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Old 07-22-2008, 02:20 AM   #41
t-homo
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Old 07-22-2008, 01:41 PM   #42
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Originally Posted by Firehawk View Post
Someone sent me this link, so here I am. Looks like a cool forum.

The R7 and R71 are mine

Hope I can shed a bit of light on the conversation....

500 R7's were made in 1999, and 1999 ONLY. The R7 in STOCK form made 106 hp. Reason for this was that the bike was IMPORTED with Euro power specs (same reason the dash only reads in KPH, not MPH). All 500 were made to the same spec. This low HP number was achieved by deactivating two of the four injectors. The R7 was Yamaha's FIRST fuel-injected streetbike.

Only 50 STREET versions came to the States, and not all sold immediately. According to Yamaha, they sold less than half of them in 1999, and still had several sitting in showrooms as late as 2002. That's why you'll occasionally see a R7 listed as a "2002"...was probably the year the individual purchased the bike. Yamaha lost an incredible amount of money on the R7, due to development and production costs. They cut cost on the street version by using off-the-shelf 1998 R1 wheels, calipers and rotors. The Ohlins suspension was also produced in-house by Yamaha, and NOT by the Ohlins factory. The Ohlins suspension supplied with the R7 was lower-quality Road and Track equipment, immediately removed by serious race teams and replaced with Superbike equipment.

There WERE more than 50 R7's that came to the states...in the form of actual factory-built racing machines. These were the bikes raced by the AMA Yamaha team. They were raced, then sent back to the factory to be destroyed at the end of the season. They technically never existed.

The R7 originally sold for $32,000 in 1999, and once Yamaha realized the bike wasn't moving off the floor fast enough, reduced retail to $24,000 in 2000/2001. The major problem was that the bike was NOT race ready. Aside from the WSBK-spec frame, swingarm, and titanium bits in the motor, the bike was every bit as stock as a 1998 R1. It was capable of being BUILT into a serious race bike, and that put the bike out of reach for most privateers. I have a copy of the 1999 R7 YEC parts list, and to build the R7 to near-WSBK spec, it would have cost you over $60,000. Add that to the $32,000 base price, and you can see how far out of reach a true race bike really was. The R7 YEC radiator was $6000 alone!!!

Another major problem with the R7 that ruined sales was crankshaft failures. Owners were reporting failures of the crankshaft after as little as 200 miles of use. Considering that the crankshaft cost $4500 alone, you all can now understand why so many R7's are floating around with R1 motors. More power, better reliability, and cheap replacement costs. Of course, it ruined the mystique and resale of the bike, but many were willing to live with that to avoid a $12,000 engine repair bill. Yamaha sold the R7 WITHOUT a warranty, but ended up recalling the bike to replace cranks anyway. Another red eye for Yamaha, and a huge hit to the pocketbook.

Yamaha sold two engine performance kits with the bike. The Stage 1 kit took the bike from 106 to 130 hp, and cost about $350. This kit included a wiring diagram to activate the two shunted injectors, two throttle cables that allowed the throttle to open fully, and a few other small parts. Adding an aftermarket full exhaust brought power up to 137 hp, but since so few were made, exhaust systems were VERY expensive, costing $3000 or more for a full Akrapovic system. This is where most R7 owners ended.

The Stage 2 kit included internal engine parts including cams, carbon airbox, modified/programmable ECU, four type 10 racing plugs ($243 for 4 plugs), high-capacity fuel pump. The kit bumped the bike up to nearly 160 hp. Taking into consideration that the R7 weighed just 8 POUNDS MORE than a 2008 YZF-R6 and made 50 more hp, the R7 starts to look more impressive. However...you have to pay nearly eight times the cost of that 08 R6 to get there, and the cost does not justify the benefit. And, realize that the 160hp number was attainable with BOLT-ON parts...nothing needed to be machined or milled. Most internal engine parts were made from titanium, making the bike a wolf in sheep's clothing. The engine revs insanely fast...as if the flywheel is missing.

