Hi, I have owned an EX500 and Katana 600 in the past. Have lots of riding experience, so I don't think this is a rider issue. Am now on an 03 VFR, my first fuel injected bike. Am having a hard time controlling the throttle smoothly in low gear, low speed scenarios, like hair pins or 90 degree turns. There is a bit of lag in my throttle before it engages, and this causes the problem. Is this a cable adjustment issue? Is it a characteristic of fuel injected bikes? I read about a device called the G2 throttle tamer on the VFR forum I read...considering getting one but first I want to understand what the issue is...
Thanks for your feedback.
Multiple things possibly at work here.
1. As others noted, make sure there is not excessive slack in the throttle cables. It should have a couple millimeters, no more.
2. Also as noted, make sure there is not excessive slack in the drive chain. Set it to specifications.
3. If the bike is a hi-miler, make sure the rubber cushions inside the rear wheel (between the sprocket hub and the wheel itself) are in good shape, because if they are chewed up, this could cause some extra driveline lash. Note that this should be filed under "extremely unlikely but possible".
4. That bike has a lot more power than your old ones did. There's a lot more power on tap. The throttle is gonna be more touchy, that's just the way it is. A good chunk of what you are feeling is highly likely to be "nature of the beast". If you think the VFR is touchy, don't try a '04 ZX10R with shortened gearing on it ...
5 and probably the real issue. Fuel-injected engines all have a feature called "deceleration fuel cut". It does exactly what it says. When you are coasting i.e. decelerating (throttle is open less than a certain very small amount, and the revs are above a certain amount) they cut off fuel delivery completely, largely for emission-control reasons. At some point ... i.e. you are starting to open the throttle, the fuel needs to come back on. When it does, the engine abruptly starts making power again. You feel that as a lurch, a step in power delivery. Different bikes do this to varying degrees. I haven't tried the VFR, but I have experienced that feeling on a '03 R6 and I found it to be extremely annoying, much more so than that of my ZX10R despite the ZX10R having a lot more power.
What to do about it ... also depends on the bike, because it depends on the specific fuel injection programming on each bike.
I have no idea what that "G2 throttle tamer" does, but it is likely a gizmo to change the decel fuel cut behaviour in some way.
Very careful mapping with a Power Commander can sometimes help, the idea is to drastically lean out the fuel delivery right at the point where the injectors come back on - involves a lot of trial and error to get it right! you have to set it up finely at each and every plausible engine speed - so that WHEN the injectors come back on, they inject very little fuel so that the engine makes less power at that point in time ...