Help us:
   HOME
  M.O GIRLS

  BLOGS
  MOTORYCLES
   Aprilia
   Benelli
   Bimota
   BMW
   Buell
   Ducati
   Editorials
   Harley Davidson
   Honda
   husqvarna
   Hyosung
   Impressions
   Kawasaki
   KTM
   Moto Guzzi
   Moto Morini
   MV Agusta
   Suzuki
   Triumph
   Victory
   Voxan
   Yamaha
  ARTICLES
   Products
   Tuning
   Motorcycle world
   Racing
  FORUMS
  Hot Topics:
   Happy Birthday
   Petite balade
  Bonus
   Photo Gallery
   Links




Google

Not a member?
register now as a free member
Login
Password
Forgot your password?
Language / Langue :
Lisez cette page en français
Road test: Suzuki GSR 600, Bandit replacement with no name
Printable Version Written: 24/04/2006 : 11:06. Read 19842 times (25/day).
The integrality of this filed article is for Premium Members.
As I struggled to find the correct headline for this article, I also struggled to see where the new Suzuki naked would fit in the model range. GSR 600 is the perfect answer to Honda Hornet, Yamaha FZ6 and even Kawasaki Z750. However in Suzuki’s own model range there’s a GSF 650 and SV650 already and that would seem to be enough middleweights for any manufacturer. It is therefore expected that GSR 600 is the Bandit 650 replacement, but Suzuki just forgot to remove the long serving Bandit from its model range.
63 votes


Last articles All the articles
ApriliaBenelliBimotaBMW
BuellDucatiEditorialsHarley Davidson
HondahusqvarnaHyosungImpressions
KawasakiKTMMoto GuzziMoto Morini
MV AgustaSuzukiTriumphVictory
VoxanYamaha  

Last Suzuki articles:
First Look: Suzuki Crosscage, Fuell-Cell inside2008-03-28
Detailed First Look : 2008 Suzuki GSX-R 750 2007-10-09
Detailed first look : 2008 Suzuki GSX-R 600 2007-10-02
Paris Motorcycle Show: Suzuki2007-10-01
First look : Suzuki GSX-R 600 20082007-09-19
Suzuki 2008 GSR 600 2007-09-11
Road Test : 2007 Suzuki Bandit 1250SA-Solid as a rock!2007-09-04
Road Test : K7 Suzuki GSX-R1000-“ABC-easy as 1-2-3”2007-08-30



GSR 600 feels nimble and light with a soundtrack slightly better than the K5 GSX-R600, at least when standing still. Before the fuel injection started to annoy me, I noticed how brilliant the handling is on this new middleweight from Suzuki. The swing-arm is based on that of the new GSX-R 600. However it is built specially for the GSR as it’s got a cut out where the exhaust tubes are heading up beneath the pillion seat. It’s still really rigid and far superior to that offered by the Japanese competition. GSR 600 really handles so well that it surprised me as being the most entertaining bike this year on my usual route home. Certainly more entertaining than Yamaha’s new R6 that I rode on these very roads only two weeks before.

With the 98bhp engine it is never going to generate any top speeds remotely close to a full on supersport.

But everywhere else the performance is perfectly suited for the roads you’d spend most of the time on. The engine still needs plenty of revs, but less than a supersport. Just around 10,000 rpm is where the engine is at its most lively and also where the power and torque peaks within 1,000 rpm from each other. This is where you want to be when going fast for good drive out of the corners. As soon as you let the revs settle down too much that fuel injection starts annoying with a jerk that is just too much to forgive easily. Particularly for town riding, filtering and generally where you want to use the smooth lower end of the power band it is a problem. Not a problem bigger than a dash of clutch can’t fix, but still annoying.

For this reason I preferred to use the engine a bit more on high revs than I at first intended. Since the GSR handles so well this was not a problem and I was happy tackling the tightest hair-bend corners quicker than anything else this year. The very steady and grippy Bridgestone BT014’s helps a lot-particularly as the suspension is in perfect tune with the tyres and balanced chassis.

The styling and mass centralisation has dictated how the bike looks at the front end with a wide front part of the petrol tank where the blinkers are integrated nicely. This gives t ...


The integrality of this filed article is for Premium Members.
(9 pictures - 1192 words. remaining).




Rate this article

Comments

Please register if you want to write a comment:
Clic here
Public Poll
Who will be the 2008 Moto GP world champion?

Casey Stoner
Dani Pedrosa
Dovizioso
Colin Edwards
Chris Vermeulen
Anthony West
Randy De Puniet
Alex DeAngleis
John Hopkins
Toni ELias
Marco Melandri
Valentino Rossi
Jorge Lorenzo
Sylvain Guintoli
James Toseland
Shinya Nakano
Loris Capirossi
Nicky Hayden

THE BLOGS

Napoemien

LAZER D1 Mk II

Dutch GP 2008

French GP 2008

lles ablultions dans la piscine

vacances argelès : premiers contacts avec la belle bleue

ASSEN 2008 WSBK, WSS et SSTK 600

GP Catalunya 2008

GP Italie 2008

balade argelès , colioure,banuyls
PICTURES TOP 10
duc dors a moitié
duc dors a moitié
part 28 Photos de Bjork
part 28
saute-vent homemade Mon saute vent, non fixé et la couleur n'est pas la bonne (trop orange)
saute-vent homemade
transport en commun
transport en commun
Kenny & Freddie  en 1984
Kenny & Freddie
duchesseTR2006
duchesseTR2006
duc3
duc3
coucou
coucou
 
Advertise with us | Jobs opportunities | Contact | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Site Map
RSS feed
About www.motorcyclists-online.com English version:
At the beginning, in 2001, www.motorcyclists-online.com was an exclusive French Motorcycle website. Now, since September 2005, it has become bilingual: English speaking people are welcome !
We do believe, at www.motorcyclists-online.com, that linguistic boundaries are not a problem when we share the same passion for bikes.
We are currently working on translating all articles and contents, to finish the UK/US version. You will certainly notice some bugs or translation errors: please do not hesitate to advise us by e-mail, Private Message or by posting in the Forum. Your help is welcome !
For the moment, articles which haven’t been human translated are automatically machine translated, which I must confess is not really famous, but faster than human translators.
Didier-lelu.com

Domaine Orsini: le palais des délices corses