Suzuki GSX series

Suzuki GSX series

The GSX Series is Suzuki's range of sport touring motorcycles with four-valved engines. The earliest GSX models were introduced in the early 1980s to complement and later replace the two-valve Suzuki GS series.

The current range of bikes by that name are completely different designs that use derivatives of former super sports engines from the early-to-middle GSX-R series.

Early GSX

Among the earliest GSX models were the two-cylinder "GSX 250" and the "GSX 400".

These Suzuki GSX models were the evolution of the GS series of 2-valve per cylinder air and oil cooled four stroke motorcycles. The first 4-valve engines were produced for the 1980 model year, but retained the "GS" designation for the US market until the release of the GSX-R models in 1986 (1985 outside the US). These GSX engines were based on Suzuki's "TSCC" (Twin-Swirl Combustion Chamber) engine design, and shared little with previous 2-valve models. The bike called Suzuki Katana in the US had this engine design, with designations of GSX-S, but has little in common with the more modern GSX-F Katanas, which are sport-touring bikes.

The early GSX four-cylinder engines are arguably among the most reliable motorcycle engines ever mass-produced, with the 1100cc and 1150cc engines still very commonly used for drag racing and hillclimbing competition in the US.

The TSCC engine was once again redesigned in 1983 with the introduction of a completely new "GSX 750", Suzuki's first modern mono-shocked sportbike in both a naked "(GSX 750E)" and half-faired "(GSX 750ES)" version. Although this bike received solid reviews from testing magazines (and came to be the testers' preferred 750 sport machine for the year), its release was an ill-timed duel against Honda's all-new V4 engine in the form of the VF750 Interceptor.

The 1983 "GSX 750ES" was a ground-breaking model in its own right, with air-adjustable anti-dive forks, preload and compression-adjustable rear mono-shock ("Full-Floater"), disc brakes at both ends. Some of the futuristic features it pioneered, like a fuel gauge, have since become far more commonplace. Others, like the digital gear indicator, turned out to be redundant marketing ploys now considered retro and obsolete.

The bike disappeared from dealers in 1984, to be replaced with the "GSX 700" - a bike with a de-stroked engine and minor cosmetic differences. Minor tweaks included taller pistons and slightly differing cam lift and timing. This plus a change in factory gear ratios enabled Suzuki to produce a motorcycle with near-identical performance specifications to the "GSX 750ES", even though engine displacement was 15 per cent smaller to satisfy the revised US import guidelines. These included increased tariffs imposed by the US government on all imported motorcycles displacing more than 700cc (repealed in 1988). This 50 per cent tariff was the reason behind the glut of de-stroked 650cc and 700cc Japanese motorcycles sold in the US in the mid-1980s - unique to the rest of the world - and is also the reason the GSX-R debuted in the US a full year later than the rest of the world.

This work was mostly in vain for the US market, however, as the "GSX 750S Katana" was completely restyled in 1984, and the "GSX-R 750" was released abroad, painting a certain demise for the comparably ho-hum "ES". 1984 also saw an update in color schemes for the "GSX 750ES" in the rest of the world, with the naked "E" being dropped in favor of the half-faired "ES" and a new "EF" model with full upper and lower sport fairings (never available as a factory option in the US).

The "GSX 750E" lived on for a few more years abroad, but was eventually superseded by the GSX-F series "Katanas". The GSX-S Katanas were also dropped from Suzuki's regular lineup, replaced by the GSX-R series. The "GSX 1100" lived on with significant styling changes for the 1984 model year, including a full-faired 124bhp monster of a musclebike, the "GSX 1100EFE" (US: "GS1150EF"). The larger bikes, although still sought-after as classic superbikes, were also replaced by the GSX-R and GSX-F "Katana" lineups, with significant body styling changes, upgraded suspension and braking components, and revolutionary frame revisions.

The "GSX 750ES" lives on in the market of previously owned bikes as an affordable all-around motorcycle, although with limited aftermarket and manufacturer support for parts. The US-only "GS 700" is still fairly common there.

Current GSX

The "GSX 750S" (US: "Katana") received an updated engine for 1984, along with Suzuki's other big-bore 4-valvers. This is the engine that the first Suzuki GSX-R Series bikes were based on.

Current GSX models are powered by derivatives of this in-line, four cylinder engine with four valves per cylinder, which is also used in the Suzuki Bandit Series. They feature a combined air-/oil cooling system called "SACS" (for 'Suzuki advanced cooling system').

The current GSX series is produced as the "GSX600F" and "GSX750F" faired sport touring models, now in their second generations, and the unfaired, twin-shock "GSX 750" and "GSX 1400" models.

The earlier "GSX 1200 Inazuma" was offered in Japan only for a short time besides the "GSF 1200 Bandit" to cater for a clientele that went for a more traditional styling and a somewhat higher build quality. When it proved sufficiently popular for overseas export, it was quickly developed into the current GSX 1400.

These modern non-US GSX-models carry little in common with their early to mid-eighties cousins other than a distant ancestor in their powerplant. The "GSX 1100S Katana" has been reissued as an anniversary model several times for the Japanese domestic market (where the "GSX 400S Katana" remains a very popular model with styling straight from the early-1980s), and Yoshimura has recently released a small handful of fully re-worked factory "GSX 1100S Katanas" for sale, requiring potential buyers to win an essay contest before being granted the opportunity to purchase one of these rare beasts.

The "GSX 250F" is known as the [http://www.suzukiacross.org Suzuki Across] and is notable as it has a rear petrol tank and a helmet storage area where the petrol tank usually is.

The GSX1300R Hayabusa hypersport bike has nothing in common with other GSX models but three letters of its designation and the most basic design parameters (number of wheels, cylinders, and valves per cylinder).

ee also

*Suzuki Katana
*Suzuki GSX-R Series


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