul (no pun intended), it will be of greatest value. But I suspect certain changes could be made, as long as plan to keep the original parts. Just an opinion, of course.
Have fun, and be safe out there!
Ohana71
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The stock exhaust is heavy, BIG, too quiet and reduces HP. Swap it out and keep it in your garage. Bike will run much better on a Staintune, Yosh or arrow.
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I think Guth had it correct in post #6. Electric bikes will likely be the bike of the day. Petroleum products might be on their way out for transportation use (not being political here/Alaska and the Dakota are busting at the seams with oil here in the states). Who knows, you may have to rig it with a sail or live on a hill to ride it by then. The general theme here is to enjoy the bike, save the OEM parts you carefully remove to replace with the aftermarket calling and pass something down a little easier to use and maintain... like a gun, homemade furniture or beef jerky (he, he, he).
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I have a 2014 standard as well. I love it. The only thing I've added to mine is a road comet 2 fairing. I love the look of those small, squarish fairings on CB bikes. It reminds me even more of my first street bike, a 1985 CB650 Nighthawk with a very similar fairing made by Rifle. I will be getting a rear rack, engine guards and heated grips, all from Honda. I have found that usually the manufacturers accessories fit and work better than aftermarket. I will leave the engine and drive train stock for reliability reasons.
The only one who can decide what is in the long term best interest is you. Personally, I don't see owning one of these bikes as a big investment opportunity. I bought mine because it is the type and brand of bike that first introduced me to street riding. It makes me nostalgic. The fact that it is a very well engineered and built motorcycle is also important. I don't want to screw that up by trying to get a bunch of extra horsepower out of it. It doesn't need it anyway. The point is, the bike is for me an investment in my happiness, not a financial investment. If you think your CB is something special, and it sounds like you do, just take good care of it so it is worth being passed on to someone some day.
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It’s like buying a house, everybody might not like your choice of decor. So keep it plain and original if selling. In my opinion who in 10/20 years will want to buy a gas guzzling dirty petrol bike. When there is cheap to run clean, faster, electric bikes as the norm. That’s progress.
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If you are going to enjoy the ride for a while, then move on, I offer that maintaining the ability to return it to 'stock' is the best ploy.
This past summer I sold my '74 Honda XL-350 Endure "survivor". I had it for about 6 years and used it as a 'pit bike' as I worked as a volunteer at the track. It was a great way to get around the inside of the three mile 10 turn Brainerd International Raceway.
The bike was not perfect, but complete and original. It ran well and had no rust. A few scratches and dings to show it had actually been used. I was able to get a premium price for it.
I am on my third Honda Restoration. It is an '81 CB650C Shed Find I picked up a couple of years back. Carbs, tires, and fluids and I have ridden it for those couple of years, and now I am doing some of the finishing touches. It remains to be seen how I will fare at selling time.
Jim
PS: I would post a picture, but my browser locks up when I try.
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(12-01-2017, 07:13 AM)holy666diver_imp Wrote: The stock exhaust is heavy, BIG, too quiet and reduces HP. Swap it out and keep it in your garage. Bike will run much better on a Staintune, Yosh or arrow.
Still lighter than the dual muffler models!
Staintune is a quality company, but $800+ to save 4.4 pounds and possibly gain 6-7 HP is close to 10% of the cost of the bike new.
Not that 7-8% claimed HP gain may not be noticeable, but I have not yet found a dyno chart to compare factory with Staintune.
Had a pleasant 280 mile ride today and found a great pie shop past Gunlock, in Veyo, Utah. Might have personally saved a pound or so if I skipped the blueberry pie, after the brisket sandwich!
Only got 48 MPG (per trip computer) running 80 MPH for ~165 miles on interstate 15, but used much less fuel than my friend's Vrod.
I am extremely happy with this bike.
Stock, other than:
1. LED tail/brake light
2. Snorkel minor mod
3. Dart Marlin flyscreen
Might add a Formotion thermometer, maybe research a gauge for head or oil temperature, with consideration for rides over 115 F.
+1 on Slowpoke's comments
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(12-01-2017, 07:13 AM)holy666diver_imp Wrote: The stock exhaust is heavy, BIG, too quiet and reduces HP. Swap it out and keep it in your garage. Bike will run much better on a Staintune, Yosh or arrow.
Thanks, this is one area that I have considered. I do like the look and sound of some after market exhausts that I have seen. Personally partial to the flat black look.
But certainly could keep the original put away. The factory exhausts sound reminds me of the way the spacecraft on the Jetsons cartoon sounded.
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Actually with the Staintune what you are mostly gaining is a louder and to some, more pleasing exhaust note. In 2013 guys were weighing and dynoing their bikes and iirc the weight loss was like you said in the neigborhood of 4 pounds and the dynod performance gain was more in the neightborhood of 4 hp. Certainly not 7 or 8 hp that Staintune claimed, and that gain is in the very upper rpm range of the engine. Still that is some weight savings and some hp gain so it's a positive, particularly if you like the sound.
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