Cycle News

Cycle News 2016 Issue 42 October 25

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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VOL. 53 ISSUE 42 OCTOBER 25, 2016 P89 comfortable in a full day's ride, though. Thumb the starter button, and the engine catches instantly from cold on the auto-choke, then settles to a quite high 1500 rpm idle, perhaps chosen to rule out any rear wheel chatter on the overrun in the absence of a slipper clutch. The large exhaust canister containing the Euro 4-compliant three-way catalyst whispers rather than booms, though above 5000 rpm there's a pleasant rasp from the intake, which gives you the impression you're going somewhere. As indeed you will be, by short-shifting through the six-speed gearbox which has a light, precise shift action and invites you to keep the engine on the boil via your left foot. The oil-bath clutch action is light and untiring, making riding the BMW in city streets a pleasure; your hand won't cramp up doing so, although bottom gear is very low, and obviously chosen for when a passenger is carried. You soon find it's better to start from a stop on level ground in second gear if you're on your own, with- out any need to slip the clutch unduly. But shifting gears is really a delight, and though you must use the clutch for the bottom two upward shifts to do so smoothly every time, you don't need to do so in the higher ratios, and indeed so precise and clean is the shift action that you can drop from top gear to fifth without using the clutch, as well. The G 310 R is indeed a great traffic tool, thanks also to the wide spread of torque peaking at 7500 revs, just three-quarters of the way to the 10,500 rpm rev limiter. The 310cc twin cam single pulls wide open in top gear from as low as 3200 rpm without any hesitation or transmission snatch, thanks to its good low-down fueling. Then there's an extra kick of acceleration around 7000 rpm, and another one at nine grand, so it pays to rev it out. That's not to say that the power delivery is lay- ered, just that it becomes more urgent the harder you rev the motor. Nice. It's also pretty economi- cal, with a claimed consumption of 70 mpg. The G 310 R's tubular steel frame more than lives up to the job of harnessing this power delivery well, and the non-adjustable KYB suspension plays a key role in this. Its fixed settings at both ends are extremely well chosen, with much better compli- ance than you have any right to expect for such budget hardware. Ride quality is high especially at the rear, and damping so well chosen that I ended up looking for the rare patches of rough tarmac on German B-roads to give it a workout. Compression damping on the fork could possibly be a little stiff- er, because when you lean on the front brake for maximum stopping power there is some nose dive, but it's not excessive. The single front 300mm disc and its four-piston radial caliper are just about up to the job of stopping the BMW and its solo rider

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