Cycle News

Cycle News 2020 Issue 24 June 16

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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2021 YAMAHA TENERE 700 R I D E R E V I E W P68 fender for maneuvering the bike around. Fuel capacity is healthy at 4.2 gallons. Yamaha claims 215 miles between fill-ups. Seat height is an approachable 34.4 inches. The Yamaha Tenere 700 is powered by the finely capable CP2 engine made famous by the MT-07 street bike. The parallel twin isn't overly sophisticated; you won't find a suite of electronic rider aids on this bike (just ABS). Yamaha figures many of you prefer that. The Tenere's CP2 comes tuned specifically to flatten the already broad torque curve of the cross-plane-firing unit. This firing ar- rangement has been proven in past Yamaha Dakar bikes, sport bikes and naked street machines, providing great traction feeling, clean torque and a super cool sound. The engine also features Tenere-specific tuning to encourage peak power to hold on longer through the RPM range. Yamaha's policy in the U.S. is to keep horsepower and torque figures under wraps, but we do know that the We found the Tenere 700 to be un-intimidating yet very capable. Euro-spec Tenere's are claimed to generate approximately 72 horsepower at 9000 rpm and 50 ft-lb of torque at 6500 rpm. While it might've been a bummer to wait so long, the delay in delivery of the Tenere 700 to the United States comes with a few benefits because our bikes actually got some updates, most of those addressing some of our com- plaints we had in Spain. However, our list of complaints on the Yamaha Tenere 700 was short. First and foremost was throttle response/smoothness. Our European test bike felt abrupt at small throttle openings, like the fueling map was not optimized for low-throttle openings, and the end result was a hesitation and snap or surge of power that would slap the chain and put a shock into the rear sprocket. This surge

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