All posts tagged 2011 new superbikes

2011 Suzuki GSX1250FA Features and Specifications

The 2011 Suzuki GSX1250FA is a dual purpose motorcycle with a sportbike DNA.  It’s versatile to use for long-distance touring, commuting or just for having fun.  Powertrain is a 1255 cc, liquid cooled, 4-cylinder, fuel injected engine that boosts 96.5 hp and 79.7 lb.ft. of peak torque.

2011 Suzuki GSX1250FA Features Specifications

The 2011 GSX 1250FA bike comes with top features including digital Anti-lock Brake (ABS) for safety and stopping power that matches available traction, Suzuki Idle Speed Control (ISC), and large capacity fuel tank.  Accessories such as top and side storage cases and windshield are also available.

 

Chassis Features
The GSX1250FA is equipped with a Digital Antilock Brake System (ABS)* that monitors wheel speed and matches stopping power to available traction.

New Engine Features
The GSX1250FA is powered by a compact, liquid-cooled, fuel-injected, 1255cc, DOHC, wet sump engine that has a bore and stroke of 79.0 mm x 64.0 mm. A secondary balancer shaft enhances the engine’s smooth operation.

Fuel Injection
Suzuki Dual Throttle valve (SDTV) fuel injection, featuring 36mm throttle bodies, brings superb response feel, smooth power delivery, improved mileage and reduced emissions. Long-wearing, tough SCEM (Suzuki Composite Electrochemical Material) cylinder-bore plating offers increased durability and efficiency.

Chrome-nitride piston-ring coating contributes to reduction of friction and tighter cylinder sealing on the GSX1250FA.

Suzuki Idle Speed Control (ISC) helps improve cold starting, reduce cold-start emissions and stabilize engine idle under varying conditions. Effective engine management and emissions control systems together allow the GSX1250FA to meet the latest emissions regulations and standards.

A liquid-cooled oil cooler helps keep the GSX1250FA engine running cool.
Transmission Features
A slick shifting six speed transmission improves acceleration while reducing top gear RPM at highway speeds. The GSX1250FA comes with a hydraulic clutch with coil springs that provides improved lever feel and control.

Power is put to the ground via a durable RK GB50GSV Z3 118 link chain.

Chassis Features

The GSX1250FA comes with a functional full fairing, housing vertically stacked headlights and is shaped for a neatly integrated impression with the tank and the tailsection. The GSX1250FA features a classic tube-frame chassis, with rake and trail chosen for an excellent balance between sporty handling and highway cruising comfort.

43mm-stanchion-tube front forks offer 5.1 inches of travel. A single rear shock (with 5.4 inches of travel) is preload adjustable so you can tune for when riding with or without passengers.

Brakes
The GSX1250FA comes with fully floating 310mm dual-disc front brakes with four-piston calipers and a single 240mm rear disc brake with a single-piston caliper.

Seat
Long rides are made easy thanks to the comfort-contoured seat found on the GSX1250FA. The seat height can also be adjusted up or down 20mm by flipping over the mounting spacers between the seat and the frame seat rails.

Stand
A convenient centerstand is standard equipment on the GSX1250FA. A large capacity 5 gallon fuel tank (4.9 gal. on CA models) provides long operating range in between fill-ups.

A comprehensive instrument cluster offers a variety of gauges, including a convenient gear-position indicator and shift light, oil pressure/coolant temperature indicator, fuel injection indicator, ABS indicator, and engine RPM indicator light.

Available Suzuki Genuine Accessories for the GSX1250FA include top and side cases, windshield and more.

*Please note that ABS is a supplemental device for brake operation, not a device for shortening stopping distance. Always remember to reduce speed sufficiently before approaching curves, corners, and traffic congestion.

2011 Suzuki GSX1250FA Specifications
USA MSRP – $11,599 USD / 5, 20, 000 Approx

Chassis:
Brakes Front Disc brake, twin
Brakes Rear Disc brake
Curb Weight 257kg (567 lbs.)
Final Drive RK GB50GSVZ3, 118 links
Fuel Tank Capacity 18.5 L (4.9 US gal)
Ground Clearance 5.3 in. (135mm)
Overall Length 2130 mm (83.9 in.)
Overall Width 790 mm (28.0 in.)
Seat Height 805/825 mm (31.7/32.5 in.) – Low/High
Suspension Front Telescopic, coil spring, oil damped
Suspension Rear Link type, coil spring, oil damped
Tires Front 120/70ZR17M/C (58W), tubeless
Tires Rear 180/55ZR17M/C (73W), tubeless
Transmission 6-speed, constant mesh
Wheelbase 1485mm (58.5 in.)

Engine:
Engine 1255cc, 4-stroke, liquid-cooled, DOHC
Bore Stroke 79.0 mm x 64.0 mm
Compression Ratio 10.5 : 1
Fuel System Fuel Injection
Ignition Electronic ignition (Transistorized)
Lubrication Wet sump
Starter Electric

Warranty:
Warranty 12 Month Limited Warranty

Vyrus plans to run hub-center steered 986 M2 Factory racebike in Moto2

Boutique Italian motorcycle company Vyrus is hoping to cause a real shake-up in top-level racing by entering its radically unorthodox Vyrus 986 M2 Factory in the heavily standardized Moto2 competition.

