February 15, 2012 2:47 PM PST
All the bikes I've owned are inline 4s. The Suzuki GS 750, Kawasaki Z1R 1000, Suzuki GS 1100, and after some time off, my current Yamaha FZ6 which is a 600.
I've ridden on twins, and a friend let me take his HD Heritage Classic for a spin.
It's all in what you like and what you dream of. I love the inline 4s, but love the low end grunt on the big twins.
I just read an article in Cycle World, and Motorcyclist mags, Kawasaki now makes a ZX14R inline 4 that ran a 9.31 quarter mile @ 151 mph. I wonder where it will all stop. The all out sport bikes are pure track bikes, but hard to ride very far on one.
Now I'm leaning toward a Yamaha FJR sport touring rig, yup, an inline 4 1300.
I've read where the Ducati 1198's are strong down low, and strong on the upper end also. Motorcyclist Mag calls Ducs the new bad boy bikes with attitude. They are powerful twins.
Whatever you love and ride, I'll like it too.
There is too much animosity between cruisers and sport bike riders it seems.
February 15, 2012 2:53 PM PST
Still have my 78 KZ650, son has a KZ550. both have lots of guts. Darn near bullet-proof and run forever. Just put competition carb jets in the 650. Gotta get a new speedo cable. The old one wouldn't take the abuse, I guess. Top end kit about three years ago. Not my daily ride, but I take the old girl out for a spin once or twice a week. Yeah - the KZ1000s ought to have been named Krazy 1000s. Fast and nasty. Had a couple, loved 'em.
February 16, 2012 7:45 AM PST
Suzuki has a GSX 1250fa which put the bottom cowling on to make it a full faired version of the 1250 Bandit. I hear they are strong low and exceptionally strong mid range power bikes. Me thinks you can put on a Yoshimura header and include a K&N air filter with a power commander to let the top end breath a bit more, and that pup will be a crazy, similar to the late 70s and early 80s, bikes Kawasaki and Suzuki put out back then. You can even buy hard bags and a touring top trunk for it. It's supposed to have an all day comfy seat and excellent seating position for touring.
February 16, 2012 8:09 AM PST
Love the old Hyosung Its the usal set with forward pegs the Kaw KZ on the other hand was a bit tall and center peged. I ve removed the rear shocks and used a set of solid pipes. Lowering the bikes rear height and allowing her to use her own weight to help the rear tire dig in. Never cared for the short rear fender so replaced it with a fiberglass longer rear fender uses a cat eye tail light. This small change has really changed the bikes feel. Its more locked to the ground feels much safer when passing larger rigs. a pluss size rear tire at 28 psi sofens the light bounce from bad road. But dont hit a pot hole it a real ass bouncer.
February 16, 2012 8:29 AM PST
Lots of great bikes out there, you find the one you like and it excites your throttle hand, I say go with that! I can't understand WHY the import market went after the V-Twin design... their designs really don't fair much better than Harley's design, I think they should have just stayed with the inline design and continued to develop the V-4 designs, some great stuff from those lines!
February 16, 2012 2:24 PM PST
I never understood it eather. The inline 4s seam simpler to keep up in the higher Rs. I admit I love he long lines of the super crusers. But the rush of the inlines is aditive to say the least. Plans in the works on conveting a inline bike to the low rider look.