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Friday, February 15, 2008

A short review from http://www.theautochannel.com/news/date/19981012/news018687.html
Nicholas FranklEuropean Correspondent
What to do with all these cruisers? So many bikes and so few miles to crunch. The Royal Star is certainly not a bike to mess with. Equipped with one of the finest and smoothest V-4 engines, tuned to deliver massive torque from low revs through one of the sweetest gearboxes you'll ever have the pleasure of using, this basically is the bike Harley should have been building during the last 95 years!


Not only does the XVZ1300A (whatever the hell all that crap means) look more menacingly brutish and bad ass than a Fat Boy, it just happens to run circles around any other custom - par my beloved Honda Valkerie - in performance terms. The numbers barely tell the whole story. 73bhp @ 4750rpm and 83ft-lb of torque. In real terms against my friend's fired up CBR600, there was no difference till we reached over 70mph, not bad for a bike that weighs in, in the red corner, at 305kg.

Size is important, but not everything, and in fact, in town, it is best not to have anything too wide. But personally I found the weaving and diving not a problem through London (as poor a cruising town as any I would suggest) despite the bike being unable to fit into the smallest of gaps - which are often the ones where a motorcyclist shouldn't be in the first place. Aided by a relaxed, low seating position and pullback bars, the rider is able to enjoy the good ground clearance that surprised quite a number of my colleagues on the road. Although the torque drive gets in the way, the bike can be enticed into some quite fearsome maneuvers, belying it's sheer bulk and custom heritage.

The steering is a little heavy, and very stable! at low speed but lightens up substantially once underway. When it comes time to stop again, the brakes are excellent, even with two-up I never had cause to panic under hard braking. Even the exhaust note is right (though not loud enough for me). Designed clearly to intimidate a Harley, (is that possible?) the four shotguns running down the length of the bike sound awesome. Yamaha also supply one of the largest ranges of factory accessories I have ever seen and once you start on that road the results can be spectacular - if not a little dear.

A video comparing the Yamaha RoyalStar with the Harley RoadKing


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VRrPnhIB2sU

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