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/1542341
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ll lf5
gears
have been
made longer
to
give
more relaxing
high-
spe€d cruising. That's an idea
which
works flne on the half-
faired Fazer all-rounder,
where
you're
more likely to eat some
sedous
miles at high speeds,
fairly weli
protected
by
the
nonadiustable screen
which
delivers only
a liftle helmet tur-
bulence to
a six-foot rider, but
enough
protection
to see 160
mph with
I
500
revs to
go
to
the limiter,
But on the naked FZ I
,
a very
different
kind of bike, which
pun-
I 6ink these
ratios are a mistake. ln
fact, I'd have
liked the overall
Eearing
to be
shorteri which would
give
it the extra
oornph
and
incrersed muscle at lower speeds it def-
initely asks
for. Expect a healthy
aftermarket
for larger rear sprockes for this
version,
since
Yamaha's wide
range of dedicated
accessories for both modelr
doesnt include
anyrhing
that's
performance
related,
iust
bodywork and
bags that are show
rather
than
8o.
\4hat - no Akrapovic
exhaust? No
Ohlins susp€nsion?
No Braking
wave dis€s? Coine,
now....
The engine is solidly mount-
ed at six
points
as a fully
stressed member
in an all-new
die-cast aluminum chassis,
which is 37-percent
lighte. than
the existing FZSl000
Fazer
tubular
steel chassis. Though
quite
different
from the
Rl
frame, it's clear, derived
frgm
it, with the
same degree of bal-
anced
flex deliberately engi-
neered in at strategic
points
by
van/ing
the thickness of the
casting
in lmm increments,
to
enhance feedback
from the
road surface.
By doing so,
Yamaha has created an
all-new
lightweiSht chassis design
which is more
than four-times
stiffer vertically and lateral-
ly than the
FZR|000 tube
frame,
yet
has
controlled llex dialed in where
it matters,
says Tominaga. who admits
that hrs main
obiective in designinS
the FZI chassis was
to optimize
weight distribution-
"Many
Naked bikes
have unfavorable
rearwards weight
bias. which
produces neg-
ative front tire
8rip,''
he
says.
"We
were
concemed to avoid this
in
a
high-perform-
ance bike like the
FZl. which has similar
handling
potential to the Rl."
To achieve this, his team
have compact-
ed the
mass of the bike a5 much as
possi-
ble, shifting the
engine forwards
by 2lmm
compared with the existing
FZS|000 to
obtain a class-leading
5l/49-percent
weiSht distribution
for the naked
FZI -
though
it's a surprise that the
five-kilo
ffr?
heavier Fazer version with
its half fairing
and twio headlamps
obviously mounted up
front, is apparently only o.s-percent
heav-
ier on the front wheel than
its bullyboy
brother.
Steering
geometry
of both bikes is
quite
a bit more conserv-ative
than the
Rl's, with a
2.6-inch longer, 58-4-inch
wheelbase for both bikes delivering
plenty
of room
for
a
passenger as well as lots of
stabiliq/ where it
mafters, aided by the
25"
head angle and l09mm of trail
(vs.
24?7mm for the
Rl)-
However, arguably
the single
greatest
factor in loading up the front tire in turns
is
your
own
body weight,
for Tominaga and
his men have delivered a
forward riding
position which
you're
immediately aware
of when
you hop aboard the
FZI's 32.6-
inch-high seat. This
is
well
padded
enough
only to
make
you
feel a liftle sore after
about six hours in the saddle.
but the dis-
tinctive,
quite
upright, stance
delivered by
the three-inch
handlebar risers mounted
to the top of the
43mm
Kayaba upside-
down
forks' upper triple clamp
is verf
untirinE aboard the
Fazei but alto makes
you
realize how
far forward
you're
sittinS.
The FZI's new 2.6-gallon
fuel
tank
is
(tiree
23.5mm
inlets and a
pair
oI
25mm
exhausts
per
cylinder), with
new-for-'o5
reshaped inake
ports
offering improved
flow from the
paired 45mm
Mikuni throt-
tle bodier
(compared
to the 37mm
carbs
on the old
Fazer), each lifted
with a single
iniector
per
cylinder and dual
throttle but-
terflies.
