Cycle News

Cycle News 2025 Issue 24 June 17

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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thing you notice is its length. At 59.6 inches, the wheelbase feels abnormally long, and once you get going, you notice it doesn't steer anywhere near as quickly with its lazy 26-degree rake as some- thing like a Triumph 765 RS that I'd just jumped off. At that point, I began to reevaluate just who the 900 R is designed for. This isn't a hyper middleweight naked bike (is that even a class?) like the 990 Duke or the Triumph. This is the kind of bike you buy as a commuter that can have a bit of fun when you want without scaring the pants off you. At a claimed 459 pounds, the 900 R isn't massive, but it's not a featherweight, either. After all, Kawasaki claims its new Z900 SE ABS weighs a claimed 12 pounds more, but it has a sportier personality than the Beemer could ever have. The 900 R's parallel-twin has been around in one form or another since God was a wee lad, and although it doesn't have pull-your-arms-out acceleration, it does have a pretty consistent torque curve that makes for easy point-to-point traffic riding, while the slightly tall fifth and sixth gears mean freeway cruising is a sub-5000 rpm breeze at 60 mph. Zipping between the canyons for our photoshoot, the 900 R was more than happy to play along and give its best big-boy, naked-bike impression. Turn the traction control off, and it'll throw a front wheel up with the best of them (see our cover shot). However, because the chassis is so long, it's one of the most controllable bikes I've ridden in a long VOLUME ISSUE JUNE , P103 Commuter cruises or backroads weekend weapon—the F 900 R is more than happy in both scenarios.

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