1974 Suzuki GT750

Summary:

Add a shaft drive and it would be the best tourer ever

Faults:

The bike had sat in storage for many years and was froze up when I bought it. So I took it home and removed the head and squirted oil on the piston tops, and let it soak down to the rings for a day. Then I tried kicking it over and ended up bouncing off the kicker like a BB hitting a Sherman tank, LOL. So then I tried plan B and called the biggest buddy I know and he did no better!

So I moved on to the big guns of plan C by having him stand on the kicker while I smacked the cylinder block with a lead shot filled plastic dead blow sledge from every angle I could manage. About 20 whacks later it freed up and started kicking over smoothly. So figuring I may still need to delve deeper into the engine, I bolted the head back on with the old gasket and filled her up with some fresh fluids and tried the kicker again, thinking it would take several kicks to get things flowing again; NOPE she fired up and purred on the 2nd kick!

Noticing the tires and radiator hoses were badly weather damaged, I replaced them and put her on the road, and I did not even need to replace the used head gasket. From that day forward the only repair I ever did was to clean the contact points on the horn switch.

General Comments:

The GT750 is a touring bike. Lots of people think they are fast like the Kawi triples, but they are not; the horse power is minimal, but the GT does have tons of low end torque; so much that one quickly realizes that 1st thru 4th are only for starting, stopping and staying under city speed limits. 5th gear is for everything else; even at 35 MPH a twist of the wrist is all that is needed to accelerate quickly, and dropping a gear really doesn't make it happen much faster, at least not enough to make it worth the effort it takes.

It's a lazy man's bike; ya just get her into 5th and then you can leave it there for a whole day's ride as the miles smoothly, quietly and comfortably float by. The Water Buffalo is far from sporty; its butter soft suspension has very nice manners in the twisties, but don't even think about any extreme leaning, because the center stand and pipes will very loudly touch ground and scare the heck outta you!

Speaking of steering, the GT750 has an interesting quirk; the steering neck is somehow notched so that it likes to kinda lock into a straight ahead position (I suspect this was Suzuki's way of avoiding the need for a steering dampener). It feels a bit odd at parking lot speeds, but is very hard to notice at speed.

Another quirk of the GT is that the front tire is some how welded to the ground and even a tiny wheelie seems impossible. Mine would readily burn rubber, so I put a monster grip Metzler tire on the back, which killed the spin but replaced it with what sounded like my tranny exploding when I revved her up and dumped the clutch! (Note though that the trans never seemed to be bothered by this and still worked perfectly). No matter how many times or ways I tried lofting the front tire, it just would not do it, period.

Not only is it as smooth or smoother than a Goldwing, it is also much quieter. Cruising side by side with a Wing at 60 MPH, I could not even hear my engine running unless I grabbed a hand full of throttle to make the carbs honk!

At cruising speed without a nearby Wing, the chain tended to make as much or more noise than the engine as it droned out the dulcet sound of a Zen Yogi's Om chant.

Loud pipes may help other drivers hear you, but it is also nice to be able to hear yourself think or the sound of a car in your blind spot, not to mention your pretty passenger's speaking voice as opposed to her having to yell to be heard.

So why buy a bike that is not fast or exciting? For the pure pleasure it is to ride, that's why.

Would you buy another motorcycle from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 9th July, 2016

8th Apr 2018, 18:38

I agree ! I OWNED A GT 750. A (1975) yeah, 1975 - not 76. It was bought in S.W. Ontario... Must have been one of the 1st A SERIES.

I sure wish I still had it, have had some since - a Kingpin, and a GV650.

These were nice, powerful, yes... but not the same as my Water Buffalo. Trying to find one now, it's the next thing to impossible unless you want to pay more than I did when I bought it new!!

10th Jul 2018, 19:47

I agree wholeheartedly! I owned a '72 & a '74 GT750, and have often thought the only thing it needed to be better was a shaft! Liked the '72. LOVED the '74! I owned the '74 for 7 years & put 49,000 miles on her! Would have been more if I hadn't lost my license for 6 months! Got caught doing 90 in a 55! Good thing he didn't catch me a minute earlier, I was doing 110! She could go fast, just wasn't crazy wild like the Kawa triples.

She was a very refined and finished machine for the day. I would put her up against the modern tourers of today for comfort! She never let me down, and always got 47-50 MPG! And while she was heavy for the day (520 pounds or so), that's light by today's standards. It's true she couldn't carve corners like today's sport-tourers, but she was a great ride! Comfortable, quiet, smooth. I rode her 800 miles from eastern PA to Wisconsin in a single day, and could have gone farther if I had needed to. She is that comfortable a bike to ride!

I've had the opportunity to ride some other big bikes - some were smooth, some not - but for touring the open road and enjoying the scenery along the way? Let me have my GT750 back!

1975 Suzuki GT750

Summary:

Wear a coat you don't mind getting oil on the back of after a ride

Faults:

Tuneup, cleaned carbs.

General Comments:

First two stroke road bike I have owned. Its reputation is well known.

To those who know. This bike is as smooth on the freeway as my Goldwing. Unbelievably smooth. Gas mileage is fantastic, I got over fifty at 60 miles per hour in calm flat weather. Wish I never sold that bike. I miss the sound. The bike had only five thousand miles on it, but had spent years in a dirt floor barn with horses close by.

I cleaned the tank, the carbs, new points, oil in tranny, antifreeze, and she fired up after years of inactivity.

My water buffalo had stock exhaust that sounded like pop corn popping at idle. And smoked like the dickens. That beautiful smell of a two stroke triple. Plus the GT750s have low end power, they don't have that pipey powerband, where the back wheel tries to pass the front wheel at five grand like the Kawasakis and the Yamaha RDs. But I will have another before I go to the happy motorcycle swap meet in the sky. I've seen used ones with 75000 miles on them, motors untouched; try doing that on an H-1 or H-2.

Would you buy another motorcycle from this manufacturer? Don't Know

Review Date: 21st March, 2015