Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's

Cycle News 2005 07 06

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/128385

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he "flying commode." The "pregnant duck." The "trussed turkey." The "plumber's nightmare." These are just some of the less-than-complimentary nicknames bestowed on Suzuki's 652cc XR23B, the ultimate version of the cubedup rotary-valve square-four ultrabike which the Japanese factory's chief designer, Makoto Hase, concocted in the mid-70s, complete with its distinctive fat exhausts wrapped around the twin-shock rear end. Often loosely referred to as the RG700, T 56 JULY 6,2005 • CYCLE NEWS Suzuki's steroid-laden superbike was more properly known by its XR23 factory designation and was initially conceived by Hase in 1976 as a rolling' test bed to advance development of the company's XRI4 500cc Grand Prix contender, which had demonstrated its potential the previous year by winning the Dutch TT in the hands of Barry Sheene, thus delivering proof that Suzuki had come of age as a motorcycle manufacturer after previously dominating the 50cc and I25cc tiddler GP classes in the I960s. This was the prelude to Suzuki's mid-70s domination of 500cc racing, with Sheene becoming the first man to win the 500cc World title for the marque in 1976, then doubling up the following year in a class whose grids were now dominated by the company's rotary-valve square-four in customer RG500 form, earning it the title of the "modern-day Manx (Norton)." Suzuki's, and Sheene's, first 500cc World title was earned with the 76 version of the XRI4, which for the first time adopted what would come to be the classic 54x54mm "square" cylinder dimensions for the class, but it still retained the same level cylinder configuration for its squarefour rotary-valve engine as its short-stroke 75 predecessor. But during 1976, Hase and his team of Suzuki engineers developed a larger 652cc version of the motor, which for the first time featured stepped cylinders and a cassette-type extractable gearbox - both features which would remain part of the design until its replacement a decade later by the RGV500 V-four. Obtained by boring the engine out as far as it would go, with 62mm-diameter pistons,

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