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Topic: Brand new 2009 GS500F for $3K - deal or no deal?  (Read 4001 times)

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SuperGregNo
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« Reply #20 on: April 28, 2011, 04:31:11 PM »


 A great bike but find your own financing. That 1.9 is one of those fly -by-night lone shark deals. My son was really burned on one of those loans!


How was he burned?
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« Reply #20 on: April 28, 2011, 04:31:11 PM »

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TriumphTiger1050
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« Reply #21 on: June 15, 2011, 02:34:43 PM »

What did you (the OP) ever get.......???? Headscratch
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« Reply #22 on: June 17, 2011, 04:22:45 AM »

I don't think anything, yet
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TriumphTiger1050
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« Reply #23 on: June 17, 2011, 05:35:44 AM »


I don't think anything, yet


That is a steal of a price for that bike!  Great for a beginner.  Wonder why beginners want such big cc bikes at times???  I started out on a 750cc Honda Shadow.  Sounds big for a beginner but it was a cruiser and 750cc on one of those is not too powerful.

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« Reply #24 on: July 05, 2011, 10:13:01 AM »


I don't think anything, yet


True, nothing yet.  The bike thing got put on the backburner for a bit as other "life" stuff entered into the program.
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birdrunner
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« Reply #25 on: July 05, 2011, 03:00:52 PM »


Just wanted to comment... I was looking for a 1st bike as well over the winter. Had my heart set on a KLR650, but was a little too short for that bike as a newbie and found no killer deals.  Up popped a leftover '09 GS500F a few hours from me and got a similar quote back in Feb: $2800 OTD. Didn't think too long on it. Paid cash, was a legit deal, $2806 total.  (Had to pay $6 to post my license plate).  

Basically heard what everyone said here elsewhere, about the bike being slow, could get a better deal used, etc.  I had looked for about 3 months over the winter and never saw a better deal used.  Late models were going for more than that, so it just seemed too good to pass up.

As a first bike, I couldn't really ask more from it. Granted it's breaking me in while I'm breaking it in.  The only downside I've found is that there isn't a whole lot of aftermarket support, but I'm not too broken up about that.  Just have to get a little more creative, and it stops me from wasting money on accessories I probably don't need.  My whole goal was to get into motorcycling cheaply.

I've been riding it just about 2 months now, and love it. I have commuted on it (20 mile RT) every day I could the last month. Last tank got 67 mpg driving like grandma.  My wife even says I'm happier at home after work the days I ride my bike to work. That makes me think I got a great deal even if I paid more.  No regrets.  I would've paid $3000 probably.




smartest post we've seen in a while.



Must be a new guy.
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« Reply #26 on: July 05, 2011, 04:07:29 PM »




True, nothing yet.  The bike thing got put on the backburner for a bit as other "life" stuff entered into the program.


Note to self.
Buy it if you can swing it. Bigsmile

People buy cars because they need one.
A bike is an emotional purchase.
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« Reply #26 on: July 05, 2011, 04:07:29 PM »


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Blunder
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« Reply #27 on: July 05, 2011, 04:57:27 PM »




smartest post we've seen in a while.



Must be a new guy.


 Lol

Let him enjoy his introduction to motorcycling. It's a good bike for starters, not like my RD400 and Gordon Jennings' book in hand.
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« Reply #28 on: August 02, 2011, 11:15:09 AM »




smartest post we've seen in a while.



Must be a new guy.


LOL newbie, yes... thanks for the compliment though.  Have about 6 months under my belt now, GS500F is going strong.  Have to admit I've been tempted by the lure of a bigger bike as my mileage increases... not for ego reasons of faster faster faster, but more about having the engine run at a relaxed pace at highway speeds on longer rides.  We shall see...
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« Reply #29 on: August 03, 2011, 06:19:21 AM »




LOL newbie, yes... thanks for the compliment though.  Have about 6 months under my belt now, GS500F is going strong.  Have to admit I've been tempted by the lure of a bigger bike as my mileage increases... not for ego reasons of faster faster faster, but more about having the engine run at a relaxed pace at highway speeds on longer rides.  We shall see...


don't worry about it,  North Americans have been ruined by Detroit engines, and expect low RPM out of their engines.  Motorcycles are designed to rev.  Check out their red line,  it's up there for a reason.

