Are you retro-spective?

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The more things change, the more they stay the same, so the saying goes.

Which begs this monthโ€™s question: โ€˜are retro bikes good for our hobby?โ€™ As in, should we applaud the pale imitations of the bikes of yesteryear that we love so much? As is usual with this rhetorical question, I already have my own answer and thatโ€™s a big yes. Yโ€™see, 24 years ago I got into older bikes thanks to seeing a rather saucy Kawasaki Zephyr on the road. This was one of those 1100-powered bikes with the general โ€˜lookโ€™ of the Z1 and later Z900/Z1000s. It made me recall the bikes that my older uncles rode and made me appreciate the older stuff much more.

Years later I bought and customised my own Kawasaki ZRX1200R, with a pukka Eddie Lawson paint scheme, Kerker pipe and Ohlins shocks. Okay, so it wasnโ€™t โ€˜the real ELR dealโ€™, but it looked great and rode well. In this monthโ€™s issue we see our own John Nutting sing the praises of the Moto Guzzi V7 II Special as a machine worthy of the name. Many manufacturers realise they cannot ignore the thirst many of us have for a classic-looking, if thoroughly modern machine.


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If these retro bikes help get more bums on saddles, as well as getting people to appreciate the older machines too, that has to be a good thing, right? And who cares if they are ?fuel-injected, or ABS-equipped: the bikes may have changed, but the feeling is still the same, a tone of pure escapism and pleasure.

Bertie Simmonds
Editor

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