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Yamaha FZR 1000 EXUP
Yamaha's FZR1000 is a maximum sports bike in every sense and has
be- o come something of an industry standard. The machine has Y' won countless
Bike of the Year awards and has even been voted Best Bike of the Eighties. Its
success can largely be attributed to the fact that it does everything pretty
well and n nothing particularly badly. It has astonishing power yet the chassis
can handle it and deliver the performance through " the tyres to the road. More
significantly, it's comfortable and rider-friendly. Although undeniably a pure
sports machine, its abilities are not confined to the racetrack and world-wide
sales confirm its position as one of the very best road bikes available.
The FZR handles beautifully thanks to the rigidity of the very
stiff, large section aluminium frame. Named Deltabox, the frame was developed
from Yamaha's V-four 500cc GP racer and the near vertical position of the FZR's
carbs lends itself to peripheral frame layout. Equipped with sturdy forks,
well-damped rear suspension and enormous 320mm floating brake discs, the FZR1000
is an object lesson in
The system added useful mid range performance and the engine’s
power was also increased to 145bhp.
The 1989 frame (now called Delta box 2) used the engine as a
stressed member. Gone were the down tubes, replaced by a sturdy fixation of the
cylinder head with the frames upper box section. This layout was the foundation
for the radical YZF-R1 chassis layout almost 10 years later. The bike’s power plant was a water-cooled, 989cc engine whose angled-forward cylinder layout and DOHC, 20-valve cylinder format that had been introduced on the FZ750 two years earlier. This engine developed 130 bhp at 10000 RPM but Yamaha increased the engine’s displacement in 1989 to a 1002cc, developing a 145 bhp at10000 RPM and it was named Yamaha FZR1000 EXUP. The EXUP system boosted performance and torque and it was first to be used on a 4 stroke engine. The Exhaust Ultimate Power valve is an exhaust control system still used on the YZF R1 in a refined form, which controls the exhaust gas flow depending on the engine’s revolutions.
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