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Yamaha XT 660X
Road test by Adrian Percival
Riding through the traffic is so easy, and as I passed yet
another supersports bike with the rider all hunched up painfully
over the bars I though of myself a short while before! Riding
the same route on the R1 was not nice, but on this XT it was
fantastic, let's see how it goes on the motorway coming up
next...
The XT660 gives you the feeling that it is unbreakable when you ride it, it's an undemanding bike to ride but it has a very distinct road presence, but as always you will really have to ride one to understand what I'm talking about. On country roads and twisting 'A' roads it can be pushed as hard as you like into corners and leaned as far over as any current sportsbike without any fear, I did actually manage to touch a peg down at one stage which can't be bad from a bike derived from a dirt bike. There are a lot of lightweight dirt bikes that feel very nervous and skittish on the road, but the XT660X feels more like a normal middleweight naked road bike in reality, you don't get that feeling of vagueness from the steering and with the seating position and footpegs being as they are it gives you a much more sporting position than the usual dirtbike style layout. As I said before the power delivery comes in a way that plants the rear wheel on the road from very low revs right up through the range, it's much smoother and crisper than the normal big-bore enduro and very exhilarating in the mid range.
The XT uses a tubular steel frame
with two upper frame tubes, the engine is utilised as a stressed
member, this results in a chassis some 60% stiffer than its
predecessor, so Yamaha say. Both the XT660 and the X have the
same 43mm front forks, but the 660X is by far better on the road
due to being less soft and better damped. To complete the road
package the X has some excellent Excel road rims fitted, the
front and rear 17" rims run sticky 120/70 and 160/60 radial
tyres. In the braking dept the front is fitted with a huge 320mm
floating disc and a Brembo four-piston caliper, the combination
certainly works well and will haul you and the rear wheel up
very quickly indeed! Yamaha have tuned the suspension for the
XT660X and it works well, It's not just a dirtbike with road
wheels and tyres fitted, it's a total package. With the right
rider on it you will definitely surprise a lot of supersports
bike riders on any country road pursuit, not bad for a 48bhp
bike!
The XTX is a really easy bike to
ride through traffic and the city, and it's serious fun winding
country lanes, in fact the narrower the roads the better the XT
gets! With the super sticky sports road tyres, which are
incidentally designed for much more power, you can put down all
the power and lay it over as far as you like. Ride the XT at any
corner and keep the throttle open like you would on the dirt, it
will steer quickly and precisely around and accelerate hard out,
it great fun and I don't know of many other bikes that you can
actually do that with! The suspension soaks up all of the bumps
and undulations in a nice way without throwing the bike
off-line, and when you brake a little hard it doesn't dive
excessively. It's a different sensation completely to that of
riding a middleweight bike hard, a lot of this is due to the
relatively high seating position. Never think you will
overstretch this bike, keep the throttle open and keep your
weight over the bars, if you think you are going too fast or are
over committed into a corner then back it off a bit, the XT
won't bite back, then try again and lean it into the corner as
much as you like, it will take it believe me!
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Any corrections or more information on these motorcycles will be kindly appreciated. |