The area the R7 excelled was HANDLING. Still to this day, even with the current crop of performance bikes on the market, the R7 was considered to be one of the sweetest handling bikes ever made. I've ridden every current literbike, short of the ZX-10, and the R7 still handles better. You can tip into a corner, put the white line out the corner of your eye, and without a steering input, she'll follow that exact line. The R7 makes it easy to go fast....and almost demands it. This bike was NEVER meant to be ridden on long, leisurely Sunday rides. It was designed to go fast on the track, and that's it.

Unfortunately, the crappy brakes, cramped riding position, ROCK HARD seat, lightswitch fuel injection and weak power ruined it for me. The R7 was my dreambike for many years, and my first ride on it this past February ruined that dream for me. After a 2 hour ride East into the San Diego hills, I never wanted off a bike more in my life. I can see how this bike would be incredible at the track with about 30 more horses, but I wasn't AT the track. Being that the bike is SOOO rare, I'd be too scared to crash it.

2008 bikes have 10 years of development on the R7. Of course time has moved on, and the bikes have kept pace. I didn't buy the R7 because I was looking for magical performance numbers. I bought it because I've always dreamed of having my own R7, and I wanted to make that dream a reality. Of course an 08 gixxer 750 would blow it away.....but it would also blow away a Vincent Black Shadow, and those are selling for well over $80,000....IF you can find one. The R7 is a piece of collectable racing history, and most R7's have been relegated to the backs of workshops, garages, museums, and private collections. Considering that many were involved in accidents in 1999 and 2000, there's even less than the original 50 that came to the US.

I've seen R7's popping on eBay about once every two months. Considering that 10 years have passed, the owners are still asking damn near what they paid for them. Breaking-even on a 10 year investment doesn't sound like a wise move to me.

Hope this helped a few of you. I'll be around....lemme know if you need any more help or information.



Linky?
Thanks for shedding some light on the whole R7 legacy. The link is farely old and the search function on the one forum sucks. It's just the same pic as earlier in the thread and it was posted in a random thread. The site is www.702sportbikes.com if you want to have a look. It's a Las Vegas forum.
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Old 07-22-2008, 05:49 PM   #43
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Saw this one in Fresno, CA. Much cheaper and with some nice additional bits.

http://www.wilsonsmc.com/pre_owned_d...2R0&veh=380084
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Old 07-23-2008, 01:00 AM   #44
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Good info, Firehawk. How much did the stage 2 engine kit cost?

Also, calling anything made by ohlins 'average' or 'common street' is a little over the top don't you think?

I know Mark, who sold you the R7. He misses it.
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Old 07-23-2008, 10:47 AM   #45
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Originally Posted by ceo012384 View Post
Good info, Firehawk. How much did the stage 2 engine kit cost?

Also, calling anything made by ohlins 'average' or 'common street' is a little over the top don't you think?

I know Mark, who sold you the R7. He misses it.
well if it wasnt manufactured by them id think it would apply
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Old 07-23-2008, 02:27 PM   #46
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well if it wasnt manufactured by them id think it would apply
I wouldn't think Ohlins would let their name be stamped on it unless it met their standards
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Old 07-23-2008, 02:41 PM   #47
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Originally Posted by ceo012384 View Post
I wouldn't think Ohlins would let their name be stamped on it unless it met their standards
dunno, according to fast bikes mag the ohlins damper on the new zx-10 is not up to the standard of other ohlins dampers. might be something there
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Old 07-23-2008, 02:55 PM   #48
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Originally Posted by Dave View Post
dunno, according to fast bikes mag the ohlins damper on the new zx-10 is not up to the standard of other ohlins dampers. might be something there
Ohlins make their own shits and they also make OEM shits. It's possible that the OEM stuff are made to lower specs. Hey, if Kawasaki were to tell Ohlins to make a steering damper that is only "this" good, then that's all you're gonna get.
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Old 07-23-2008, 06:19 PM   #49
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Originally Posted by ceo012384 View Post
Good info, Firehawk. How much did the stage 2 engine kit cost?
According to the YEC list, optional engine parts available to attain the full 160hp (Stage 2) were:

