Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's

Cycle News 1996 11 06

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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SHOOTOUT 1997 CR125 VS. KX125 VS. RM125 VS. YZ125 VS. TM 125 1997 Suzuki Rl125V u.t price . . . . .. .. . . .. . . . .$4.849 m f' It........ 124cc ElItI-.". 1.Jquik:ooIed. SilgIe-cylilder two-stroIest, while the rest of our testers gave them fairly equal marks. This is surprising for Honda. They really did their homework to go from about worst (overdampened and under-sprung) to near first in the suspension department in one season. That leaves the motor to decide the outcome. Both of these powerplants are simply awesome. If the Honda is missing power anywhere compared to the YZ it's in the bottom range. The YZ has the most low-end power of any 125 we've ridden and moves up into a meaty midrange and into a top-end surge that pulls impressively well. The Honda, on the other hand, gives a little away to the YZ down low, has about the same power in the middle revs and carries in to a top-end hit that is ever-so-slightly better than the YZ's. If we had to choose one motor over the other (and we do) we have to give the nod to the YZ for best all-around motor and overall winner of the shootout. Its W \0 0\ 0\ ....-4 \0' I-< OJ ~ > o z 16 The 1997 RM125 has plenty of midrange power and Is most at home carving turns. excellent low-end power makes it easier for a wider variety of riders to go fast on, especially on loamy tracks. You almost can't make a mistake on the YZ with its do-all power and you rarely find yourself grabbing for the clutch lever to build revs anywhere, while you occasionally need to grab the lever on hat a year to be a 125 rider. There was a time when this class of motocrossers rewarded the discriminating buyer more than any other. The range of performance that the smal-bores offered was extremely wide. Brand A might have an engine that allowed for a 98--percent holeshot success ratio, but that same bike would be horribly suspended and quickly left behind in the rough stuff . by Brand B, which couldn't be bent around a turn unless you melted it into liquid steel. And at the end of the year, all of them were tossed "onto the garbage heap or into the classified section as 125cc pilots anxiously awaited the newest, trickest, power-valved. rising-rate linkage wonder. Times have certainly changed for the better. The Japanese manufacturers - with a solid Euro factory or two always ·thrown into the mix are building more powerful, better handling. better suspended tiddlers. Heck, you can even ride one for two seasons before retiring it nowadays. Imagine that. Yet there are still subtle differences in an of these 1997 mini-rockets, many of them based upon the personal preferences of the discriminating pilot and not necessarily proficiencies or deficiencies, that make picking an outright winner possible. It's just more difficult. The TM was a bike that I desperately wanted to like but couldn't due to its seat height, which punishes the vertically challenged, like me; a handlebar bend which feels extremely awkward, and a 300 rpm road racer-style powerband that rewarded aggressive riders but sorely punished everyone else. The rear brake was far too touchy. And I may have be the odd man out on this one, too, but 1 thought that the Italian machine's Marzocchi forks felt "dead." Couldn't stand 'em. The TM's hydraulic clutch was the best feeling of the dass, however. Fifth place. Then there's the Kawasaki, a decent package that failed to keep up the Honda in the lower rpm ranges to go fast. Simply stated, the YZ has an epic motor that is very forgiving, yet at the same time explosive. Couple that with a very able chassis and suspension components and you've got our shootout winner - the 1997 Yamaha YZl25. {N with the others listed ahead of it only by virtue of its poor damping rates and a midrange motor that gives up a little too much on top this year. Add some stiffer springs and a pipe, and you'd be left with a very neutra-handling motorcyde that could be ridden fast, turned fast and stopped fast by pros and spades alike. There's certainly still a lot to like, such as extremely comfy ergonomics and a motor that is easy to ride as long as you stay in the meat of the powerband. Fourth place. Results be damned, the Suzuki RM125 was my favorite small-bore of 1996. The bike fit my 5-foot-6-inch body if it were custom-made for me. The suspension and handling were right in the hunt. The engine was strong. a bit more forgiving than the Kawasaki, and it pulled well past the point where