sorry dude,dont agree
I have been in the motorcycle industry for a long time,ridden lots of bikes,raced many too
My RG 400 is the best steering and one of the best handling bikes I have ever ridden.Period
Its all a case of setting them up right.I remember a while ago now Steve Dundon built a wicked little RG250 F2 bike.It had a 16" front wheel,and the handling was brilliant.
truth is too many people didnt fit the right tyres,or had no idea how to set them up properly,since most 16"fronts coincided with the Japanese wanting to have multi adjustable everything.
And of course,Moto GP seem to have gone back to (almost)16" fronts again.
Maybe they are onto something?![]()
"more than two strokes is masturbation"
www.motoparts-online.com
That's cool. I don't mind that you don't agree! Without wishing to sound rude though...if you think your RG400 is one of THE best hadling bikes 'period', you can't have ridden that many late model bikes. By today's standards, they're wobbly piles of poo. Don't get me wrong, I love old bikes, and have raced all sorts of things on and off road (doing some VMX at the mo), but modern bikes have come a loooooong way in the 25 years I've been in the industry mate. 19 of the last have been working for Steve Dundon funnily enough...
And the 16.5" tyres the Moto GP bikes are using, I bet have the same roolling dia as most modern low profile 17" fronts we use.
Thanks but remember, there was only ever one DT360, that was the A model, it's predecesor was the range of RT-1 models and it's successor was the DT400B in 1975, an equally desirable bike , then the C , D and E models ( all Monoshock ) Be nice to have any one of them now ......
"more than two strokes is masturbation"
www.motoparts-online.com
The first Fireblade and R1 must rate a mention too, tis when the Japanese started to ramp up the light weight high horsepower machines of the modern era.
to me there are three main eras of the modern motorcycle(post 1970)
The early era(seventies) was when power started to ramp up sharply,such as the Kawasaki Mach Three,honda CB 750 and Kawasaki Z1.later the CBX six,Suzuki GSX 1100 etc.The frames and suspension were often sadly left behind however
Then came the 80 s when the focus turned to the frames(RG 250 aluminium frame for example)and suspension(suzuki and Yamaha anti dive,Kawasaki and Yamaha with early Single shock rear suspension on road bikes)
Then came the mid to late 80 s when they started getting it all right and putting together machines that were a complete package,with good power,great brakes and good handling,with weight reduction becoming important.The early Suzuki GSXR 750 and RG 500 springs to mind here(not saying they got it perfect,but they recognised and worked on these areas specifically)
Since then it has basically been a progression of refinement of that era,a few speed bumps and leaps forward along the way,but we are truly all in the Golden Era right now
just my opinion![]()
"more than two strokes is masturbation"
www.motoparts-online.com
The first R1's are hot and set the standard for what we see on the road today![]()
and possibly the most significant bike which did change the face of motorcyling for ever the honda C50 stepthrough, it sold millions brought mass production and high quality to teh masses and eventually brought the japanese into a dominent position in the motorcycling world
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I'm livin' the dream.
If I had sold tickets to everybody who stopped to look at my XN85 this weekend (and their mates they dragged back to have a look)at the BRONZ rally I would have quite a pile of money right now.
To me it's an iconic turbo bike - the best developed and sorted of the turbo bikes.
Buth those sort of bikes are a niche thing I guess.
Winding up drongos, foil hat wearers and over sensitive KBers for over 14,000 posts...........![]()
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