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2008 Suzuki GSX-R750 Test - Lone Wolf

Despite Being The Only 750 In The Sportbike World, Suzuki's GSX-R750 Continues To Be Updated-And We're Not Complaining

writer: Kent Kunitsugu
photographer: Tom Riles

 2008 Suzuki GSX-R750 Left Lean

For being the only fish in the three-quarter-liter pond, the GSX-R750 sure gets a lot of attention from Suzuki to stay sharp. You'd think that as the last 750 sportbike left standing it would have the right to rest on its laurels and enjoy some well-deserved leisure time. Let the 600s and literbikes work themselves into a froth every two years; the last-generation GSX-R750 certainly wasn't a slouch ("Ahead of the Curve," Dec. '06), and with no direct competitors for almost a decade, you couldn't blame Suzuki if it'd just plastered some new graphics on the '08 version and called it good.

The GSX-R750 is very dear to the corporate hearts at Suzuki management, however, and they're not about to let the model that stamped the company's name indelibly on motorcycling history back in 1985 grow moldy and be mothballed in the back section of the company catalog. Thus the GSX-R750 has enjoyed a frequent-upgrade schedule over the years that easily rivals that of its 600 and 1000 stablemates.

And we're all the better for it. Suzuki's constant tweaking of the GSX-R750 has resulted in a sportbike offering a superb balance of power and handling that in the right hands will often put its bigger and smaller brethren to shame on both street and track. This thankfully hasn't gone unnoticed by the sportbiking public; unit-sales numbers for the 750 were close behind the 1000 (which already enjoyed healthy sales) last year.

 2008 Suzuki GSX-R750 Left Lean View

Subtle Refinement
With no real reason to turn the applecart upside down, Suzuki engineers concentrated on minor modifications to increase performance while also dealing with ever-stricter emissions and noise regulations. Interestingly, many of the engine changes were aimed at shoring up the sagging midrange that appeared to plague the previous-generation GSX-R750 on the dyno but not on the road (at least as far as we could tell).

For starters, the intake-cam profile now features reduced lift specs to improve that midrange power. Aggressive high-lift cams can help produce good top-end power, but intake velocity drops at lower rpm, compromising cylinder filling. By tweaking other aspects of the intake system along with the lower-lift cams, you can maintain the same top-end power while enhancing the midrange.

The twin double-barrel SDTV (Suzuki Dual Throttle Valve) throttle bodies' primary and secondary injectors now each have eight smaller holes instead of the previous units' four large ones for better fuel atomization. Assisting in this regard is a more powerful engine-management system operating the secondary throttle valve more precisely to maintain high-intake velocity, with the primary injector taking advantage of this by being positioned at a steeper angle to spray deeper into the intake port.


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