mcfingon
Western Australia
My BMW R80G/S being checked out by fellow riders on a trail ride with my local Enduro club in 1985. Pic on Hasselblad 500C with Ektachrome 64 film.

You're right, the CB750 was impressive, and it impressed other traffic with those 4 pipes. Guys with fast cars, for instance 396 Chevelle, would avoid doing anything provocative, just in case! I wasn't into swaggering so I kept my cool too. At the time, the "other" hot bike was the Kawasaki 500 triple-cylinder two-stroke: wheelie city!Great memories Doug, thanks for sharing! I can still remember how I felt when my dad’s buddy brought his CB750 over. In a word, intimidated! Don’t get me wrong, even as a kid I loved pretty much anything with wheels and an engine. But the CB750 looked so massive to me with its inline four cylinder engine and that matching four-into-four exhaust. It was such an impressive bike.
Boojum:
OK, Moose Jaw, but you missed Swift Current, Rat Portage and Medicine Hat. WC Fields said, "I was in Medicine Hat once, yeah. It was closed."
I did CT to CA in '82 on a '67 R69S and it was grand. I later toured all over the SW on an R100RT. The R69S was the better bike. Too much traffic now for scooters.
That is a serious ride too!
As to Moose Jaw, it's one of many unusual place names, and I thought it was special and deserved a visit. When I was in USAF in South Dakota, part of my job was plotting the weather on pre-printed paper maps: wind speed & direction, air pressure, temp and dewpoint, etc. The data came in on teletype printers from HQ in Omaha every 3 hours. The maps came with letter codes identifying the reporting location. I wondered what "MJ" was up there in Canada, and looked it up. Moose Jaw! What a name. So years later on my Honda 750 I made a point of stopping there.
Is that shaft drive?My Honda CB1100, dwarfed by the aging Paul Bunyon statue in the Kenton neighborhood of Portland.
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No, it’s chain drive. I’ve hung onto it while contemplating whether or not my riding days are done. When it comes to bikes I was never more than a day tripper, but I did commute via motorcycle for a number of years in all but the worst of weather here in Portland. I’ve had plenty of close calls, but fortunately no accidents and I feel fortunate to have watched my son grow into a man.Is that shaft drive?
I had a 1980 CB750F that I liked a lot, but traded it in on an '82 V45 Sabre which I considered my Japanese BMW. Got rid of it when I decided I'd like to see my kids grow up.
The 3-cyl 750 Kawasaki? Indeed! A peaky power band and light weight made that one a handful, much like the 500! There was also a 3-cyl 2-stroke 750 Suzuki. It was water-cooled and easier to handle, often called the "water buffalo."IIRC the 750 was the real widow-maker. From the talk at the time, the power was such that full throttle could force a frame flex. Regardless, they were just too powerful for most of us.