this year's JO( mill gives up ghost. Why mention this? Because regardless. of the changes that Suzuki claims to have made on the '97 edition. the RM feels almost exactly the same as last year's machine. The motor is a little brighter on top than in '96. My favorite machine of last year is only third-best this year, however. Hey, Suzuki, it's time to start thinking ahead. I almost have to lump first and second place together at this po.int they were that close. The Honda and the Yamaha both offer awesome powerplants, razor-sharp handling traits, excellent bump control in almost any condition and cockpits that fit the tall and the small alike. Both machines nudge the performance envelope a little further than their competition, but the Yamaha forges ahead the furthest. While a little less forgiving of mistakes than the user-friendly CR, the YZ's torquey, take-no-prisoners engine and straight-line stability are the difference between first and second place. Any of these bikes can make you a winner. The Yamaha and Honda will make you feel like one .right off the bat. Scott Rousseau as or me personally, this shootout came down to the battle of the ponies - horsepower - but not just raw horsepower. [' m taUcing about good, usable ponjes. All of these bikes have good chassis and surprisingly versatile suspension units. Granted, some were slightly better than others here or there, but they were all near the same level. None of the bikes had any weird suspension quirks that would scare you or make them unridable. J could jump on any of the bikes out of the five we had assembled and, within a matter of a lap or two, could adapt and be riding a good pace on them. They're all that good this year. From here on out, though, I'm only talking motors because that's what decided the outcome forme. I had to stick the Kawasaki JO(l25 at the bollom of my list due to the unexcitable nature of its motor - it just feels, well, slow compared to the others. The bottom and midrange power is okay and very tractable, but the top-end power left plenty to be desired even though it sounded like it could have been picking up revs. The JO( just doesn't go anywhere, even though it sounds like it should be. Hopup shops are going to have a field day with the JO( - and ours is first. The TM came in fourth on my list. Even though it's the fastest production 125ec on the planet, it's the way it gets there that isn't so good. 0 bottom-end leads to a pretty weak midrange that leads to a screaming surge of raw horsepower on top. The thing absolutely rips on top and is very fun to ride if you keep it in the hjgher rpm ranges. It's definitely a bike that would be best used by professional and expert hands on long. outdoor-style tracks. It's a blast to ride, but not very easy to consistently tum fast lap times on. I rated the Suzuki RMI25 as my third place pick, but still like this motor a bunch. With just a little more bottom-end, this bike could be king of the horsepower wars. Suzuki went to a new.cylinder this year that gives the bike one of the best midrange motors of the year. In my opinion, the RM has about as much bottomend power as the JO( does, but after that the similarities stop. The RM bursts into one of the best, aJbejt explosive, midrange surges of the group into a fairly good topend hit. It's a good 125cc motor that falls right in the middle of the bikes we assembled - the standard motor of the dass. Choosing second place was very tough for me, but J ended up giving it to the Honda - but not by much. The Honda CR125R has had one of the aU-time best motors in the 125cc dass. It has only needed minor changes through the years and has the best midrange and top-end of aU the 1255, except when compared to the . TM. The only thjng holding the Honda back is a srnaU deficiency in bottom-e-td, compared to the YZ. The transition from low-e-td to the Honda's midrange explosion is also a tad abrupt, making the bike somewhat of a handful in slick conditions. So that leaves the YZ in the numberone position. with the best l25cc motor of all time. The bottom-end power is very good and the transition to the meaty midrange and on to the screaming top-end surge is almost perfect. The Honda may have slightly more ponies on top, but not much, and the bike has bottom-e-td power that Honda has not been able to find. Usually, to have good mid- and top-end power you've got to sacrifice the lower ranges and vice versa, but the Yamaha has it aU. It's by far the easiest bike to go fast on lap after lap by riders of ail ability. How'd they do it? Cameron Coatn~ F

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