Thursday, September 12, 2019

judgment day-1969, 1973, 1978















The Golden Age for Japanese motorcycles was the 1970’s.  Beginning a year earlier when Honda stunned us with its CB750, a new standard for performance was set.  750 cc’s, inline four cylinders, front disc brake, and smooth reliability, it sent England’s new triples to the back of the line quickly.  Even creating an instant collectible by the first engines being sand cast, as they never thought it would sell in the numbers it did, so passed on the tooling.  But with an initial sub 13 second quarter mile time, even the mighty Sportster, the bike one magazine once said “was so fast it would part the hair on your chest, and if you didn’t have any, give you some,” was slow.  The Honda was the bike to beat on the street, and soon it was winning on the track too, and after market parts and industries soon followed.  It was the first, and no one would ever surpass its power and grace.....
Until 1973, and Kawasaki gave us the Z-1.  A company famous for it two strokes, that were quicker than the Honda, but shook and vibrated, drank gas and oil by the gallons per mile, and wheelied while it felt like the frame was hinged in the middle.  But the Z-1 changed all that, and suddenly the rules were changed, and a new King crowned.  Initially it was to be a 750 like the Honda, but went to 903 cc’s, with double overhead cams, 82 hp, and it ran 12.2’s right out of the crate.  Maybe a bit expensive at $1895, some $400 more than the Honda, but soon the new King had taken over, and in every aspect of motorcycling from touring to racing to Daytona, you ran one or finished second.  BH had been king for a short time on his Honda, Bouke took over on his Z-1.  While I rode my R90S, we were three fast guys in search of good times, never looking back, we felt our bikes would be keepers, and then Suzuki had something to say.....
Surprising everyone in 1978 with its GS1000, even the E model with cast wheels and dual front disc brakes, the reign of the Z-1 was over.  Faster, quicker, and better handling, in less than ten short years. First Honda, then Kawasaki with its first four stroke, and now Suzuki with its second new four stroke in two years dominated.  With each new model bringing along a newer criteria for speed and reliability.  Three new Kings of performance motorcycling in a short ten years, it was a great time to be alive, and an even greater time to ride.  And for one brief decade there it was paradise.....
With each new performance king, based on quarter mile times and top speed, more reliability also came with it.  As a new King took over, the old Kings polished their products, smother, better handling, updated styling, and the thing that had made them the King of the Quarter Mile, speed, diminishing.  Honda got slower, as did Kawasaki, not much, and soon Yamaha gave us the excessive Eleven, and big motors were the way to go to get speed.  But technology would bring us smaller engines with more power, for less money, and it was judgment day for big motors, as Honda gave us the CB650, quicker than the original Z-1, with shaft drive, Kawasaki gave us the KZ650, a downsized Z-1, and Suzuki gave us the GSXR750, a race bike for the street.  A new decade meant new performance, and it drove us crazy trying to raise a family and keep the fastest set of wheels in our garage, with little time to ride.  Things were changing and so were we, but we would never forget our first rides on those Superbikes of the Seventies, and as we got older and slower, in our memories they got faster.  The Kings of our past were dead, long live the Kings....
But as fast as those bikes were, it always came down to the nut behind the bars, the one twisting the grip, the one who sometimes might get into trouble running his mouth before his motor.  One afternoon when BH couldn’t stand the smoky exhaust from a Mach IV, at the light the race was on, and he was beaten, making it worse was the Kawi had a passenger.  It seems that there is a time to speak and a time to stay quiet, but do we ever learn?  Out of his mouth that day came bragging at first, that soon turned to cursing after his loss and embarrassment.  Seems we all like to be King, we just don’t like the competition.  Or being embarrassed.  The same mouth that can produce praise can also produce cursing, just as God warned us.  No berating of his bike would make it go faster, and his relationship with it ended soon after with a Suzuki GS1000, his pride injured, and also his wallet.  Maybe Paul’s advice here would help, only tell the truth.  THE truth, opinions are like Hondas, everyone has one.  Do not let any unwholesome words come from your lips.  We all fail here.  But only use words to build up, not break down.  Getting rid of the trash, getting rid of bitterness, slander, rage, anger,  and all forms of malice.  A great philosophy, you say, but without an example just that.  Then Jesus came along.....fulfilling the words of scripture, and telling us we can do the same, but not on our own.  A new King can be crowned, one of the control of the mouth, which can praise or curse God also.  It can either give credence to the holy spirit, or deny him.  It can save us from hell, or condemn us to it.  For out of the mouth comes what is on our hearts.  I can only hope you never hear me not getting my own way....and we cannot do it alone, for like a performance challenge, one is always waiting for us.  You can be the Captain Kirk of your Enterprise one minute, and drowning in defeat soon after.  One slip of the tongue can either give you a reputation or ruin one.  It is only by the spirit we can tame the tongue, and in the battle of wills, the tongue will be the final say every time.  Judgment Day, blessed one day, cursed the next.  The battle for speed and your soul never quits.....
But with the tongue we can also speak forgiveness, maybe the nicest words Jesus spoke were to a woman caught in sin, “you are forgiven, go and sin no more.”  He was consistent in his words and actions, and we can be too.  Put down the how to books, drop the studies on how to be nice, and admit your sin, ask Jesus to help, then let him.  Repenting again when you slip, because you will, but each time the words hurting you, because of their sinfulness.  Suddenly it is not about us, but about Jesus, and when that  occurs, our actions along with our words will change. 
And so God has given us his spirit to help, to aid, to guide.  And bikers the full face helmet.  Many cuss words have gone unheard because of the face shield muffling them, but God hears all.  Imagine a Golden Age of Hearing, where only kind words were spoken, no one cursed God, but only praised him.  With a change of heart it is possible, but not on our own.  Can you imagine the bragging about how nice I speak?  Or how I only say nice things?  All with a hard heart.  Word of mouth advertising will always be the best, once the word on the Z-1 hit the streets, Honda knew it was over.  Judgment Day had arrived.  Judgment can be harsh, but it can be rewarding also.  It depends on your choice, and the words that represent your God.  Hearing is the last sense to go before death, and you cannot control it.  You can your mouth.  Proven one day at the stoplight.....when the flag drops the BS stops...many will try to steal your peace, only in Christ will it be secure.  The battle between throttle and mouth continues....there will always be someone quicker or faster, but not  in God’s spirit.  Even thousands of years ago he warned of racing, and its consequences.  “Not by might, not by power, but by my spirit,” says the Lord.  Or do we not remember what scripture says about having a conversation with a fool....
And I bet you didn’t know quarter mile times aren’t done on the track any more, but on the dyno.....which never lies!  Oh, those were the days!
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com