Yebbut, did the manufacturer of any of those bikes rip the fairing off and slap on some MX bars?Rockburner wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:27 pmNever since a Vincent Black Prince? or an Arial Leader? Or a Triumph Saint? Fairings have been around for a long time.....bevvo wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:19 pmI wondered if anyone would bring up something like the z1, but could it be termed naked before 'clothes' had been invented?Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 11:52 am
If by that you mean "the first time a manufacturer did a geniunely naked sportsbike, rather than one detuned for midrange etc." surely the Speed Triple pre-empted it by a few years?
If you just mean fast naked bikes...well, they're been around for donkeys haven't they? At one point they were the norm.
the Game changer bikes
Re: the Game changer bikes
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Re: the Game changer bikes
I was just trying to say that 'clothes' had been invented long before the Z1, so yes, the Z1 is a naked.bevvo wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:41 pmYebbut, did the manufacturer of any of those bikes rip the fairing off and slap on some MX bars?Rockburner wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:27 pmNever since a Vincent Black Prince? or an Arial Leader? Or a Triumph Saint? Fairings have been around for a long time.....
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Re: the Game changer bikes
That's like saying the Fireblade is Honda's response to the FZR1000, which was Yamaha's response to the GSXR1100, which was Suzuki's response to the GPZ900 etc
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Re: the Game changer bikes
I don't think the fireblade was just an incemental development of the FZR1000. I think it was a new approach. I seem to remember that it started as a CBR600 frame with 750 engine which became a 900 and it all seemed pretty revolutionary at the time...Le_Fromage_Grande wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:53 pmThat's like saying the Fireblade is Honda's response to the FZR1000, which was Yamaha's response to the GSXR1100, which was Suzuki's response to the GPZ900 etc
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Re: the Game changer bikes
The special thing about the fireblade was it was designed to be better than anything else available.
Not a bit better, a fucking whole lot better.
In the 80's, the big 4 launched a bike a month and then looked at what everyone else was doing, and tweaked theirs a bit next year. And so on. Evolution rather than revolution.
When the fireblade was released, it had 1000cc power, 600 handling and weight, ideas straight from the gp's. In 1992, that was as exciting as your first porn mag.
A quantum leap forward in bike design, which stood unchallenged for nearly 6 years whilst the other manufacturers threw away what sports designs they had and started again.
Now remind me how the 675 changed biking again?
Not a bit better, a fucking whole lot better.
In the 80's, the big 4 launched a bike a month and then looked at what everyone else was doing, and tweaked theirs a bit next year. And so on. Evolution rather than revolution.
When the fireblade was released, it had 1000cc power, 600 handling and weight, ideas straight from the gp's. In 1992, that was as exciting as your first porn mag.
A quantum leap forward in bike design, which stood unchallenged for nearly 6 years whilst the other manufacturers threw away what sports designs they had and started again.
Now remind me how the 675 changed biking again?
Re: the Game changer bikes
If i remember rightly, the 675 daytona was a really nice 600 class sports bike. Triumph cheated a bit by adding some ccs but it was a triple so maybe that's allowed. Anyway, Kawasaki had already done the 636?
So nothing particularly game changing there.
However, creating the street triple by ripping the fairing off and adding mx bars... erm.
It didn't change the entire biking world, but it shook up the middlewieght market. Up to then it was detuned or old stock 600s in budgety setup. Hornets, bandits, SVs. The street triple, although still good value, brought some glamour and desirability to the sector, especially in R form. Even now, any sub-1000 road bike has to compete with the street triple, albeit as 765.
So my answer is: by reigniting interest in middleweight bikes.
So nothing particularly game changing there.
However, creating the street triple by ripping the fairing off and adding mx bars... erm.
It didn't change the entire biking world, but it shook up the middlewieght market. Up to then it was detuned or old stock 600s in budgety setup. Hornets, bandits, SVs. The street triple, although still good value, brought some glamour and desirability to the sector, especially in R form. Even now, any sub-1000 road bike has to compete with the street triple, albeit as 765.
So my answer is: by reigniting interest in middleweight bikes.
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Re: the Game changer bikes
The 675 was built coz supersport racing allowed 675 triples.
Nothing to do with marketing .
Nothing to do with marketing .
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Re: the Game changer bikes
Yup, and there was a 599cc ZX6 with flatslides for supersport racing too.
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Re: the Game changer bikes
Do you mean ' ... and sell to the public'?
