-40%

1970 Suzuki T-350 II Rebel - 4-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article

$ 7.3

Availability: 22 in stock
  • Make: Suzuki

    Description

    1970 Suzuki T-350 II Rebel - 4-Page Vintage Motorcycle Road Test Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    Suzuki T-350 II
    Rebel
    In the broadening urban battle between cars
    and motorcycles only the nimble have a chance.
    The Suzuki Rebel has the best chance of all.
    Suzuki’s newT-350 Rebel is an enlarged
    and improved version of last year’s
    T-305 Raider, which was an enlarged
    and improved version of the X-6 Hust-
    ler. The development process was not
    always of equal gain on all fronts. At
    first the bikes were fragile, then loud,
    then vibrated. Suzuki seems to have
    caught up on the ’70 models: our Rebel
    was still awfully fast, and the niceties
    were well seen to—finally.
    The T-350 is a very important motor-
    cycle in a very important group of
    motorcycles: 350s are the last of the
    lightweights. As we tested them, with
    oil and a half tank of gas, they ranged in
    weight from the Bridgestone’s 362
    pounds to our Suzuki’s 325 pounds.
    Using the factories’ claimed output fig-
    ures, the power/weight ratios range
    from the Suzuki’s 8.34 pounds/bhp to
    the Honda CB-35O’s 10.0 pounds/bhp.
    From these figures, one would presume
    that the 350s are quick and agile. They
    are. The Rebel is the nimblest of the lot.
    New York City traffic is one long
    super-agility test. Between the hard-
    boiled taxi drivers with their rolling
    yellow junk-heaps, and the unconscion-
    ably fat city buses, a bike rider must
    stay focused to survive. If you merely
    roll along at traffic pace, they’ll get you.
    You have to get away from the lights
    before they do and swerve/panic-stop to
    avoid colliding with those you must
    pass. And the pedestrians have the
    calculating nerve of bullfighters. A motor-
    cycle horn is lost in the mind-numb-
    ing din, and people pretend not to look
    as they walk against the light. Through
    it all, the bike rider must be doubly
    alert to avoid killing or being killed.
    In the cities’ hostile environment, the
    350 is now the ultimate weapon. The
    constant cut-and-thrust caused by traf-
    fic lights is relieved only by 60 mph
    jaunts on expressways. Lighter, lower-
    powered machines are but moving tar-
    gets; the bigger bikes are too cumber-
    some. The Rebel’s 0-60 mph time of 6.1
    sec. is better than that of most 650s and
    it’ll stop and turn lots better.
    And the T-350’s balance is excellent.
    With most bikes, you’ll find a very
    unstable period shortly before coming
    to a stop and just as you’re getting
    started. The T-35O’s center of gravity is
    quite low and the seating position is
    quite high in relation to the gas tank
    and handlebars. You get the impression
    that you’re sitting way up on top of the
    bike, yet the removal does not diminish
    the feeling of absolute control. The
    transitional period between being sta-
    tionary and moving, and vice versa, is
    very smooth.
    Suspension control is vastly superior
    to that on the machine we tested last
    year [Cycle, Dec. ’68]. The T-350
    makes no pretense at being an off-road
    bike, so no compromise is made with its
    shocks and forks. It is meant to be a...
    13922-AL-7007-04