After a couple of months and 2,500 miles here's my impressions of my new 2006 Suzuki SV650.
First thing to say is that the
engine is an absolute gem. It's a 650cc V twin, watercooled, dohc, 8 valves
putting out about 70 bhp. It is smooth and sophisticated with very little
vibration at any speed. It feels sporty - eager to rev but also flexible. It
puts out plenty of power at low revs. You can putt-putt along at 50 mph in top
gear but with some throttle it'll take off. Rev it and it gives you smooth
power all the way to the 11,000 rpm red line. With 70bhp pushing a light bike along it gives pretty brisk performance. The engine has plenty of
character - a V twin is something special. It is quiet but makes a great sound
when thrashed - a hard, flat howl. Also the fuel injection is perfect. I've
read that some FI bikes have problems with snatching at low speeds but not so
on the SV.
It's not a fatty |
Grunty engine, stiff frame |
The chassis is also great. It's
very light (165kg - 363lb dry) so easy to throw about. It handles very well both in tight corners and on high speed ones. The aluminium frame really works.
The Nitron shock probably helps. The front forks are maybe a touch soft - I might fit a stiffer set of springs at some point. The brakes also work well. I'm not a fan
of sliding calipers but these are powerful with lots of feel.
The stoppers work |
It's quite a practical bike. Easy
to ride around town and you certainly could tour on it.
Bar risers & re-upholstered seat help comfort |
Any drawbacks? - of course there
is, no bike is perfect. You wouldn't want to carry a passenger - there's not a
lot of room. On the standard bike the bars are too low and the seat is too
hard. With bar risers and a re-upholstered seat comfort is a lot better. Not
great, but good enough for my 200-300 mile runs. Remember this is naked sports
bike not a tourer. Fuel consumption is low to mid 50's mpg (imp) (45 US
gal/mile, 5.2 litres/100km) again ok but not great. That's about it, so a lot
more pluses than minuses.
Digital speedo/analogue tacho is easy to read - but no fuel gauge - really Suzuki? |
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