I brought home yet another broken Honda motorcycle. This makes three, including my trusty '79 CB650 cafe/brat beater and a '74 MT250 Elsinore basket case I haven't even touched yet. This one needs much less work than either, and that's the point of it. The CB is great for bombing around town, but it's old, still needs a lot of work, not particularly fast, and not very good on the highway at all. I'm interested in taking longer touring trips. I was inspired by the "What's the best $3000 touring bike?" thread, and that's where I found out about and fell in love with the shape of the ST1100. I can't explain why but I just love the way it looks - the upright/slightly forward sporty seat position (as opposed to a laid-back cruiser), the fairings and integrated luggage, the correct amount of wheel spokes, and that deep red paint.
The ST1100, known as the Pan-European overseas, was a great big 700 lb sport touring bike with a heavy steel frame, longitudinal water-cooled cam-belt V4 making about 100hp, 5-speed trans, and shaft drive. They have a good reputation for reliability and appetite for mileage. Supposedly they can go 100k miles and beyond with basic maintenance. Mine is the final year 2002 before it grew to the even heavier, more car-like ST1300. Some models even had ABS, but not mine.
I was watching this one listed for $3,200 on FBMP by the original owner. It only had 24,000 miles (lowest I've seen for this model locally). The owner had developed a disability and couldn't ride anymore. Unfortunately it sold before I could convince myself to do it. A month or two later, it's back for $1000 less. The frustrated new seller spent too much money trying to catch up deferred maintenance, since the bike sat for a few years. The clutch starts slipping after 30 minutes or so of riding, so he had a new clutch installed. He also had the old gas drained out of the tank, spark plugs replaced, and a new front tire. After all that, the clutch still slips so he got mad and listed it for sale for $2200. That's where I come in. Seller was very forthcoming with the clutch issue, but was tired of spending money. He said you can fix it temporarily by cracking the bleeder screw to relieve the built-up clutch pressure. Sounds like a master cylinder problem, which are still available new but pricey.
I had a friend drive me an hour away to meet the seller. I test rode it and everything operated fine, so I paid the man. He had already ridden it to the meet up location, so by the time I got the nearest gas station, the clutch issue started happening. It was slipping so bad I literally couldn't make it to the freeway, so I parked it and came back later with a trailer. By the time I returned to the bike, the clutch was working fine again. So the issue seems to be usage or heat related like the seller thought.
Man I love this truck!
Stablemates - both have carbureted 4-cylinders!
I love that the model is printed on the key.
Also came with original tool kit, owner's manual, an extra rack without sissy bar, a rear-mount luggage bag, and a nice storage cover.
Two Brothers exhaust. Sounds pretty decent.
The gas tank is NOT where you think!
It's under the seat for lower center of gravity - neat!
Plans? Fix that clutch issue, flush all hydraulics with new fluid, catch up on any deferred maintenance, maybe some LED lighting upgrades, and ride the heck out of it.