it? How many times, in how many areas of life, has this turned out to be true? While other new bikes are launched shrouded in fogs of hype, others just roll out of the crate and offer themselves for your consideration. Honda's ABS-equipped Fireblade have. In fact, the GSX-R1000 seemed a bit, `so what?' when it was officially revealed in September 2008. this is understandable, since the K9 looks like the previous model GSX-R (it has its older brother's eyes, its sister's curves...), which is the blessing and the curse Suzuki has to live with. frame and the new swinging arm and check out the new monoblock Tokico calipers. Check the power, torque, weight and wheelbase specs. Now do you see? This really is a properly new bike, not a noisy new engine bolted into an old chassis. This is more of a new bike than any GSX-R1000 since the all- conquering 2005 model. Suzuki UK took us to Almeria circuit with former British superbike champion, John Reynolds and its 2009 BSB rider Sylvain Guintoli to find out. And? sensibilities, but that Anglo-Saxon expletive was precisely what came into my mind on my first lap of the Andalucian circuit. There's no humming or hawing, there's no time for chin-stroking here. Pin the throttle to the stop in second gear coming out of Almeria's long right hand turn 11 and onto the near one kilometer long straight and the biking equivalent of `Holymotherofgod!' is what you experience. |