The
lower of these are opemted
by the rider
via
the
twistgrip, the
second-
ary
upper ones by an electric
servo digital-
ly controlled by
the 32-bit Nippondenso
ECU, via the twin throftle-position
sensors
on
each cylinder, with
(he
aim
of refining
throttle
response
and deliverinS a
smoother
pickup
via
added
progression,
withour sacrificing
acceleration.
That
s
nice
for wet
roads, as
well
as
to stop
you
sPin-
ning the tire out of turns
in the dry with
that
extra lowdown
8runt.
However,
it ain't what
you got, but the
way
that
you
8et
it that really
matters, and
it soon
becomes
+parent
when
you
twist
the wrist wide open
on the FZI
anywhere
below
6000 rpm that
you
should
have
e-xerted
your left foot a little more and
worked the
gearbox harder
if you really
wanted
to make some motion.
That's
because
the combined effec
of the lower
compression ratio,
TPS dual throttles,
revised
EXUP
(Exhaust
Ultimate
Powervalve)
operation and
softer carn
pro-
files with less inlet \ralve li{t and
altered cam
timing compared
to th€ Rl, is to smooth
out the
power
deliver),
rather than to
add
serious
muscle to lowdown
performance.
And the enSine
mapplnS onv reinforces
this impression at
lower revs.
You
can
acceleiate
wide open literally off idle,
mak-
ing the FZI an
easy bike to ride
in town or
a line of traflic
-
but if
you want serious
acceleration
of the
kind that will have the
front wheel lifting off
the
ground, you'll
need to kick it down a couple of
gears and
make the engine sing.
Anywhere above 6000
revs and
the FZ I
is a wild cheetah superbike streetfiEhter,
wheaeas below that
it's more of a
power-
packed pussycat
just
purring
along with
its
claws
retraded.
lust
remember, this
is a
sportbike,
not a tourer
(even if the Fazer
accessory list includes fairing
lowers and
luggage which
will surely turn the FZI into
yet
another
Yamaha sporu-tourer
model),
and
that means working the
gearbox to
access
its impressive
topend
performance
by street-fighting
standards.
f4eetint the
new Euro 3 norms surely
have
played
a
paft in this, by
removing some of the
torque Tominaga
and his men obtained
by
retuning the Rl motor.
The fact that the clutch
action is so light
and
precise
-
and anyway,
clutchless
upshifts
are the order of the day
-
makes
using the
six-speed
Eearbox
a
pleasure.
lt5
boftom four mtios and overall
l7/45
gear-
int are
the same as the Rl, but the top
two
srr'?e15 lc)
anaira
iallas
I a' I I
n?ir?sr il!rler's
tl
shorter than the FZS|000 equivalent,
and
this helps
position you further forward on
the bike.
Funhermore, the
handlebars are
lower and closer to the rider.
while the
footrests are higher and
further back than
the 2005 layout.
The result is a riding
posi-
tion which
gives a feelinS of control,
with
you. body's contribution to
loading up the
front
wheel with extra weight obtained
vra
an upright
forward stance
which
Sives
Sood
leverage from the one-piece
steel
handlebar, rather
than reclining
you
for-
ward on the bike
(like
on the
new Ducari
Sportclassics).
transferring
),,our
wei8ht to
the front wheel
via
your
wrists and shoul-
ders
-
well,
for as long as they
can with-
stand the discomfort, Even
in similarly
naked
guise,
the
Yamaha FZI street
frghter
is much more comfortable to
ride. with a
better
feeling of control.
CYCLE
NEWS.
FEBRUARY22,2006
29
!l
\
1
"i
Those
lu(ky Europeoni
get
their
choice
of the fozer
lrtyled
identi(qlly
lo the
U,S.
modell or
this unfoired ver-
sion.
olso known or
the Fzl,
ters will ride in a veD/ different
way,
The FZI
qlso
gers
o stylirh single
heodlomp insteod of
the duol lomps
ured on the foired bike.
i
/"
/
The FZI ! Rl
-
derived
998<<,
2O-volve inline
four
hos been
tuned to deliver
I 5O bhp ot
'l
I
,0OO
rpm.
The
(ompqcl
engine
spores
the
(ylinder5
so

