ased solely on the Yamaha
Niken GT’s front-end design,
I don’t think there’s any
question that it is the most
controversial motorcycle
release of the year.
Because the Niken is different, there
was a lot of talk about the bike at this
past winter’s motorcycle shows and I
chatted with many riders about what
its pro and cons might be. Some were
worried about the extra weight up
front from all the complicated linkages;
some were concerned about all of the
extra moving parts and the associated
maintenance costs; while others just
asked, “Why.” Why would a company
spend all of the required R&D time and
money on redesigning something when
there was nothing wrong with the
original style of front end?
There have been a lot of different
motorcycle suspension and steering
systems developed over the past
century: springer, girder, leading and
trailing links, telelever and duolever,
Earles, single-sided front swingarm,
hub-centre steering, Fior, Hossack and
telescopic – a pretty good overview of
past and current designs, I think.
Piaggio has its MP3 leaning scooter,
but off the top of my head, Yamaha
is the only other company to offer a
production motorcycle with a two-
wheel leaning front end.
Yamaha isn’t new to introducing
offbeat front ends. Remember the rare
GTS1000 sold in North America for only
two years, from 1993 to 1994? (It sold in
Europe until 1999.) Any improvement it
may have offered didn’t justify the extra
cost to the consumer, and maybe it was
just a little too weird for the masses –
after all, the conventional telescopic fork
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With the Niken, Yamaha is trying
the unconventional again. Maybe it’s
a design exercise like Honda’s Rune,
which enjoyed a limited-time run
and soon became a collector’s item.
The Rune proved that a design team
could overcome the objections of
the engineering department and the
bean-counters. But the Niken’s design is
more practical than an art exercise.
Sure, it’s pricey at a hair under 21 large
for an 847 cc machine, but by all accounts
the front end is superior to a conventional
fork. The Niken still uses telescopic fork
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cornering ability – the basis of which is
two contact patches instead of one.
During some of the winter MMIC
motorcycle shows, Motorcycle Mojo col-
umnist and training guru extraordinaire
Clinton Smout used a Niken GT for his
in-show, slow-speed demonstrations
and told me afterward how impressed
he was with its abilities to handle slow
speeds and its knack to absorb drastic
irregularities of a road’s surface.
This past spring, Costa Mouzouris,
another of our columnists, attended the
North American launch of the Niken
GT and was just as impressed with the
machine as Smout was. The difference
being that Mouzouris rode the bike in
real life situations: on highways and
carving canyon roads and – to add to
the testing – sometimes in heavy rain.
If you’re still wondering why Yamaha
would release something like the Niken
GT, you’ll want to read Mouzouris’
article, which begins on page 18.
The basic motorcycle design hasn’t
changed much since its inception over
120 years ago: one wheel in front of
the other, a handlebar, a saddle and an
engine. My hope is the riding public
will accept the Niken GT as another
alternative to the traditional motorcycle.
Change is inevitable, and hopefully it
leads to improvement. And Yamaha
seems to have done just that.
Oh, and try not to keep up with one
in the twisties.
CROSSROADS
by Glenn Roberts
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13 YAMAHA CANADA
68 YAMAHA DEALERS
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