Stereo wrote:Interesting....
I'm not sure about this whole fly by wire revolution..... Unless you can plug your bike into your PC and control the programming it seems kind of crap.... You have to buy an aftermarket computer to make even the smallest change.... And considering EVERYONE does something to their bike in the end the most popular bike will be the one that people can most easily make changes to. At least with carborated bikes you could adjust cables and wires etc.... Sure it makes more sense to do it all computerised.... but still.
Neka79 wrote:also, do u want the latest & greatest bike on the road to have carbs??
nah..stuff that...
mmamster wrote:I found the following article on a french website:
http://www.motards-online.com/motorcycle-tests-reviews/news_332_2007-Honda-CBR600RR-and-Kawasaki-ZX6R.html
...The 636 was a nice trick, but we believe that Kawasaki wants you to buy the ER6F and N if you want strong midrange and torque whilst the ZX-6R goes back to being a technological showpiece and potential race winning machine...
By Tor Sagen/CG by Luc1
Mark
I-K wrote:mmamster wrote:I found the following article on a french website:
http://www.motards-online.com/motorcycle-tests-reviews/news_332_2007-Honda-CBR600RR-and-Kawasaki-ZX6R.html
...The 636 was a nice trick, but we believe that Kawasaki wants you to buy the ER6F and N if you want strong midrange and torque whilst the ZX-6R goes back to being a technological showpiece and potential race winning machine...
By Tor Sagen/CG by Luc1
Mark
Right. On the basis of the above-quoted statements, I am adding the name "Tor Sagen" to my list of motorcycle journalists who have absolutely no fucking idea about anything.
Stereo wrote:Neka79 wrote:also, do u want the latest & greatest bike on the road to have carbs??
nah..stuff that...
Im not saying drop fuel injection.... But at the moment the bikes are a mix of computers and analogue signals....
Ok look at it this way.... The throttle would stop being a cable, it would be a turning digital knob... Kinda like the one on your stereo.... Now, those stereo knobs get a dirty contact and whammo, you suddenly have the volume at 20 gazillion decibels...
Now imagine that same scenario but instead of a volume knob it is a throttle on a 2008 zx10 with 180 horsepower......
mmamster wrote:I-K wrote:mmamster wrote:I found the following article on a french website:
http://www.motards-online.com/motorcycle-tests-reviews/news_332_2007-Honda-CBR600RR-and-Kawasaki-ZX6R.html
...The 636 was a nice trick, but we believe that Kawasaki wants you to buy the ER6F and N if you want strong midrange and torque whilst the ZX-6R goes back to being a technological showpiece and potential race winning machine...
By Tor Sagen/CG by Luc1
Mark
mmamster wrote:I-K wrote:mmamster wrote:I found the following article on a french website:
http://www.motards-online.com/motorcycle-tests-reviews/news_332_2007-Honda-CBR600RR-and-Kawasaki-ZX6R.html
...The 636 was a nice trick, but we believe that Kawasaki wants you to buy the ER6F and N if you want strong midrange and torque whilst the ZX-6R goes back to being a technological showpiece and potential race winning machine...
By Tor Sagen/CG by Luc1
Mark
i dont think this would happen.Maybe drop the 636 back to a 599 so they dont need to make 2 bikes, and can concerntrate on just one bike....BUT bring back the 750?? ..i highly doubt it..why would they?? only suzuki has one, and no real benefits over the 600..
Duane wrote:ducati are 2 cyl's completely different story, a 600 2 cyl would be gutless.
mmamster wrote:Duane wrote:ducati are 2 cyl's completely different story, a 600 2 cyl would be gutless.
True but the point is there is a market segment for 750s.
Duane wrote:mmamster wrote:Duane wrote:ducati are 2 cyl's completely different story, a 600 2 cyl would be gutless.
True but the point is there is a market segment for 750s.
If it's a two cyclinder, because a 2 cyl is considered at 750cc to be the equiv as a 600 inline.
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