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It took four tries but I finally got a clear run down our six-kilometre test straight with no wind, no birds (you have no idea how much damage a guinea-fowl can do at 250km/h) and no distractions – and the Suzuki GSX-R600 K7 rewarded me with a one-way best of 271km/h, making it officially the fastest 600 motoring.co.za has yet reviewed.
It was also only one km/h slower than the 272km/h I got on the bike's GSX-R750 sibling. What's more important, it was rock steady at that speed; in fact it's extraordinarily stable at any speed, given its 161kg weight (or lack thereof) and cobby 1400mm wheelbase
That's partly due to a conventional but perfectly weighted
steering damper and partly thanks to a low, 810mm seat heat –
but mostly it's because the designers of Suzuki's latest
midweight screamer concentrated on getting all the major masses,
including the rider and the exhaust system, concentrated as
close as possible to the bike's centre of effort.
Hence the low seat heat and the big collector box under the
transmission that's also the silencer; the little triangular
tailpipe under the rider's right foot is mostly for show.
Restacking the gearbox shafts has made the engine more compact
and allowed Suzuki to lengthen the swing-arm by 37mm without
increasing the wheelbase or overall length.
The chassis has been set up for slower, slightly lazier handling
than some of its competitors (which grown-up riders will find
reassuring) and the factory suspension settings are biased
towards street comfort rather than race-track precision – which
doesn't help much as the seat is a genuine 1980's plastic plank
reminiscent of Yamaha at its worst