Below you can find Suzuki Bikes Wallpapers to decorate your wide desktop, hope you like them. I'll be updating the blog with latest Suzuki Bikes Wallpapers as often as possible.
Showing posts with label Suzuki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Suzuki. Show all posts
Monday, August 29, 2011
Suzuki Bikes Wallpapers
Below you can find Suzuki Bikes Wallpapers to decorate your wide desktop, hope you like them. I'll be updating the blog with latest Suzuki Bikes Wallpapers as often as possible.
Friday, June 10, 2011
Suzuki Racing Bikes
Compared to concept cars, concept bikes are a rare breed. Radical design departures used to take place through racing on bikes like the 1954 AJS E-95 “Porcupine” or the 1969 Jawa Typ-860 GP. Innovation lived as long as it was winning races, only to be immediately cast aside once something newer was dreamt up. Alternatively, the low production costs of a one-off motorcycle meant that many ideas actually found their way onto the road. Witness the 1921 Ner-A-Car, with its early version of hub-center steering. Exploring ideas not possible with current technology, concept bikes aThe plan was simple: Make a full-on, race-ready Heavyweight Superbike, but make it docile enough to be an everyday street bike. Okay, maybe not so simple. Typically a race bike is finicky, idles high, runs hot when not at speed, etc.; not very conducive to street use. But what sportbike, street or trackday rider doesn’t dream of owning a superbike that can be ridden to the coffee shop every Sunday? . Thanks, Grant! s design exercises started to appear in the 1970s. Here are our 10 favorites.paint work is top notch, as was the turnaround time.
For the maiden voyage we took her out to Laguna Seca recently for a Track Crafters trackday and performance was incredible. Handling was on par with that of any supersport bike I have raced, plus an engine that could run with every 1000cc machine I encountered all day, and off-the-charts, onefinger brakes. Truly amazing considering I then used
the bike in its exact same state to commute to and from work the following week. An incredible combination, no doubt.
That’s just plain cool. So, we did it anyway! Well, Grant Matsushima at MPT Racing did it for us. In our recent do-it-all sportbike shootout the Suzuki GSX-R750 came out on top by virtue of its incredible all-around capabilities both on the street and racetrack. But we all would have liked some additionalpower. This is where Matsushima first came into the equation. Originally consulted to build a “street-able superbike engine,” he quickly jumped at the task of building the entire motorcycle, leaving us to simply gather the parts needed
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