Dual-sport bikes are hardly new. By some accounts, BSA launched the category in 1965 with its offroad-styled 500cc A50 BSA Wasp and 650cc A65 BSA Hornet. Three years later, the company introduced the BSA Firebird Scrambler, its latest — and arguably best — variation on the theme.
https://www.motorcycleclassics.com/clas ... scrambler/
[img]https://ogden_images.s3.amazonaws.com/www.motorcycleclassics.com/images/2009/07/11080849/4559-558x840.jpg[/img]
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Re: the Game changer bikes
Trying to see it fro your point of view Nope, still no idea what you're on about
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Re: the Game changer bikes
I'd agree with that. The R1 was a direct result of the Blade, they didn't come up with the idea themselves they responded to what Honda had done. Hence game changer. The Blade wasn't a direct result of a GSXR750 or EXUP it did something new and nobody had anything to respond withDemannu wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 4:19 pm The special thing about the fireblade was it was designed to be better than anything else available.
Not a bit better, a fucking whole lot better.
In the 80's, the big 4 launched a bike a month and then looked at what everyone else was doing, and tweaked theirs a bit next year. And so on. Evolution rather than revolution.
When the fireblade was released, it had 1000cc power, 600 handling and weight, ideas straight from the gp's. In 1992, that was as exciting as your first porn mag.
A quantum leap forward in bike design, which stood unchallenged for nearly 6 years whilst the other manufacturers threw away what sports designs they had and started again.
Now remind me how the 675 changed biking again?
Re: the Game changer bikes
Dual-sport bikes are a different matter. I was thinking about 'performance naked' bikes. Which is just a handy term referring to bikes which are essentially sports bikes - high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons. I reckon, the mk1 tuono was the first one of those, and it was a game changer because it kick started that genre. Although I concede that the speed triple may have a case...Horse wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 7:51 pmDo you mean ' ... and sell to the public'?
Dual-sport bikes are hardly new. By some accounts, BSA launched the category in 1965 with its offroad-styled 500cc A50 BSA Wasp and 650cc A65 BSA Hornet. Three years later, the company introduced the BSA Firebird Scrambler, its latest — and arguably best — variation on the theme.
https://www.motorcycleclassics.com/clas ... scrambler/
[img]https://ogden_images.s3.amazonaws.com/www.motorcycleclassics.com/images/2009/07/11080849/4559-558x840.jpg[/img]
- Rockburner
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Re: the Game changer bikes
But again, you're forgetting that "...high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons...." is essentially what a 'sports' bike WAS until the mid-70s or so.bevvo wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 8:29 amDual-sport bikes are a different matter. I was thinking about 'performance naked' bikes. Which is just a handy term referring to bikes which are essentially sports bikes - high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons. I reckon, the mk1 tuono was the first one of those, and it was a game changer because it kick started that genre. Although I concede that the speed triple may have a case...Horse wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 7:51 pmDo you mean ' ... and sell to the public'?
Dual-sport bikes are hardly new. By some accounts, BSA launched the category in 1965 with its offroad-styled 500cc A50 BSA Wasp and 650cc A65 BSA Hornet. Three years later, the company introduced the BSA Firebird Scrambler, its latest — and arguably best — variation on the theme.
https://www.motorcycleclassics.com/clas ... scrambler/
[img]https://ogden_images.s3.amazonaws.com/www.motorcycleclassics.com/images/2009/07/11080849/4559-558x840.jpg[/img]
Take the bike that won (or did well) on Sunday, stick on some flats and a comfier saddle and sell it to Joe Public on Monday. That's how Norton, Velocette, Triumph, BSA, Arial etc etc did business.
The Tuono (or anything similar age and style) was just a throwback to the past in some ways.
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Re: the Game changer bikes
Fair enough. My biking memory doesn't go back that far.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 9:49 am
But again, you're forgetting that "...high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons...." is essentially what a 'sports' bike WAS until the mid-70s or so.
Take the bike that won (or did well) on Sunday, stick on some flats and a comfier saddle and sell it to Joe Public on Monday. That's how Norton, Velocette, Triumph, BSA, Arial etc etc did business.
The Tuono (or anything similar age and style) was just a throwback to the past in some ways.
I'm not sure that's what Aprilia were thinking when they made the Tuono, though. They were already selling the Mille as a road-legal racer.
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Re: the Game changer bikes
The Tuono was a 'factory-made street-fighter', just following the trend of owners rebuilding a crashed fully-faired super-sports bike (fireblade etc) with moto-x bars and no fairing with bodged on lights: street-fighters.bevvo wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 12:00 pmFair enough. My biking memory doesn't go back that far.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 9:49 am
But again, you're forgetting that "...high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons...." is essentially what a 'sports' bike WAS until the mid-70s or so.
