HONDA XL250
Past
Memories
"When
all's said and done, a bike that can get you home missing most of its
levers can't be bad. One that can cruise at seventy, return 65mpg
despite being thrashed and costs nearly nothing has to be good news.
If you throw in an ability to provide as much fun as you're ever able
to get with your clothes on, then you're really talking. My XL250
Honda was certainly such a beast.
It
didn't seem to promise much when I first saw it. Sherman took me to a
back street dealer in Mutley Plain on his Montjuic, an interesting
experience in itself. We inquired about cheap bikes, please. Dear old
Tom took us into his garage and proudly displayed a pile of wrecks.
In the corner lurked a Honda. It'll be great when it's done up, said
he, but you can have it, as seen, for two hundred.
After
ritual guffaws, I gave him a ton and he invited me to take it
elsewhere for its next MOT, due in a month. As seen was to be
believed. Lights were present but emitted a glow just sufficient
to attract only the most curious of passing moths. Handlebars were
enormous cow horns. The tank was sprayed silver and Isopon. The seat
was designer masking tape.
Ugly
she was.
The
road test was the trip home. Tom's only concession to business ethics
was to get her going - by pushing. The controls fell easily to hand
as it lurched off into the gathering gloom of a Plymouthian rush
hour. It was just as well that speed was restricted by the traffic
for the tyres were a combination of rear Pneu- mat and a slick
version of a knobbly. Their combined effect on instability was only
exceeded by the riding position. The cow horns forced the
luckless pilot to sit on what laughingly passed as the pillion
seat. Knees grasped the very back of the tank on a timeshare basis. A
rum affair which allowed the singular experience of 50mph
wheelies on a hopeless tyre later found to contain less than lOpsi.
Safely
back at chateau Speedwell, various other delivery faults were
noticed. There were no air or oil filters. The swinging arm didn't
and the fork gaiters were the sole form of front suspension. But
apart from that I was laughing, if only because Sherman's Italian
masterpiece had to be towed home after one of its traditional fusebox
festivals.
I
replaced the tyres with used Michelin trials.The
bars were swapped with those from next doors youngest's push-bike and
proved a resounding success for all concerned. The speedo was
given a cable but I maintain that the only time it was accurate was
when stopped. An air filter was constructed from a stocking (sorry
uear) and as the motor seemed happy to recycle its own swarf no oil
filter was added to avoid over-complication.
In
this form the XL passed 3 MOTs, survived four years of abuse and
pushed its recorded mileage up from 17500 to nearly 32000. Its engine
required no routine servicing. Only when overcome by guilt would this
mechanical rock-ape peer into its bowels. I adjusted the tappets
once following instructions culled from an old Motorcycle Mechanics
(remember them?). It appeared to make no difference to the power band
or character of the plot, which can best be described as basic.
Firing
about every third lamp-post in top, the engine would pull strongly
from low revs through a predictably bland torque curve which reached
its peak after five minutes. Precise figures are unavailable due
to operational defectiveness of the tachometer. This proved ideal for
commuting, scrambling and the snowy days that Dartmoor is famous for.
It also provided life saving engine braking to supplement the
notoriously bad drums which seemed to believe they had a primary
purpose as water tanks. Cruising was a pleasant experience up to the
legal limit but an impossibility beyond it because of vibration and
upright riding position. When really tested, the Honda could
edge its way up to a hopelessly optimistic indicated ninety
given a clear run, a tailwind and a demented rider.
Running
costs? Oil was changed annually (whether it needed it or not). Parts
were either bodged or used. The most expensive by far were the tyres
which were replaced all too often because of the demonic riding style
employed. The front needed three used covers, the rear five.
Insurance and tax were cheap necessities and the only other recurring
expense was the MOT. I got this down to a fine art. Step one,
locate a dealer away from home i with the blue sign. Next, enter his
emporium fawning interest in the most obvious rip-off bike he's got
on show.
Third,
tell him you I want to buy it but must sell yours first. Fourth, show
him the rat to dissuade him from offering trade-in. Fifth, say that
you think you know a ] friend who wants it to ride mainly on a farm i
but has asked you to get it MOT'd first. Sixth, I if the dealer
hesitates in granting you an MOT
i -
which some of the less dishonest ones will
quickly
ask him if he can do finance on the deal - that carrot is invariably
irresistible. Seventh, pay your test fee and ride away into the wild
blue yonder clutching the certificate. Eighth, never, ever, break
down near that dealers shop.
The
XL never did break down. Anywhere. It was most in its element out
running along vast tracts of Dartmoor's heritage. Not because it was
a good off road bike - with knackered suspension and a top heavy
frame it was pretty average - but because of its rugged expend-
ability. I treated it with a contempt that changed to total respect.
Even when I inadvertently sent it tumbling down a cliff and it shed
brake, clutch and gear levers in the process, it started first push
(the kickstart departed very early in its career). Truly, it was an
amazing machine. But even old soldiers peg out in the end. This one
did too. Last summer may have been a cool one but Devon's beaches
were not a bad place to be. Owing to diversions the description
of which would be better found in
Forum,
I quite forgot about the time - and the tide. We emerged from the
cove to find the XL tank deep in briny. As I plunged in to rescue it
a wave swamped the bike. It drowned a horrible death and I suppose,
for a moment, I wish I had used something more substantial in the
inlet (of the motorcycle, you horrible person). Would I buy another.
Bloody oath I would. It proved
MY philosophy
that ace biking can be had for nearly nothing given a little flair
for haggle, hustle and bodge. Now, does anyone have an XT500 they'd
swap a hundred notes
for?
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