Yamaha YZF R15 Performance Modifications Unleashed
August 28, 2008
Filed under Motocycle India
Within a couple of months of it’s launch, the Yamaha YZF R15 has become a hot favourite among young biking enthusiasts. According to industry figures, the Yamaha YZF R15 is now the second largest selling premium bike in India. In some parts of the country, the waiting period for the bike ran into months when it was launched!
Yamaha it seems wants to continue riding on the Yamaha YZF R15 success and is all ready to introduce a new colour scheme for the bike – red and black. We have spotted this bike at a lot of showrooms. Some showrooms are custom painting the bikes on the customers’ demand as well. We however wish to see the bike in white and red colors!
Yamaha is also planning to launch an array of accessories especially designed for the bike. Remember the Yamaha YZF R15 displayed at the Auto Expo? The the single seat cowl in addition to other goodies like a carbonfibre patterned tank protector pad, racing stand, an LED flasher set, rim stripe tape and other accessories will soon be available at Yamaha dealers across the country. Of course these don’t come cheap. The specially designed bar-ends cost over half a thousand while the billet clutch lever will retail for a grand. Pay more for the billet brake lever! If you are a Yamaha YZF R15 fan, we are sure you won’t mind shelling out the extra dough to further spice up the bike.
The Yamaha YZF R15, with a first in its class fuel injected liquid-cooled four valve 150CC engine offers class leading performance and outperforms all’ its rival on the track. We, howev.er, feel that the company should incorporate a few changes in the bike. The non-adjustable rear suspension, for example, is not acceptable for a bike that costs over a lakh. We would also like to see projector headlamps and tweaking of the ECU for a better low and midrange for city use. Our sources tell us that Yamaha might be working on these changes which will be incorporated into the production bike later this year or early 2009.
For those who think that even these changes are not good enough, performance ECUs are available for the bike in Indonesia. The chip will unleash the real animal within the bike. Yamaha is not going to introduce the performance add-on in India, but if you know someone in Indonesia, get one! be careful though, as your warranty is likely to be null and void the moment you start playing around with the bike’s electronics.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R Specifications Review
August 21, 2008
Filed under Motorcycle Reviews
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R ENGINE
The liquid-cooled 249CC parallel twin with four valves per cylinder makes 33.5PS at 10,000rpm but will rev on to 14,000rpm. It’s been designed to peak at 33.5PS rather than being limited to 33.5PS, so it doesn’t feel artificially stifled at the top end. The fuel injection throttle bodies feature dual throttle valves to make the throttle response feel like CV carbs. This makes the engine very smooth when you’re getting on and off the throttle.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R CHASSIS
The tubular steel frame, combined with a 154kg dry weight, makes it easy to flick the 250R around, a quality that new riders will appreciate. They’ll also appreciate the low 77smm seat height which, together with high bars and low pegs makes the riding position very comfortable.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R SUSPENSION
The 250R is built down to a price, which explains the simplicity of the suspension. The conventional 37mm forks are right way up and non adjustable. The shock is basic too, and adjustable for preload only.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R BRAKES
Like larger Ninjas the 250 gets funky looking petal discs front and rear. There’s a single 290mm disc at the front with a twin-piston caliper. The rear uses another twin-pot caliper, but this one bites on a 220mm disc. The brake lever is non-adjustable.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R DESIGN
Even though they had to keep the price down, Kawasaki have tried to make the 250R resemble the rest of the KAWASAKI NINJA 250R range. Viewed from the side, the aggressively styled fairing looks very similar to those on bigger bikes in the range. The six-spoke wheels also contribute to the 250′S sporty appearance.
KAWASAKI NINJA 250R QUALITY
This is a budget bike built in the same factory that builds the ER-6n and ER-6f in Thailand, and it seems to be very well put together, although a British winter might tell a different story. All the panels match up perfectly and there’s the same look of quality you’d expect from a Japanese-built bike. The components aren’t of the highest quality individually, but work well together to create a perfectly functional overall package.
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Yamaha YFZ R15 150cc Review in Cities
August 18, 2008
Filed under Motorcycle Reviews
Are you buying the Yamaha YZF R15 just to race it on the track? If yes, don’t read this, just go ahead and buy one for there isn’t a better indian bike for the purpose. More than ninety nine percent of you, however, will probably never take the bike to the racetrack. It’ll more often be used for dropping your girlfriend to college and sometimes to disappear quickly into the traffic when her father spots you with her.