VYRUS-986-M2-FACTORY

With the same weight, engine, tires and electronics as its opponents, the Vyrus bike is more or less a controlled experiment in the racetrack effectiveness of hub-center steering. It will be the first time in decades that we’ve seen a machine enter top-level racing without a set of traditional telescopic forks at the front end. If it succeeds, it has a real chance at causing a suspension revolution in the sportsbike world. Oh, and there’s streetbike and kit versions available too. Very exciting news.

Hub-center steering

Hub-center steering has never managed to become popular on motorcycles – presumably due to the added cost and restricted turning circle offered by such systems. Or maybe just because it looks weird, and motorcyclists can be deeply resistant to change despite their “rebellious” image.

But while it may have some practical deficits around town, hub-center steering almost magically cures some of the most serious handling issues inherent in bikes with telescopic forks. There’s no front-end dive under brakes, for example – so the bike’s weight balance remains neutral and the suspension stays in its optimal traction management zone more of the time. You can “stay off the brakes until what seems suicidally late,” as master bike tester Alan Cathcart once put it, and with the mechanical separation of steering from suspension, “there seems no limit on how hard you can push it in corners.”

Cathcart made these comments after riding Vyrus’s last attention-grabbing masterpiece, the 211-horsepower, 1200cc Vyrus 985 C3 4V.

Clearly, to get the best out of this sort of suspension system, you need to be hunting for tenths on a racetrack – but since Yamaha’s GTS1000 of nearly 20 years ago, none of the major factories other than BMW have bothered much with anything but telescopic forks.

So it will be fascinating to see how Vyrus goes when it takes its brand new 600cc 986 M2 Factory racer out and pits it against some of the world’s best racebike chassis designers on Moto2′s world stage.

Going racing

Vyrus has clearly stated its “intent of racing in the Moto2 category” – but the 986 M2 will likely start its racing career in lower-level national and international race series. No announcement has been made yet on when we’ll see the Vyrus in the GP paddock.

Three versions: race, road and kit bike

Three versions of the Vyrus 986 M2 will be produced. There’ll be the Factory – the full-on race version dripping with titanium, carbon fiber, magnesium and all sorts of other unobtanium as well as motoGP-spec brakes and suspension. It is availbel for 54,200 Euros (approx. US$73,560).

For those who wish to enjoy the Vyrus’ exceptional handling on the road, the roadgoing Vyrus 986 SL Replica will be available for a fairly hefty 24,925 euros (that’s approx. US$33,840). That includes super-light “white carbon” fairings, custom forged aluminum wheels, Brembo monobloc brake callipers and a Honda HRC engine computer for maximum performance out of the well-loved CBR600 engine. Expensive, yes, but this bike won’t just grab every eyeball on the block at a rider meetup, it’s also vastly lighter and quicker than anything else in its class on the road – not to mention its insane handling. Those dollars buy both prestige AND performance.

And there’s a third option if you’re handy with a spanner; you can get yourself a crashed CBR600RR between 2007 and 2011, and buy a Vyrus 986 Replica kit.

The kit comes with the frame, wheels, suspension and unpainted bodywork for 16,542 Euros (that’s approx. US$22,450), to which you add the engine, brakes, exhaust system, wiring loom, CPU and dash from your CBR600RR. There’s another kit coming out this September that will let you do the same with a Yamaha R6. The resulting kit bikes won’t be road legal, but they will kick some very serious arse on the racetrack.

These bikes seem a long way out of most bike buyers’ reach – and yet they’re still well in the ballpark of a family car, so you’d have to think there’s a market there. Either way, if there’s a chance they can stick it to the fast guys at the top level of international racing, that’s where their real value lies.

If a hub-center steered motorcycle wins the world championship in Moto2, competing within the same strict engine, electronics and tire restrictions as everyone else … well, the sportsbike world is in for a real shakeup – a proper revolution that will lead to some phenomenally quick-steering, stable and grippy roadbikes. Wish Vyrus luck!

source:gizmag

2011 Kawasaki Z1000S revealed

Kawasaki is harking back to the useable superbikes like the GPZ900 and ZZR1100 with a faired Z1000S version of the 1043cc Z1000 naked bike for 2011.

kawasaki-ninja-z1000s-2011

The bike is based around the Z1000 but has a full fairing and according to insiders it also has an adjustable windscreen and will have a range of accessories aimed at making it a much more accomplished touring machine. In keeping with other bikes in this category this will almost certainly mean hard panniers, top box and other accessories.

This image of the new bike has been discovered by MCN on an online site where intellectual property rights register the design of the bike and prohibits copying. MCN found the images which are shown only in low resolution and in black and white, before colouring them in and making them fit for publication.

So what’s the verdict – can the new Kawasaki topple the S1000RR?

