Cycle News - Archive Issues - 1990's

Cycle News 1992 10 28

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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SHOW Cologne 1992 horsepower. This is most definitely the shape of things to come as statutory 100 bhp limits proliferate in Europe. It also demonstrates the way in which Yamaha managers are prepared to be different, although the top industrial designer (an Englishman) who did much of the early styling work was dismayed at the way Yamaha had interpreted his ideas. If the GTSIOOO is a leap in the dark, Yamaha's other new offering is anything but. The YZF750R is an aWOl for the masses, complete with EXUP, upside-down fork, aluminium Deltabox frame and all the other Genesis paraphernalia we've come to expect. There is also an SP version for Superbike homologation with 39mm flatslide carbs, so maybe Fred Merkel will stand a chance in the World Championship Superbike Series in '93. The YZF (a designation it has taken from the factory FI machines) has the problem that it looks just like all the five-valve 750cc Yamahas that have gone before it and it doesn't have the path-breaking technology of a Honda RC30. However, the German-market price of DM17,200 (22,200 for the SP) The centerpiece of the Ducati display was the M900 Monstro, which our man on the scene says is "a bike to give V-Max owners inferiority complexes." European bikes steal show By Julian Ryder Photos by Kyoichi Nakamura he Cologne Show may be the most important European show on the calendar, but 1992 was the first year anyone could remember the European factories dominating the biannual exhibition in Germany so completely. There were exciting new models from Ducati and Triumph, a new-generation Boxer motor from BMW, Bimota showed the beautiful DB2 to the public for the first time, and KTM, with a range of roadoriented trail bikes, showed the over 250,000 attendees that they are back from the dead. The honorable Japanese exception was Yamaha. Seen on these pages before, the GTSIOOO ushers in the era of the non-telescopic fork on a production motorcycle, and interestingly it is on a catalytically cleaned sports tourer voluntarily restricted to 100 T (Above) The Ducati Desmoquattro Supermono. (Left) The Triumph Daytona - one reason the Triumph display drew the most attention. is an indication of how competitive the YZF will be with the ZXR750 in the European super-sports market. If those prices really do bear some relation to what it'll cost when it hits the market, this is going to be a lot of motorcycle for a relatively small amount of money. (Left below) KTM will produce dual sport versions of their 350, 400 and 550cc four-stroke enduro bikes. (Below) Prototype V-twin KTM.

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