They say there’s no substitute for cubic capacity and while technology is trying as hard as possible to negate the notion, the saying generally holds true till date. The Yamaha YZF R15 is no exception. Putting out a commendable 17PS of power from that puny 149.8cc milL the Yamaha YZF R15 decidedly suffers from a lack of grunt lower down the rev spectrum. The pull from the engine isn’t too strong below 7000rpm and is somewhat disappointing below 3500-4000rpm. Of course, the engine won’t die down below that rev point, but you won’t be overtaking anything but bicycles convincingly. That said, you can easily live with the new Yamaha in the city if you aren’t the true blue commuter who has never revved his bike more than 3000rpm. Extra heavy traffic scenarios where you have to move at crawling pace may be a bother, but once the traffic starts flowing the new Yamaha feels at home.
Just because the Yamaha YZF R15 has beaten the bigger 220s around the circuit doesn’t mean that you should expect it to be as tractable, torquey and commuter friendly in the city as well. To extract that blistering performance from that small motor, some of the low end grunt had to be sacrificed, and it’s evident. The bigger bikes will surge forward with reassurance even at low rpm in higher gears. Even the normal two valve air-cooled 150s will feel torquier below a certain rpm. The Yamaha YZF R15, however, gets substantially stronger after 4000rpm. At 7000rpm and above, the bike comes into its own and leaves everything behind. The acceleration figures upto 60km/h are very marginally slower than the bigger 220CC bikes, but the Yamaha YZF R15 catches up with them in the o-100kmph timings. The true top speed of about 130km/h with an indicated (exactly the same as we had anticipated) 140km/h is better than any other Indian bike by a good margin.
Fuel efficiency, as our standard test figures suggest is a very reasonable 39.2kmpl on city streets and 52kmpl on the highway. Even with some spirited town riding, we don’t expect the fuel efficiency to drop below 35kmpl – a reasonable enough figure for a performance bike. A very important aspect of a bike you intend to live with on a day-to-day basis is its suspension quality. On that front, The Yamaha YZF R15 features probably the best suspension on any Indian bike. The rising rate mono suspension, supple and comfy at low speeds gets stiffer as the load increases lending brilliant dynamics to the bike when pushed hard through corners. It manages to deliver the best of both worlds, almost making the suspension on most other Indian bikes look agricultural. Even with a heavy pillion on board, the bike’s suspension doesn’t lose its poise, offering a pliant ride and bottoming out only when ridden over extreme bumps at high speeds. The riding position is comfortable, though purebred commuters are sure to experience a mild pain in their wrists and shoulders before they get accustomed to the relatively sporty riding position. The bike is a breeze to manoeuvre even at extremely slow speeds, something very unlike what its sporty appearance suggests.
The tyres look absurdly narrow for a bike this sporry and distort the appearance a bit. Functionally, however, they’re just pedect, offering superior grip with minimum drag.
Riding on the highway, the smaller size of the engine makes itself more evident. At speeds of around 70-75km/h where the bigger 220CC bikes will pull strongly in fifth gear, this Yamaha will feel slightly wheezy. Shift down, bring the revs up and it charges ahead. A tall sixth gear aids economical highway cruising, but requires you to downshift during quick overtaking manoeuvres. The sixth gear isn’t entirely non-functional in the city as well till the time you just with to flow along with fast (50-60km/h) moving city rraffic. Twin headlamps provide fantastic illumination during the night, though the Yamaha YZF R15′s horn isn’t the best or the strongest sounding among Indian bikes.
The city verdict? The Yamaha YZF R15 is reasonably easy to live with in the city, if it’s not an out-and-out comfy, commuter bike that you’re looking for. If you’re an enthusiast, and don’t mind shifting gears a bit more than your regulation torque laden 220, then you should be able to happily rev your way through even the more congested streets. The fuel efficiency is good, the ride quality is superb and the riding position is just right – in a nutshell, there’s nothing that should stop you from buying this one if it’s a performance bike that you are looking for!
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August 17, 2008
Filed under Videos
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