Torrance, California, May 10, 2002 -- What do you call those lizards that are really tiny, but have the big neck deal that flares out like an umbrella when they're protecting their turf? Native habitat: the Discovery Channel. When I first clapped eyes upon the V-Strom in the flesh, I though it looked like a huge motorcycle. Closer inspection, though, reveals that the massive frontal superstructure is really not much more than a plastic shell, designed apparently to ward off predators. And the humongous battleship exhausts out back aren't all that huge either; what you see are aluminum heat shields covering a pair of stainless mufflers beneath. Lo and behold, when we balance the DL precariously upon our not-all-that-accurate MO scales, the reading is a mere 528 pounds--and that's with 5.8 U.S. gallons of fuel in the tank.
Light is, surprisingly enough, just the way the bike feels, too. Once in the saddle, levering the thing upright from the sidestand with the nice handlebar requires about half the effort you'd guess from looking at the beast, and the lithe theme grows stronger with every Taco Bell curb you hop in your own little Paris-Dakar fantasy world. Welcome to Suzuki's all-new "Sport Enduro Tourer." Listen, Suzuki's copywriter is better payed than me, so take it away: ... Underneath the trapping of responsible citizenship, some people dream of more.
A place like Africa. From meandering tracks through broad plateaus bordered by the Drakensburg Mountains of the coastal (sic) near Durban, South Africa. To hard-packed switchback roads carved into the side of a gorge in the Atlas Mountains of Morocco. From vast savanna grasslands to towering peaks. Now there is a motorcycle inspired by that dream, and built for adventure. Named for its V-twin engine and the stream of wind, or "Strom" in German. It is called the Suzuki V-Strom 1000. Ready to live the adventure in your mind.
In any case, the DL, once past the hyperbole and marketing Strom-job, is a nicer motorcycle than it looks, depending of course on what you think of its looks. Its 996cc L-twin, sourced from the TL1000, has found itself a nice home, hanging there beneath a twin-spar aluminum alloy frame. A 43mm cartridge fork sees the the front 19-inch wheel sternly through any asphaltic upheaval, while a single linkage-mounted shock continues the long-travel-yet-controlled theme out back. In between, a nice long seat offers quite a bit of wiggle room for long, dull days in the saddle--along with the ability to act the hanging-off, scooting-around fool when the time comes to attack squiggly backroads.
We've said it a hundred times about the BMW GS series: You won't believe how well such an ungainly looking thing attacks corners, and the V-Strom assaults that concept from a slightly different direction: It doesn't quite have the BMW's chassis, but it does have a lot more POWAH. Numbah One Thing is the handlebar; high and wide, the 'Strom bar gives a feeling of complete dominance over front-wheel direction, even if the stiffish front end means you don't get a lot of front-end feel. Number two would be low, forwardish footpeg placement. The V-Strom goes further in the big-dirt-bike direction, though, by providing a seat/fuel tank junction shape designed with sporty riding in mind; ie, skinny between the thighs and with plenty of room to shift your bulk forward, as you throw it into the corner, and rearward, as you wheelie out like the big juvenile you are.
Your brakes are not exactly cutting-edge either--two-piston slide-type calipers grab the front 310mm discs. Yet again, in finest dirt-bike style, you find yourself using the rear more on the DL than upon your typical sportbike, and with the bike's long-travel suspension, really grabby brakes wouldn't be completely useful anyway.
The DL's throttle bodies got shrunk too, all the way from 52 to 45mm, and inside them you'll find the same Suzuki Dual Throttle Valve System used on its GSX-Rs: your right paw activates the lower butterfly in each throttle body, and the bike's 16-bit computer opens the upper one as it sees fit. It's effective, too; the bike has very nice power delivery from down low, and Suzuki's claim that SDTV helps fuel mileage seems borne out by the fact our bike averages around 44 mpg in normal use, giving it a range of well over 200 miles.
In the gearbox, too, a bit of reshuffling took shape: the DL has a shorter second gear than the TL (nice for off-road use), and an overdriven sixth instead of the TL's 1:1 top gear. A 41-tooth sprocket, then, gives the TL an overall ratio of 4.049 (4.049 engine revolutions per rear tire revolution) to the TL's 4.11 ratio. (Our bike more than occasionally hangs fire on the 2-3 upshift.)
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