Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles
Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/125840
Up on the tank. stick the front end just where you want it and 9lIS it to bring the reer end out and around.
The technique that worked best, ewen for first timers, was gas it into the corner,
brake hard, lean it over squeezing the tank and gas it out again.
370 Suzuki RN
By John Huetter
Photos by Roger DeCoster and Huetter
You've seen dozens of pictures of
the machines ·with Roger, Sylvain
and Joel in the saddle racking up
Grand Prix wins and, usually,
trouncing the oppOSitIOn in U.S.
races. The bright yellow RN
Suzuki has been more photographed, talked about and the
32
subject of more posters than any other
motocross bike in modem times.
Th e questions concerning them
reflect the cloak of Oriental mystery
that shrouds most Japanese R&D
efforts. Are they really that light? Are
they really thatfast? Did the RH-73 250
really handle as poorly as Robert
claimed? Nobody really knew except
the factory riders because nobody had
ridden the bikes before. They looked
Hght and it looked like the feather
weight compromised the handling over
rough
terrain
but this was all
supposition.
We recen tly had a chance to answer
some of the questions about the yellow
speedsters firsthand - by riding one. The
bike tested was very close to the bike
that Roger DeCoster rode to his third
consecutive 500cc World Championship
for Suzuki. It was an RN-72 works bike
which means it embodied the
technology of last year's GP machines.
This year's bikes were changed very
little, if at all, except for suspension
which was tuned to individual rider's
requirements. The bike we rode had
up-do-date long travel forks and shocks
mounted forward on the aluminum
swingarm with KONI internals and
Suzuki proprietary externals and
springs.
The 370 (actually, at 367cc, the
smallest GP bike in the 500 class) never
had trouble making the 209 pound FIM
minimum and actually weighs in at less
than 220 with some gas in it. The front
end aviates very easily with a twist of
the throttle to allow the rear wheel to
get the power to the ground and do the
dancing over the ruts. You'll often see
Roger carry the fron t wheel in the air
for the lengrh of the start straight if the
ground is cobby. Even a squid can
perform this feat fairly successfully to
keep the front end Hght and avoid fork
rebound.
Like most of the GP bikes, for some
Roger DeCoster doing his hornewQl"k
on the RN Suzuki.
reason the seating position seems tall in
terms of trying to touch the ground but
once underway (again, like the other
bikes) the tall feeling goes away. This
feel is probably due to the fact that the
seat fits flush with the top of the gas
tank so there is no hang-up to moving
directly forward. The fast guys spend a
lot of time up on the tank in the
comers.
Handling is very, very precise. You
stick the front end into a corner and it
goes exactly where you point it. If you
screw up and point it where you don't
want to go, too bad. The RN Suzuki
responds exactly to the directions you
give it, good or bad, with a high degree
of refinement. It is not skittery or
wobbly through the turns bu t does have
a very light feeling. Being used to stock
motocrossers which are,