Rev the hell outta it, change the oil, enjoy.


BTW,  after the initial newbie break in, the most dangerous time for a motorcyclist is just after they start to think they're getting proficient.  You start to relax, and in reality, you're never as good as you think you are.


I've got about 80,000 miles under my belt, yet this year while riding the mountains, I was feeling pretty good about not missing a single corner/ line.    Voila, next day, I was "sight seeing" instead of focusing and I drifted into the oncoming lane ....  good thing it was a remote road, but still it's not kosher .... ever.
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« Reply #30 on: August 03, 2011, 11:30:36 AM »

Will keep that in mind. Have heard about the "danger zone" of new riders, somewhere around year 2 on... believe that's what you're talking about.  My wife reminds me to "motor safely!" before I leave the house... that helps, and I make her say it even if she forgets.  Thumbsup
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« Reply #31 on: August 03, 2011, 03:11:56 PM »


Will keep that in mind. Have heard about the "danger zone" of new riders, somewhere around year 2 on... believe that's what you're talking about.  My wife reminds me to "motor safely!" before I leave the house... that helps, and I make her say it even if she forgets.  Thumbsup


I'm glad you are enjoying the GS500.  I had a 94 GS500 as my first streetbike.  The suspension was shot.  That sure made bumps in the road entertaining as the thing bottomed out frequently.  Rode it for a year.  Took it to the dragstrip once with some friends and we took turns running going down the strip.  Best time was 14.2 sec.  Not that fast, but we sure didn't mind.  

You really can rev the beans and tomatoes out of it --it won't hurt things a bit.  
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« Reply #32 on: August 15, 2011, 07:48:06 PM »


Just wanted to comment... I was looking for a 1st bike as well over the winter. Had my heart set on a KLR650, but was a little too short for that bike as a newbie and found no killer deals.  Up popped a leftover '09 GS500F a few hours from me and got a similar quote back in Feb: $2800 OTD. Didn't think too long on it. Paid cash, was a legit deal, $2806 total.  (Had to pay $6 to post my license plate).  

Basically heard what everyone said here elsewhere, about the bike being slow, could get a better deal used, etc.  I had looked for about 3 months over the winter and never saw a better deal used.  Late models were going for more than that, so it just seemed too good to pass up.

As a first bike, I couldn't really ask more from it. Granted it's breaking me in while I'm breaking it in.  The only downside I've found is that there isn't a whole lot of aftermarket support, but I'm not too broken up about that.  Just have to get a little more creative, and it stops me from wasting money on accessories I probably don't need.  My whole goal was to get into motorcycling cheaply.

I've been riding it just about 2 months now, and love it. I have commuted on it (20 mile RT) every day I could the last month. Last tank got 67 mpg driving like grandma.  My wife even says I'm happier at home after work the days I ride my bike to work. That makes me think I got a great deal even if I paid more.  No regrets.  I would've paid $3000 probably.




GS500F is a good first bike.  It really likes to rev.  No power below about 6,000 RPM.  Likes more.  If you haven't already, check out GSTwins.com.  Some of those guys have forgotten more about the GS500 than Suzuki ever knew.  Some have over 100k on them.  Great site.
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« Reply #33 on: August 16, 2011, 03:58:13 AM »

I would never recommend a new bike for a beginning rider. The bike will be dropped at least once in the first two weeks, and there is no point having to spend big $$ fixing cosmetic parts. Nor does it make sense to borrow money for a bike - keep your sights on what fits your cash budget.

You can find a well-maintained 1980s GS for under $1400 all day long, and probably under $1K since it's getting mid-late in the season and anyone selling a bike in August really wants to sell it. And if it suffers a zero-speed drop or two, they won't be the first on a shiny, virgin bike.
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« Reply #33 on: August 16, 2011, 03:58:13 AM »


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