For All Those Who Remember The 80’s Just Look Back At The Prices ‍♂️

Discussion in 'Other Bikes' started by Arf765, Dec 31, 2025.

  1. Arf765

    Arf765 Member

    Feb 3, 2023
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    Berkshire, uk
    upload_2025-12-31_19-5-23.jpeg
     
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  2. Eldon

    Eldon Crème de la Crème

    Nov 14, 2018
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    #2 Eldon, Dec 31, 2025
    Last edited: Dec 31, 2025
    My motorcycling really took off in the 80's and
    I've previously shown this on this site for very similar reasons.
     
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  3. MightyBoosh

    MightyBoosh Senior Member

    Mar 29, 2023
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    In 1976 l bought a brand new 400/4 for £699...really wanted a T160 Trident but couldn't spring the requisite £1,215. Honda was sound enough anyhow :)
     
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  4. Eldon

    Eldon Crème de la Crème

    Nov 14, 2018
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    Here you go.....

    IMG-20201125-WA0001(1).jpg
     
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  5. Eldon

    Eldon Crème de la Crème

    Nov 14, 2018
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    I remember in the 80's trials bikes being in the £100's like about £800 except the RTL 250 (Not TLR) and that was something ridiculous like £2500.
    Now that was supposedly something trick with nice touches here and there, but well out of my grasp as a poor apprentice.
     
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  6. ajc400

    ajc400 Senior Member

    Jun 4, 2024
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    1980's line-up - Mopeds, Lightweights, Sport & Touring and On/Off Road.

    Yamaha website today - Supersport, Hyper Naked, Sport Heritage, Sport Touring, Adventure, Off Road, 125's, Urban Scooters, Sport Scooters and E-Bikes.

    Life was so much simpler then! :laughing:
     
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  7. johne

    johne Standing on the shoulders of dwarves.

    Jan 16, 2020
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    Where the Wolds meet the sea
    Wages of course were much lower back then, at least mine was! I think I was on about £5000 a year in 1980 which was a pretty good wage at the time as I recall
     
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  8. Eldon

    Eldon Crème de la Crème

    Nov 14, 2018
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    1983 as a new 16 year old apprentice, £2500 year.
     
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  9. littleade

    littleade The only sane one here
    Subscriber

    Mar 17, 2015
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    You youngster you :joy:
     
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  10. Iceman

    Iceman Crème de la Crème

    Apr 19, 2020
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    My first bike cost me two pounds and ten shillings, people could not give away old British bikes back then. A few years later, and a really nice Ariel Arrow set me back six pounds.
     
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  11. Baza

    Baza Elite Member

    Jul 25, 2020
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    All this nostalgia about wages back in the day brings on a smile. Can you remember what your first weekly wage packet was and when?
     
  12. Baza

    Baza Elite Member

    Jul 25, 2020
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    All this nostalgia about wages back in the day brings on a smile. Can you remember what your first weekly wage packet was and when?
    A Golden Arrow? My first machine was a Leader. Only ever owned four bikes and still got three of them.
     
  13. Samsgrandad

    Samsgrandad Senior Member

    Dec 15, 2019
    712
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    Somerset
    As far as I can remember my first wage or salary was in 1964 at the Westminster Bank and it was £375 per YEAR! I was 16 then and the proud owner of a Honda C100 - 49cc Step through Cub. It ws about 1year - 18months old and cost less than £100 but I can't remember exactly how much.

    At that time you were allowed to leave school at 15, I left at 16 after completing a few 'O' levels. How times have changed
     
  14. Baza

    Baza Elite Member

    Jul 25, 2020
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    Mine was a year earlier in 62 for a local authority that is no longer for the princely sum of £5/week or £260/year. I too did the O levels but missed out on English :joy: which took me another year before I could become a student member of my professional institution.
     
  15. Dawsy

    Dawsy Cumbrian half-wit
    Subscriber

    Aug 24, 2018
    1,340
    800
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    1980 as a 16 year old apprentice fitter with a small engineering firm I was on £1/hour, £40/week. My mates who were in the shipyard were probably on about £25/week.
    Twelve months later I was still an apprentice but working for the Andrex makers on quite a bit more money but not sure how much. I spent the first year with this company in the shipyard training school, still on more than my mates, and I remember getting a tax rebate and picking up a wage packet of £231! I was absolutely minted :grinning:
    Obviously it all went on bikes and booze:joy:
     
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  16. ajc400

    ajc400 Senior Member

    Jun 4, 2024
    954
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    Glasgow
    1970, started in an architect's office with day release to Building College - 17 years old, £5 a week, 1959 Triumph 500 built from boxes of parts which cost £35.
     
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