2010 ZX-10R 2011 ZX-10R
Price £10,209 £11,495 (estimate)
Engine 998cc, liquid-cooled, four cylinder 998cc, liquid-cooled, four cylinder
Power 165.3bhp (tested at rear wheel) 185bhp (estimated)
Weight 208 kg 198kg
Bore x stroke 76.0 x 55.0 mm 76.0 x 55.0mm
Compression ratio 12.9:1 13.0:1
Ignition Digital Digital with Sport-Kawasaki Traction Control (S-KTRC)
Rake/trail 25.5 degrees /110 mm 25.0 degrees / 109.9mm
Front tyre 120/70ZR17 120/70 ZR17
Rear tyre 190/55ZR17 190/55 ZR17
Wheelbase 1415 mm 1424.9mm
Front suspension/wheel travel 43 mm inverted fork, rebound,
compression, spring
preload adjustability
43mm Big Piston Fork (BPF), rebound, compression and spring preload adjustability
Rear suspension/wheel travel Bottom-Link Uni-Trak. High/low-speed compression, rebound and preload adjust Horizontal Back-link. High/low-speed compression, rebound and preload adjust
Front brakes 310 mm petal discs, radial-mount
4-piston calliper
310 mm petal discs, radial-mount
4-piston calliper
Rear brakes Single 220mm petal disc Single 220mm petal disc
Seat height 830mm 812.8mm
Fuel capacity 17 litres 17 litres

Source: www.motorcyclenews.com

New 2011 Suzuki Hayabusa Big Bird

Suzuki has finally come out of its shell and released pics of its 2011 model year Hayabusa. There wasn’t a 2010 model as Suzuki tried to clear showrooms of leftover 2009 bikes, and the only changes that we can see are the color schemes. Still, they’re pretty different from the ’09 colors, so check ‘em out.

Transmission Features
The Hayabusa comes with an optimized 6-speed transmission. Oil spray to the 4th, 5th and 6th gears reduce wear and mechanical noise during highway cruising. Suzuki Clutch Assist System (SCAS) serves as back-torque-limiting system for smooth downshifts and also contributes to a light clutch pull.

Engine Features
The Hayabusa is equipped with a 1340cc, in-line, DOHC liquid-cooled engine with 16-valves, and Twin Swirl Combustion Chambers (TSCC).

Lightweight aluminum alloy pistons with a compression ratio of 12.5:1 are used for maximum performance in all conditions. Hard, smooth chrome-nitride Physical Vapor Deposition (PVD) coating on the upper compression and oil control rings on each piston reduces friction while improving cylinder sealing.

Suzuki Composite Electrochemical Material (SCEM) cylinder plating improves heat transfer, durability and ring seal.

Lightweight titanium valves allow the use of light valve springs and high lift while maintaining accurate valve control. Iridium spark plugs are used for high combustion efficiency.

The Hayabusa’s engine is fed via Suzuki’s SDTV (Suzuki Dual Throttle Valve) fuel injection system with dual 12-hole, fine-spray injectors per cylinder and ram air intake with large volume airbox.

Suzuki Pulsed-secondary AIR-injection (PAIR) system ignites unburned hydrocarbons and reduces carbon monoxide emissions.

S-DMS (Suzuki Drive Mode Selector) allows the rider to choose from three different engine settings depending on riding conditions or rider preferences.

The Hayabusa comes with a large volume 4-2-1-2 exhaust system with a large capacity catalyzer, dual triangular canisters and closed loop system.

A high efficiency curved radiator features dual electric fans controlled by the ECM for increased cooling capacity. The oil cooler has 10 rows cores for increased heat dissipation.

Chassis Features
A lightweight and rigid twin-spar aluminum frame minimizes weight while maintaining high torsional strength.

The Hayabusa has been outfitted with a fully adjustable inverted front fork featuring DLC (Diamond-Like Coating) coated inner tubes. The front suspension offers minimal friction resistance and provides outstanding suspension performance over a variety of riding conditions.

A bridged aluminum alloy swingarm features a cross-sectional shape for increased rigidity, which also helps cope with improved rear tire grip and increased engine output. The Hayabusa’s fully adjustable rear shock absorber has a 43mm piston and 14mm rod diameter.

Radial-mount front brake calipers offer maximum braking performance and allows for smaller 310mm front brake rotors resulting in reduced unsprung weight and improved handling. A lightweight single piston rear brake caliper works in conjunction with a 260mm rear brake disc.

3-spoke cast-aluminum-alloy wheels are shod with 120/70ZR17M/C (58W) front and 190/50ZR17M/C (73W) rear radial tires.

Vertically stacked twin headlights provide increased light intensity, improved light distribution and match the elegant flow of the Hayabusa styling.

The Hayabusa’s instrument cluster features four analog meters for speedometer, tachometer, fuel gauge and water temperature with a S-DMS mode indicator, gear position indicator and adjustable engine-rpm indicator.

Advanced aerodynamics offering superb wind protection both for normal and completely tucked-in seating positions.

The Hayabusa comes with a bright, durable LED taillight, with clear inner lens and red outer lens.

Suzuki Hayabusa Ex Showroom Price in Delhi/Noida/Gurgaon – 12,50,000/-