IT FEELS GOOD NOW AND IT MUST HAVE felt even better back in 1969. On a narrow and winding road in the country I am cruising lazily along, sitting comfortably upright, engine pulsing gently below, my ears filled with the deep twin-cylinder burble of the exhaust note. When a short straight appears, I flick up a gear, roll open the throttle, grip the wide 'bars slightly harder, and enjoy the acceleration as the torquey middleweight surges crisply forward.
Sensations like these had made 650-cc parallel twins from Triumph and BSA hugely popular throughout the 1960s, but this bike had one major difference-the name on its petrol-tank made that quite clear. The look, the feel, the sound; all the characteristics would have been familiar to the rider of a typical British twin back then. But this bike was built by Yamaha of Japan. The last area of Britain's two-wheeled domination was about to be lost.
Back in late 1969, when the XS-1 arrived in the United States (it took longer to reach Europe and other export markets), the name Yamaha was by no means unknown. The Japanese firm's smaller two-strokes were well established and factory rider Phil Read had won both 250- and 125-cc world championships in 1968. But until the XS-1 came along, Yamaha had never built a four-stroke roadster, let alone a 650-cc parallel twin that was so obviously aimed at the British opposition.
And which scored a direct hit, too. For although many riders questioned the wisdom of taking on machines such as Triumph's Bonneville and BSA's Lightning with such a similar bike, those doubts were rapidly blown away. The XS-1-and particularly its descendants, the XS-2 and XS650, for the original model was promptly updated-soon became strong sellers in the massive US market, firmly establishing Yamaha as a manufacturer of large-capacity machines.
This story is from the December 2022 edition of Bike India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 2022 edition of Bike India.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
BMW F 450 GS Concept
EICMA 2024 IS GENERALLY NIRVANA FOR MOTORCYCLE ENTHUSIASTS as they're treated to plenty of new machines from a number of manufacturers. BMW Motorrad are one of them.
Toprak is the 2024 World Champion
Toprak Razgatlioglu took home his second World Superbike Championship (WSBK) title after a good battle with the Italian rookie, Nicolo Bulega of Ducati.
A Toprak Sandwich
The battle for the title heated up as Toprak Razgatlioglu won Race One and Race Two while Nicolo Bulega won the Superpole Race in Estoril, the penultimate round of the 2024 World Superbike Championship (WSBK) season.
Navaneeth Wins Double
Navaneeth Kumar S, Rohan R, and Yogesh P were the winners in the second round of the J K Tyre Royal Enfield Continental GT Cup INDIAN RACING
Ross Branch and Team Hero MotoSports are the new FIM World Rally-raid Champions
TEAM HERO MOTOSPORTS was founded in 2016 and Ross Branch joined in 2022. Since then, he has been a Hero MotoSports rider and their years of toil have borne a particularly sweet fruit: Ross Branch and Hero MotoSports are now the FIM World Rally-raid Champions.
The Rise of a New 'Rad'
Reise Moto invited us to the COASTT High Performance Centre in Coimbatore to experience their all-new radial road tyres, the traceRads.
Feels Like Graduation
The third and final round of the TVS Young Media Racer Programme (YMRP) saw us take P2 in the race and P3 in the overall championship. Here is how it went off
In the Shadow of the Colossus
TVS have given the base Jupiter a complete overhaul, including a new engine. We had checked it out on a closed course back in August. This time we let it loose on the urban jungle and observed if it could survive there
Pay Win
THE ATHER RIZTA WAS LAUNCHED TO much fanfare in April this year and then we got to sample it for a short burst in May.
Agile and Aggressive
The Kawasaki KLX 230 is a superbly built dual-sport that has the ability to take on some big hitters in our market. We hopped on it for a while and kicked up some dirt at the Prodirt Adventure Park.