Take the bike that won (or did well) on Sunday, stick on some flats and a comfier saddle and sell it to Joe Public on Monday. That's how Norton, Velocette, Triumph, BSA, Arial etc etc did business.
The Tuono (or anything similar age and style) was just a throwback to the past in some ways.
I'm not sure that's what Aprilia were thinking when they made the Tuono, though. They were already selling the Mille as a road-legal racer.
non quod, sed quomodo
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Re: the Game changer bikes
Actually - thinking about it, the Honda Hornet was probably more of a 'game-changer' because it was more than just an unfaired CBR600, it was a whole new frame incorporating a detuned CBR600 engine, and revitalised the 'middle-weight' market because it was as reliable and torquey as the super-sports bike it was based on (CBR600R), but easier to manage and own for those who didn't want a sports bike. The incumbents in the "middle-weight road bike" market were all 'commuter' bikes: basic, simple suspension, unexciting (think CB500, ZR550Zephyr, XJ650 etc), the Hornet was sold, and was, an exciting bike to ride that handled well, but not 'race/sports' oriented. Without the Hornet you might not have got the unfaired Triumph 675 (Street-Triple? I can't remember Triumph's naming convention).Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 12:25 pmThe Tuono was a 'factory-made street-fighter', just following the trend of owners rebuilding a crashed fully-faired super-sports bike (fireblade etc) with moto-x bars and no fairing with bodged on lights: street-fighters.bevvo wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 12:00 pmFair enough. My biking memory doesn't go back that far.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 9:49 am
But again, you're forgetting that "...high performance engine, sharp handling, decent suspension, powerful brakes - but without a full fairing and with more upright riding position, usually facilitated by using handlebars rather than clip-ons...." is essentially what a 'sports' bike WAS until the mid-70s or so.
Take the bike that won (or did well) on Sunday, stick on some flats and a comfier saddle and sell it to Joe Public on Monday. That's how Norton, Velocette, Triumph, BSA, Arial etc etc did business.
The Tuono (or anything similar age and style) was just a throwback to the past in some ways.
I'm not sure that's what Aprilia were thinking when they made the Tuono, though. They were already selling the Mille as a road-legal racer.
non quod, sed quomodo
Re: the Game changer bikes
I would tend to dispute that the hornet as torquey. I Only rode one once but I found it peaky. It did handle nicely although the suspension was budget.Rockburner wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 1:36 pm
Actually - thinking about it, the Honda Hornet was probably more of a 'game-changer' because it was more than just an unfaired CBR600, it was a whole new frame incorporating a detuned CBR600 engine, and revitalised the 'middle-weight' market because it was as reliable and torquey as the super-sports bike it was based on (CBR600R), but easier to manage and own for those who didn't want a sports bike. The incumbents in the "middle-weight road bike" market were all 'commuter' bikes: basic, simple suspension, unexciting (think CB500, ZR550Zephyr, XJ650 etc), the Hornet was sold, and was, an exciting bike to ride that handled well, but not 'race/sports' oriented. Without the Hornet you might not have got the unfaired Triumph 675 (Street-Triple? I can't remember Triumph's naming convention).
The street triple had much better mid-range but I take your point - maybe the hornet did revive the middle-weight market and pave the way for triumph's attempt...
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Re: the Game changer bikes
What did the Fireblade do that was new?Supermofo wrote: ↑Fri Jun 11, 2021 8:23 amI'd agree with that. The R1 was a direct result of the Blade, they didn't come up with the idea themselves they responded to what Honda had done. Hence game changer. The Blade wasn't a direct result of a GSXR750 or EXUP it did something new and nobody had anything to respond withDemannu wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 4:19 pm The special thing about the fireblade was it was designed to be better than anything else available.
Not a bit better, a fucking whole lot better.
In the 80's, the big 4 launched a bike a month and then looked at what everyone else was doing, and tweaked theirs a bit next year. And so on. Evolution rather than revolution.
When the fireblade was released, it had 1000cc power, 600 handling and weight, ideas straight from the gp's. In 1992, that was as exciting as your first porn mag.
A quantum leap forward in bike design, which stood unchallenged for nearly 6 years whilst the other manufacturers threw away what sports designs they had and started again.
Now remind me how the 675 changed biking again?
I can't think of any new technology on the Fireblade, the light weight, high power thing had been done before by the GSXR750, tbh the only thing new about the R1 is the stacked gearbox.
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