Cylinder head gaskets: $542
Induction box case (airbox): $1,171
Fuel regulator: $108
Fuel pump: $418
Throttle set: $345
Spark plugs: $243
Radiator: $5990
Full Ti Akrapovic system: $3500
Race wire loom: $486
Air breather plate: $136
Air funnel set: $338
YEC pistons/rings: $1,560
Valve springs: $1,624
YEC camshaft: $481
YEC ECU: $867

TOTAL.....$17,809.00

And that doesn't include the $40,000 worth of optional transmission gear ratios, suspension parts, chassis parts and quick-change Marchesini wheel sets.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ceo012384
Also, calling anything made by ohlins 'average' or 'common street' is a little over the top don't you think?
Older Road and Track forks were not made by Ohlins, Sweeden....they were made by YAMAHA, Japan. Yamaha owned Ohlins up until a year ago, when they sold their stake in the company back to the Ohlin family. I'm not saying that the older R&T forks were substandard, but they were not top-shelf Ohlins race equipment. If you look at the gold fork tubes on R&T forks and the tubes on ANY of the Superbike forks, the gold is a totally different color. Tolerances were not as tight, and production standards were more on the Japanese factory level, vice the Ohlins level (which means still pretty damn good). R&T forks made for the R7, R1 LE (and many other bikes) were made in JAPAN....not Sweeden.

By the way...any Ohlins suspension parts that were actual "racing" parts were produced in Sweeden. Obviously, Yamaha wasn't going to make superbike forks, then sell them to race teams from Suzuki and Kawasaki. Ohlins still controlled the racing division, and made the spendier race bits in Europe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ceo012384
I know Mark, who sold you the R7. He misses it.
Still can't believe what he let it go for, but I wasn't going to complain. Mark is a way cool dude, and it was great to meet him.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ceo012384 View Post
I wouldn't think Ohlins would let their name be stamped on it unless it met their standards

They didn't have a choice...Yamaha owned the company. Yamaha had free reign to put Ohlins on whatever they wanted to.

Last edited by Firehawk; 07-23-2008 at 06:22 PM..
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Old 07-23-2008, 07:52 PM   #50
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Firehawk View Post
According to the YEC list, optional engine parts available to attain the full 160hp (Stage 2) were:

Cylinder head gaskets: $542
Induction box case (airbox): $1,171
Fuel regulator: $108
Fuel pump: $418
Throttle set: $345
Spark plugs: $243
Radiator: $5990
Full Ti Akrapovic system: $3500
Race wire loom: $486
Air breather plate: $136
Air funnel set: $338
YEC pistons/rings: $1,560
Valve springs: $1,624
YEC camshaft: $481
YEC ECU: $867

TOTAL.....$17,809.00

And that doesn't include the $40,000 worth of optional transmission gear ratios, suspension parts, chassis parts and quick-change Marchesini wheel sets.



Older Road and Track forks were not made by Ohlins, Sweeden....they were made by YAMAHA, Japan. Yamaha owned Ohlins up until a year ago, when they sold their stake in the company back to the Ohlin family. I'm not saying that the older R&T forks were substandard, but they were not top-shelf Ohlins race equipment. If you look at the gold fork tubes on R&T forks and the tubes on ANY of the Superbike forks, the gold is a totally different color. Tolerances were not as tight, and production standards were more on the Japanese factory level, vice the Ohlins level (which means still pretty damn good). R&T forks made for the R7, R1 LE (and many other bikes) were made in JAPAN....not Sweeden.

By the way...any Ohlins suspension parts that were actual "racing" parts were produced in Sweeden. Obviously, Yamaha wasn't going to make superbike forks, then sell them to race teams from Suzuki and Kawasaki. Ohlins still controlled the racing division, and made the spendier race bits in Europe.



Still can't believe what he let it go for, but I wasn't going to complain. Mark is a way cool dude, and it was great to meet him.




They didn't have a choice...Yamaha owned the company. Yamaha had free reign to put Ohlins on whatever they wanted to.
Thankyou! Almost every company in the world has entry,intermediate and premium products,Ohlins is no exception. Brembo is another example. I had some kid argue with me that the Brembos that came on his bike were the same pieces used in professional racing. I'm like,"So you really think that your $10,000 bike came with $5000+ brakes?"
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