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Suzuki Super Katana 1000

You'll rarely hear "classic" in the same sentence
as "'80s Japanese motorcycle" when you're sitting around the Sunday morning
breakfast table with your riding buddies, but that's a shame, as some iconic
shapes rolled out of the Home Islands in that period. The Honda Interceptor,
Suzuki GSX-R and Honda Magna stand out as some serious eye-candy, and although
some of the metric cruiser designs from the days of Reagan and Iacocca make me
want to throw up in my mouth a little, they demonstrated the Japanese factories
had original thoughts and ideas and weren't just in the business of making
cheap, bland copies of "real" motorcycles.
But we forget that Suzuki was one of the first
companies to hire an outside design firm to style its motorcycles, ushering in
an era of stylish mass-market machines. In 1980, Suzuki showed off the ED-2,
styled by German firm Target Design (according to the Wikipedia entry, there is
still debate as to who actually penned the original sketch). Hans Muth, who also
designed the BMW R90S and R65LS is usually credited, but Hans Fellstrom, who did
other work for Suzuki, also had a hand in the pot as one of Target's founders).
Based on the existing GS1100 superbike platform, the simple, aggressive styling
set the stage for the sportbike revolution that still rages today. It had a
small fairing that flowed into a modern tank shape, topped off with compact
instruments and a tiny windscreen. It looked great, but perhaps the true appeal
of this bike is the idea of elegant design married to brutal power and speed.
The production machines, the GSX series, was sold under the "Katana" name. A
katana is the deadly sharp sword carried by Japan's Samurai warriors, sparking a
trend of naming other Suzuki models for edged weapons like the Madura cruisers (Madura
being a traditional knife carried by natives of the Madura islands) and the new
Gladius standard (the sword carried by Roman soldiers).
The original Katana's sleek looks must have struck a chord with MD's friend in
Italy, designer Oberdan Bezzi. This sketch is his concept of a modern-day
SuperKatana 1000, based on Suzuki's latest GSX-R1000. With well over 150 hp at
the back wheel, along with Suzuki's own B-King, this would be the most powerful
and fastest naked on the market, but it would be light and nimble like the
Ducati Streetfighter. Let's hope that the Ducati is successful enough to
encourage a little craziness from Suzuki's product-planning department.
Source
Motorcycle
Daily
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