^ and on that note, 04 ZX10R was the second Kawasaki nicknamed the "widowmaker" ... the first being the old two-stroke triple ...
1998 R1 didn't redefine anything as it got beat by the 1999 GSXR750 a year later, which was basically a 1996 GSXR750 with fuel injection and a steering damper.
And nowhere did I claim it was a litre bike! All I'm saying is if a litre bike that supposedly "redefined" litre bike history got ambushed by an older chassis with a smaller displacement engine then it didn't really "redefine anything"
First on your list is an 1100 cc bike.
That would definitely redefine a litre, since it's 10% larger, but that puts the bike into a slightly different class :d
And a redefining step backwards was anything 2007, specially the GSXR 1000
Except that it did. The 98 R1 was absolutely THE BOSS for highsiding people to the moon... lol
And a redefining step backwards was anything 2007, specially the GSXR 1000
In Aus it was THE BOSS of flipping people backwards onto their heads at WOT, people just werent used to the power/weight of it.
The 04 R1, 04 10R and the 05 GSXR1000 were all big leaps forward. Inverted forks with radial brakes, slipper clutches, light weight, etc, etc.
The models after the 04 zx10 and 05 gsxr 1000 were a little neutered by kawi and suzuki, not sure why other then I guess liability concerns.
Were the RSU cartridge forks and non-radial calipers dramatically worse on the litre bikes? Or was it the combined package that did it? I always assumed part of the change was marketing driven, even if the quality was decent (street-bike now has race-bike style components).
actually the zx-11 was re-nicknamed the widowmaker as after it was released Motorcycle deaths increased dramatically because of this bike, also resulting in high insurance rates for super sports bikes because of this bike^ and on that note, 04 ZX10R was the second Kawasaki nicknamed the "widowmaker" ... the first being the old two-stroke triple ...
1994 Ducati 916, a classic of classics.
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