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1977 Yamaha XS650D - 7-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article

$ 7.44

Availability: 51 in stock
  • Make: Yamaha

    Description

    1977 Yamaha XS650D - 7-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article
    Original, vintage magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    If pre-1977 motorcycles were categorized
    by their sales records, the Yamaha 650
    would rate somewhere between Big
    Macs and pet rocks. If they were classified
    according to their excitement potential,
    the 650 would fit in between sleeping and
    watching your grass grow.
    Yamaha's 40-inch vertical twin, now in
    its eighth season, was originally created to
    seduce Triumph Bonneville types, in par-
    ticular those who had tired of daily sop-
    ping up their motorcycle’s vital fluids from
    the garage floor or were fed up with self-
    ingesting electrics, nose-diving quality
    control, skyrocketing retail prices and the
    other hassles normally associated with
    owning a British motorcycle.
    From a numbers standpoint, the 650 has
    been an unqualified success. A steady,
    consistent seller all along, it carried more
    than its share of the load in the years when
    Yamaha didn’t have a big. multi-cylinder
    “superbike" for sale. But despite the styl-
    ists' attempts to copy the “Triumph look."
    the Yamaha 650 has never been able to
    capture that special, intangible magic
    which made a Bonneville one of the most
    coveted bikes of its time.
    Nor has the Yammie’s performance
    been anything to write home about. The
    650s were a little slower and a lol heavier
    than a Triumph, a lot slower and much
    rougher than comparable-sized multis.
    and they've garnered a reputation for hav-
    ing more handling quirks than a rubber
    unicycle
    This leads us to the inescapable conclu-
    sion that the 650 Yamaha has sold well
    and survived much criticism not because
    of what it does, but because of what it
    doesn't: Il doesn't leak, it doesn’t break, it
    doesn’t require much attention and it
    doesn't cost much. So if you're not a
    demanding performance buff, a motorcy-
    cle with all those “doesn'ts" looks like a-
    good deal.
    There are. of course, other reasons why
    one would buy a 650 Yamaha. Some peo-
    ple like the stump-pulling torque of a big
    twin or the sound of its exhaust or the
    narrowness of its engine. Others are wooed
    by the aesthetics of a vertical four-stroke
    twin. And ever since BSAs died off and
    Nortons and Triumphs began their on-
    again. off-again existence, the Yamaha
    650 has been the closest thing to a British
    twin you could gel.
    Admittedly, we've rapped the 650's
    shortcomings in the past, but we have to
    admire Yamaha's loyalty to the motorcy-
    cle. The company has stuck with the 650
    and. slowly but surely, its designers have
    exorcised most of its gremlins.
    Yamaha's sales force is extremely en-
    thusiastic about the 1977 XS650D. And
    they have a right to be. For the “D” model,
    while still no Triumph, is al long last a
    motorcycle we can recommend without
    serious reservations.
    13802-AL-7703-09