Or is the opposite true; that greatness can come in small packages? There is an unhealthy obsession with size and power in motorcycling, whether it be adventure bikes or superbikes or whatever; the idea that a small bike can offer as much as a 1000+cc monster is widely dismissed.
But what about those among us for whom a big bike is not an option? Maybe we have no need for something with so much power or size. Maybe we have no need to be able to ride from one end of the country to another in a single day. Maybe we have no need to break the lap record at a track day. Maybe all we need to do is get to work and back. Maybe we’ve just started to ride and need to ease our way into it. Maybe all we can afford is a small bike.
That’s fine but does it also mean that the bikes we ride have to be dull and uninteresting? Not in my book and, on the evidence of this month’s riding, also not in the books of many of the manufacturers.
We are very quick to convince ourselves that we really need the biggest and fastest we can afford; that should we turn up on a ‘small’ bike, we’ll be ridiculed; that we do actually have the talent to tame and control 100bhp or (much) more. Maybe some of us do but in reality, those with the real talent could easily be just as fast around track with 80bhp and light weight as someone on a 200bhp ‘heavyweight’.
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Esta historia es de la edición October 2020 de Bike SA.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
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A Ladies Perspective What a Surprise Kawasaki Ninja 1000SX
I’m sure as everyone knows by now there is little that compares to my BMW K1200S and out of the 13 different bikes I’ve been lucky enough to ride over the 18 months I’ve been riding, I finally came across one that I’m almost certain I’d swap my bike for…
Goodwood's 79th Members Meeting - Hunting, Shooting and - Racing
For that’s what marked the 79th Goodwood Members Meeting aka 79MM, held this year on April 9-10, which this time included two thrilling motorcycle races, each with a blanket finish which in Race 1 saw less than a second covering the first four bikes home.
MIDWEIGHT PUNCH - TRIUMPH TIGER SPORT 660
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Isle of Man TT-winning ABUS NORTON NRS588 GONE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN
Exclusive track test of the last British bike to win the Isle of Man Senior TT in 1992, after what's widely considered to be the most exciting race ever held in the Island
NORTON ROTARY RACERS HISTORY - Rotary Race Record
For eight successive seasons the world’s first - and so far only - Rotary-engined racebikes swept to serial success on British racetracks. Here’s a timeline on their ebb and flow.
MOTO MORINI'S Alberto Monni - INTERVIEW
Exclusive interview with Moto Morini's CEO Alberto Monni, responsible for directing its ride along the comeback trail since its 2018 takeover by Zhongneng Vehicle Group/ZVG
KAWASAKI NINJA 1000SX - Surprise Package
I’ve recently written in my Editor’s note bemoaning the lack of available Sports-Touring motorcycles nowadays.
DRYSDALE HISTORY PART 4/5: 25 YEARS ON FROM CREATION OF FIRST 750-V8
2002 1000-V8 Bruiser mega-Monster was a Naked roadster with added muscle - the answer to the question of how to out-max a Yamaha V-Max!
GODIER & GENOUD KAWASAKI 1000 - Enquring Excellence
Exclusive track test at France's Carole circuit of what's arguably the first motorcycle of the modern era - the title-winning Kawasaki Endurance racer built in 1975 by Frenchmen Georges Godier and Alain Genoud
Unnecessarily Fast, or Unnecessarily Dangerous?
“The bigger they are, the harder they fall.” This truism comes from boxing, but applies to all walks of life. Innovative MotoGP superstar Marc Marquez, however, adds a new twist.