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  • gsx 1400

    i was wondering if this is basically a big kat handling wise,perfomance,and egonomics. this bike looks like a big brother to my 750.and does any one have one on here? if i can put plastic on it i think itll be the upgrade i have been looking for. thing is i havent seen one anywhere around here. so are they in the USA?

  • #2
    Seems to me, the best "nakeds" stay in overseas.
    The people who think they know everything always mess it up for those of us who do .....



    BIGKAT1100

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    • #3
      i've wondered about it as well sometimes. i don't know why it has the dual rear shocks, seems old technology to me. if you want a big naked bike and by suzuki...the bking is coming here.

      “Programming today is a race between software engineers stirring to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the universe is winning.”

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      • #4


        Suzuki GSX 1400

        Road test and photographs by Simon Bradley

        Whichever way you look at it, it's big. 1402cc. 105bhp. 228kg. 145mph. Big numbers, big presence. Big.

        First impressions are everything when you're dealing with a bike that trades as strongly on image as it does on ability. And although it would have to be a particularly dark and misty night before you'd mistake the GSX1400 for a genuine classic like it's great grandad the GS1000, there's no denying that those first impressions are pretty good. It's a fine looking bike, especially in the classic blue and white colour scheme, and the air/oil cooled engine looks traditional enough despite the almost radiator sized oil cooler to keep the illusion going. Big (of course) heavily chromed twin pipes and the big (you expected something else?) chrome rimmed headlight make their contribution as well. But then things start to go a bit pear shaped. The front discs, for example, are…big. Actually, enormous might be a better description. And they've got 6 piston calipers as well. That's a bit out of keeping, surely? And that rear suspension. Sure, twin shocks are nicely historical, but what's all this adjustable damping malarky? I don't remember having that on my old Katana.

        And that's the real strength of this bike. Unlike certain other retros I could mention, just because it looks like something from the 80's, at least at first, it doesn't force you to put up with the things we all secretly hated about big bikes back then. You know, appalling brakes, rubbish suspension and flexible frames. That sort of thing. At least, that's how it appears at first. To get the true story you have to ride the beast. So why don't we do just that?

        No prizes for guessing what the first thing that comes to mind is once you've climbed aboard. Big. Although well padded and, um, big, the seat isn't especially high, it is wide, though, and as a result it's more of a stretch to the ground than you might expect. It's quite a long way to the bars as well, but by no means uncomfortable. Firing up the extremely untraditional fuel injected motor is a little surprising, if not disappointing. The noise, of course, is the sort of noise you'd expect from a motor this big. Just slightly quieter. Like an extremely powerful industrial tool that has been silenced by the Health and Safety Executive. Not a bad simile, that...

        This is not a sportsbike, so you can't expect it to go like one. Ah. That'll be the next surprise, then. Open the taps in any gear at just about any revs and you will be rewarded by what I can only describe as a relentless surge of acceleration as your arms get stretched and everything around starts going very slowly. This is a seriously quick bike, although obviously sitting bolt upright with no streamlining is bound to impact on your top speed a bit. Plus, of course, the fact that sitting with your head in a 140mph wind tends to make your neck a little stiff. Happily, although not a sportsbike, the GSX-1400 isn't really a retro either. Suzuki call it "Naked Sports" which, I must admit, brings altogether different images to mind, but which probably isn't too far off the mark for this bike. You see, although it doesn't really look as though it should, it goes round corners really well, to the extent that a particular favourite B-road was dispatched in pretty much the same time as I would have done it on my own sportsbike. It stops as well, with the two big (of course) discs being gripped by equally impressive 6 pot calipers.

        Over a distance you soon find yourself getting really into this bike. It doesn't respond well to ham fisted riding, making you subtly aware that there is a better way of riding without doing anything crass like shaking its head or getting out of shape at all. So you naturally adopt a slightly more relaxed position and attitude and as a result the rate at which you cover ground is always a pleasant surprise. It's also quite comfortable, despite the lack of weather protection (ours was fitted with an optional flyscreen that I would heartily recommend) and it looks great. And so, of course, do you...

        This is a bike it is very easy to feel good about. It goes like the proverbial train, handles far better than it has any right to, stops on a sixpence and is comfortable. It looks by far the best of the current crop of naked musclebikes, it has huge presence and could only really be improved by the addition of a matt black four into one and painting the rear shocks red to give it that proper period feel. However, it can also deceive you into going quicker than you intend, or should.



        The GSX 1400 does an excellent job of being everything that we would like to remember our favourite 70s musclebikes being like while at the same time being far better, in every respect, than they ever were. It's fast, it goes round corners and it's beautifully screwed together. Almost exactly unlike its spiritual ancestors, then...

        At a glance:
        Suzuki GSX 1400
        Price: Ł6149

        Capacity: 1402cc 16v four
        Power: Oh yes.
        Torque: Huge.
        Tank capacity/ave range: 22l/180 miles
        Seat height: 790mm
        Weight: 228 kg

        Rating: 4 Stars



        MCNews brings you all of the latest motorcycle news including latest bikes, race results and motorcycle reviews.

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        • #5
          That's not much power from a huge bike. It's in the style of the Japanese standards. Like all the old school bikes from the 70's and 80's. Still very popular everywhere but here. The B-King should be awesome, just not sure why it is more than a Busa. Kinda hard to pay 13K for a naked, when you can get the full sport for a grand less.

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          • #6
            Hopefully those will start to be sold here in the states in about 5 years, when I have my current debts paid for.
            I don't know how fast my bike goes, I've never stopped to find out.

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            • #7
              i really like this bike as an alterative to the new gsx650f still looks comfortable, plenty of power,and sporty. i just really would like to put plastics on it.

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              • #8
                a big factor was left out of the above review........torque. Those hp numbers stated match my 919, some ss600 bikes and close to the kat750. However i don't consider either of those bikes starters. Based on those numbers alone the bike looks like the bandit 1200 with old technology. Oil/air cooled, twin rear shocks and retro styling. If that bike has like 30 ft/tq then it could be a starter bike, but it could have 80 or so. The 1400 could just be a really big torque machine or it could be a bandit motor bored and stroked different. THe only thing i can see why they can justify producing that bike is that it fits the retro look for people. Between that or bandit, i'd take the bandit.

                “Programming today is a race between software engineers stirring to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the universe is winning.”

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                • #9
                  I used to ride "nakeds" in the 80's thru the mid 90's. I had ridden some of the early sportbikes but not for any real distances. When I finally got a real chance to experience the comfort of wind protection, my "naked" phase was over. I still like the look of the "nakeds" but there is nothing like rolling down I-85 @ 90 or so with wind protection.

                  That is a beautiful bike, and prolly a "torque beast" just based on the cc's involved. I've owned several bikes in that genre ('81 CB750F, '84 VF1100F, '79 XS1100, and a couple of KZ's). My favorite "naked" is Honda's CB1000F from the early/mid 90's, never owned one though. At times I toy around with the idea of getting "naked" again, then I raise the automatic shield on my Big Kat and those thoughts just kind of blow away. Honda's has a 1300cc I-4 "naked" overseas that would be a real temptation for me if it ever came here.

                  The "shock question" was interesting because Kawi's ZRX also runs dual shocks in the rear. I've pondered that same question myself.
                  Last edited by BIGKAT1100; 10-22-2007, 04:47 PM.
                  The people who think they know everything always mess it up for those of us who do .....



                  BIGKAT1100

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