My first question is...I'm trying to determine what is and isn't stock on this bike. I know the rear springs and shocks aren't stock. I'm not sure if the springs in the front fork are stock (is there any way to tell, even upon visual inspection?). I also know it has Tele-Fix clip-ons and what the previous owner claims are Thomaselli headlight brackets. There are no front turn signals on the bike, as it had a fairing installed with integrated signals which the previous owner removed (I'll likely leave it off as well and just mount some small turn signals on either side of the headlight). The bar-end mirrors aren't stock obviously, though I haven't looked closely enough at them to determine a brand...
Does anything else look not-so-stock? That front mudguard mount seems to resemble the tubular steel type sold by FlatRacer.com.
Welcome, Ben, and congrats on your new R65. Glad you found us here on BMW R65 dot com.
Boge shocks are the OEM rear shocks on the R65s. A quick I.D. can be made by spotting the lever that adjusts the spring preload. Boge shocks often get a bad rap but I have a pair on my '83 R65 that seem to meet my specs just fine. Then again, my '81 runs some very nice Hagon shocks out back. Rear shocks, like your choice of wife, is a very personal thing.
The Snowbum site http://bmwmotorcycletech.info/ has plenty of info on the front fork springs, ie: spring length, and mucho additional helpful information. Doubt if you'll be able to determine stock from aftermarket on your scooter.
The fork brace looks quite like a San Jose brace often seen on larger capacity and older BMWs that have the flat steel plate upper triple tree component. Fortunately, you have the solid cast aluminum triples so the fork brace is mostly "bling" on your bike.
The muffs are aftermarket as LS models came with black chrome mufflers.
So what's the plan? A return to full stock configuration or...
Lots of R65 info out on the web. Start surfin' and see what's different on your bike. A Haynes and Clymer manual would be quite helpful
Monte
Thanks for the info, Monte! I've been reading R65.org voraciously for the past few days and am already familiar with your suspension to an extent. I'm definitely considering Hagons. My shocks aren't OEM as they are stamped "MADE IN USA" on the lower bodies. I'll be putting 10WT oil in the front fork, most likely, having read your comments on it.
I'm likely going to go a bit in the cafe racer direction. For instance, the instrument cluster surround deal is brittle and cracking, and the light in the tacho doesn't work, and both gauges are heavily clouded. I'd like to keep both gauges, but lose the rubber instrument pod and have the gauges and ignition switch mounted on a nice metal plate. A good friend has a plasma CNC table, so he's able to cut just about anything I want (up to 1/2" steel plate).
I'm also going to look into tidying up the rear end as the turn signals are a bit ungainly to my taste. I'll also likely do LED bulbs in any lights that don't get outright replaced with LED versions, and am planning to add P3 lights on either side of the license plate for safety (
http://www.lights.skenedesign.com/).
After a bit more research today, it looks like the bars are TeleFix "Profi" version. Cool stuff.
The bike came with a new (no-name) black full face helmet, new black leather gloves, and a Clymer manual. I had the Clymer manual spiral bound in two parts at Kinko's last night -- I've found this really helps when you're out in the garage/shop as it lets the pages lie truly flat. I've done the same in the past to my copy of Proficient Motorcycling as well as to my BMW E30 Bentley manual...