My Harley shop only works on bikes 10 old or newer; in this case it has nothing to do with the tech as many of their older bikes were not much different from newer ones at the time. It is merely a psychological ploy into making you have motivation to purchase a new bike. Bike s shops and other repair businesses that also sell new (and used) products often try that gimmick, which is odd because often times the labor costs are far more profitable than the profit made on a sales mark-up; but most who do it most likely have a high mark-up on sale items or make a direct commission on a sale.I dropped by my local MC shop to see if they wanted to work on my '85 GPZ900. They looked at me like I was insane.
Last time I brought a bicycle to a shop they either acted like they were unfamiliar with the component (a freewheel needing disassembly); or maybe they were truly ignorant. I do not know about others regarding their work, but when someone wants a job done I will educate myself in order complete the task at hand and will be prepared for the next one coming through the door. I now know what derailleur clutch is and why it is; but if requiring a special/proprietary tool I doubt I have it in the box though my knowledge of mechanics.will allow me to service it as if I had previously worked on it. I see many folks "working" at jobs where they have essentially no knowledge/experience at their position; and when you ask them something related to their job the response is often "I don't know"; and that is it. No effort made to attempt to educate themselves ar their own job.
So regardless of how old a bike (or anything is) is, if you run a repair shop you are supposed to attempt a repair (it possible). Age/model should have nothing to do with it within reason. There are far too many bikes out there that are fully (or nearly) operational and made within the last 50 years that can easily be serviced and maintained by bike shops with only a few (and generally inespensive for a business) tools (and I do it without a true work shop or even a bike stand (I personally dislike their designs and limitations).
I have stood in a shop with a customer bringing in a modern bike (20-25 yrs old) for service;. The "tech"/"mech", without test riding or doing any physical mechanical check of brakes or drivetrain, already added up the costs and told the guy it would be about $200 to repair it. That was a complete fabrication, the obvious repairs that the bike was brought in for could have easily been done at 1/2 the cost including parts. That shop screwed up in my opinion by turning the guy away since it was obvious he was not going to buy a new bike (their cheapest at about $500), at least not from them (he may also gone to get a second opinion from another repair shop).
Last edited: